If you own (or are considering buying) a property with historical significance — an older home in a historic district, a building with architectural or cultural importance — you may have heard about potential property tax benefits tied to historic designation. This is a local-option program under Texas law, meaning it varies significantly depending on where you are. For expert advice and loan quotes related to property taxes, contact American Finance and Investment Co., Inc. (AFIC).
Texas law allows (but doesn’t require) cities and counties to offer property tax exemptions or special appraisal for properties designated as historically or archeologically significant. This means some cities have such a program and others don’t — and the specifics (how much benefit, what qualifies, the application process) can differ between jurisdictions that do offer it.
Generally, there are two distinct steps:
Having a historic designation doesn’t automatically mean a tax benefit applies — both pieces need to be in place where the program exists.
Where offered, historic property tax provisions might take the form of an exemption (reducing taxable value by a specified amount or percentage) or a special appraisal method — the specific structure depends on the local program’s design.
Historic designation often comes with restrictions on alterations — changes to the exterior, additions, demolition, etc., may require approval from a historic preservation board, even for changes that wouldn’t otherwise require special approval. This is an important consideration separate from the tax question: owners should understand what they’re agreeing to in terms of future property changes, not just the potential tax benefit.
For owners considering pursuing historic designation (where a property might qualify), it’s worth weighing:
Separately, there’s a federal historic tax credit program — this is an income tax (not property tax) benefit, generally relevant for income-producing historic properties undergoing qualified rehabilitation, administered at the federal level (with state-level coordination in some cases). This is a different program with different rules, eligibility, and application processes than any local property tax provision.
If you’re interested in this topic for your specific property, your city or county’s planning department, historic preservation office, or similar body would be the source for information about local historic designation processes — and your appraisal district can address whether any property tax benefit is tied to that designation locally.
If you’re considering purchasing a property with existing historic designation, understanding both any tax benefit and any restrictions that come with the designation (and whether these transfer to a new owner) is part of evaluating the purchase.
Whether your property has historic designation, is being considered for it, or is a standard residential property, understanding your overall property tax situation is something AFIC can help with.
American Finance & Investment Co., Inc. (AFIC) has helped Texas property owners understand and manage their property tax obligations for over 80 years. See if you qualify for a property tax loan.
No — this is a local-option program, so it varies; some cities/counties offer it, others don’t.
Not automatically — designation and any tax benefit are generally separate processes, and the tax benefit only applies where the local jurisdiction offers one.
Often restrictions on exterior alterations, additions, or demolition, requiring approval from a historic preservation board.
No — the federal program is an income tax credit for income-producing properties undergoing qualified rehabilitation, separate from any local property tax provision.
Check with your city/county’s planning or historic preservation office for designation processes, and your appraisal district for any associated tax benefit.
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Your tax office may offer delinquent tax installment plans that may be less costly to you. You can request information about the availability of these plans from the tax office.
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