How can a property be assessed for more than its recent purchase price?
Real Estate may be assessed for more than the sales price because the assessment reflects "fair market value." Fair market value is not necessarily the price paid for a piece of real estate, but rather, what it is worth on the real estate market. A sale may be below fair market value, for example, if the owners are in financial distress and need to sell quickly, lowering the price beyond what they might otherwise accept. Selling a property at an amount simply sufficient to cover the mortgage would be another example of a distress sale not at fair market value.

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1. What is annual reassessment?
2. What is the effective date of my assessment?
3. What is fair market value?
4. What sales were used to determine my assessed value?
5. How can a property be assessed for more than its recent purchase price?
6. Why did my assessment change?
7. Why did my structure value go up? I didn't make any changes to my house.
8. Why did my house go up at a higher rate than my neighbor’s house?
9. Why did my assessed value change more than reported in sources like Zillow, etc?
10. Why did my assessment go up more than the percent change advertised in the local newspapers for my market area and property type?
11. What does land value represent and why did it change?
12. Why do property values have separate land and building values and why did they change? I own a condo; why do I have a land value?
13. Is there a law that prevents assessments from changing more than a certain amount from year to year?
14. Is there any effect on real estate values for major floodplain acreage?