Nebraska property tax appeal guide
AppealTax can help review your assessment, identify errors, organize comparable sales, and prepare a clearer challenge before the local appeal window closes.
Start by checking your Notice of Valuation and gathering your county property record.
Nebraska County Guides
Select your county or county-equivalent below for local property tax appeal guidance, basic deadline context, assessment-review steps, and residential tax-bill benchmarks.
Antelope County
Arthur County
Banner County
Blaine County
Boone County
Box Butte County
Boyd County
Brown County
Buffalo County
Burt County
Butler County
Cass County
Cedar County
Chase County
Cherry County
Cheyenne County
Clay County
Colfax County
Cuming County
Custer County
Dakota County
Dawes County
Dawson County
Deuel County
Dixon County
Dodge County
Douglas County
Dundy County
Fillmore County
Franklin County
Frontier County
Furnas County
Gage County
Garden County
Garfield County
Gosper County
Grant County
Greeley County
Hall County
Hamilton County
Harlan County
Hayes County
Hitchcock County
Holt County
Hooker County
Howard County
Jefferson County
Johnson County
Kearney County
Keith County
Keya Paha County
Kimball County
Knox County
Lancaster County
Lincoln County
Logan County
Loup County
McPherson County
Madison County
Merrick County
Morrill County
Nance County
Nemaha County
Nuckolls County
Otoe County
Pawnee County
Perkins County
Phelps County
Pierce County
Platte County
Polk County
Red Willow County
Richardson County
Rock County
Saline County
Sarpy County
Saunders County
Scotts Bluff County
Seward County
Sheridan County
Sherman County
Sioux County
Stanton County
Thayer County
Thomas County
Thurston County
Valley County
Washington County
Wayne County
Webster County
Wheeler County
York County
Statewide Residential Benchmark
A broad statewide benchmark for Nebraska is an effective property tax rate of about 1.76% of home value. On a $400,000 residential property, that equals about $7,040 per year. This is a statewide comparison point, not a guarantee of what any parcel will owe.
Basic statewide deadlines
Nebraska appeal windows move fast
Nebraska valuation protests are generally due by June 30.
Start by checking your Notice of Valuation and gathering your county property record.
Then confirm the current year’s instructions with your county assessor, local board, municipality, or state tax authority, especially if a deadline falls on a weekend or legal holiday.
Common questions
When is the Nebraska property tax appeal deadline?
Nebraska valuation protests are generally due by June 30. Confirm the exact current-year deadline with your local assessing office.
What should I gather first?
Gather your assessment notice, property record card, tax bill, exemption information, photos, repair estimates, and comparable sales.
Can AppealTax help with a Nebraska assessment review?
AppealTax can help review your assessment, identify errors, organize comparable sales, and prepare a clearer challenge before the appeal window closes.
