North Dakota 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.
North Dakota 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.
Barnes County
Benson County
Billings County
Bottineau County
Bowman County
Burke County
Burleigh County
Cass County
Cavalier County
Dickey County
Divide County
Dunn County
Eddy County
Emmons County
Foster County
Golden Valley County
Grand Forks County
Grant County
Griggs County
Hettinger County
Kidder County
LaMoure County
Logan County
McHenry County
McIntosh County
McKenzie County
McLean County
Mercer County
Morton County
Mountrail County
Nelson County
Oliver County
Pembina County
Pierce County
Ramsey County
Ransom County
Renville County
Richland County
Rolette County
Sargent County
Sheridan County
Sioux County
Slope County
Stark County
Steele County
Stutsman County
Towner County
Traill County
Walsh County
Ward County
Wells County
Williams County
Statewide Residential Benchmark
A broad statewide benchmark for North Dakota is an effective property tax rate of about 1.42% of home value. On a $400,000 residential property, that equals about $5,680 per year. This is a statewide comparison point, not a guarantee of what any parcel will owe.
Basic statewide deadlines
North Dakota appeal windows move fast
North Dakota local and county equalization meetings generally occur in spring, often April through June.
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 North Dakota property tax appeal deadline?
North Dakota local and county equalization meetings generally occur in spring, often April through June. 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 North Dakota assessment review?
AppealTax can help review your assessment, identify errors, organize comparable sales, and prepare a clearer challenge before the appeal window closes.
