From a storefront with an apartment above, to a live/work loft, to a house with a small detached office space that’s rented out — mixed-use properties combine residential and commercial elements in a single property. This creates some unique considerations for appraisal and exemptions. For expert advice and loan quotes related to property taxes, contact American Finance and Investment Co., Inc. (AFIC).
For a mixed-use property, the appraisal district may need to allocate the overall appraised value between the residential and commercial portions — since, as discussed in our commercial property article, these portions might be valued using different approaches (the residential portion more like a typical home, the commercial portion potentially considering income/expense factors if it’s rented).
This is a key point: if you live in part of a mixed-use property as your primary residence, the homestead exemption (and the 10% appraisal cap) generally applies only to that residential portion you occupy — not to the commercial portion, even if you also use or operate the commercial space yourself.
Mixed-use situations exist on a spectrum:
Where a specific property falls on this spectrum affects how clearly the residential/commercial allocation applies.
Live/work properties — common in some urban areas — are designed with both residential and commercial/studio space integrated. Depending on the specific design and use, the appraisal district may treat these similarly to other mixed-use properties, allocating value between the components.
Understanding the allocation matters because:
If a property’s use changes — for example, a previously fully-residential property where you start renting out a portion commercially, or vice versa — this kind of change in use is the type of update that should be reflected in appraisal records over time, similar to how other improvements and use changes get reflected.
Given the variety of mixed-use configurations, if you own this type of property and have questions about how it’s currently being valued and whether your homestead exemption is being applied correctly to the appropriate portion, this is worth discussing directly with your appraisal district — the specifics of your property’s configuration matter.
Whether your property is purely residential, purely commercial, or a mix of both, understanding how it’s classified and valued is the foundation for managing your property tax obligations.
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.
The appraisal district may allocate the overall value between residential and commercial portions, potentially using different valuation approaches for each.
Generally only to the residential portion you occupy as your primary residence, not the commercial portion.
A home office is generally a smaller-scale version, often still treated as part of the homestead — true mixed-use typically involves more clearly separated commercial space.
Comparable mixed-use properties, or comparable residential and commercial properties separately, depending on how the appraisal district approaches the allocation.
This kind of change should generally be reflected in appraisal records over time, similar to other use changes.
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