Johnson County
Property Tax Protest
40+ Combined Years of Experience | $1,307 Avg Bill Reduction | 7.1% Avg Reduction %
Protest Deadline: May 15, 2026A Johnson County property tax protest is the most effective way to reduce your tax bill if you own property in Cleburne, Burleson, Joshua, Keene, Grandview, Alvarado, or anywhere along the Chisholm Trail Parkway corridor. With median home values near $332,000 and an average combined tax rate around 2.19%, the average Johnson County property owner pays roughly $7,271 per year in residential property taxes, and commercial owners often pay far more. Even a modest $25,000 overvaluation costs you ~$548 every year, and that overpayment compounds each year you don’t challenge it. Filing a Johnson County property tax protest with a professional agent ensures your case is built on real comparable data, not the district’s mass appraisal assumptions.
Resolute serves Johnson County with a North Texas team that brings over 40 combined years of property tax consulting experience and an average bill reduction of $1,307 per client. Those aren’t projections, those are actual results from actual clients.
Why You Need a Johnson County Property Tax Protest
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Chisholm Trail Parkway growth distortion The Chisholm Trail Parkway has transformed the northern Johnson County real estate market, with massive new construction and commercial development driving values sharply upward along the corridor. Johnson CAD’s models tend to apply parkway-adjacent appreciation rates to neighborhoods farther from the corridor where the growth premium doesn’t apply, overvaluing established homes in Cleburne, Joshua, and surrounding areas.
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New construction comparable inflation With over 3,000 new homes planned and billions in residential property value added in recent years, builders routinely offer incentives, rate buydowns, and closing cost credits that inflate reported sale prices. Johnson CAD applies these builder-inflated sales as comparables for existing homes without adequately backing out the incentive value, systematically overvaluing older properties throughout the county.
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Rural-to-suburban transition zones As Johnson County transforms from a predominantly rural county into a DFW suburban growth hub, agricultural land is converting to residential development at an accelerating pace. Properties at the edges of these conversion zones frequently get swept into new subdivision neighborhood groupings, compared against brand-new homes rather than similar existing properties with very different characteristics.
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Luxury home reassessment surges Johnson County’s 2024 reassessment showed single-family homes increasing 12.6% overall, but luxury homes in the $1M to $1.5M range saw increases of 29%. Johnson CAD’s models apply aggressive appreciation to higher-value properties based on limited comparable sales data, and the resulting valuations frequently outpace what the market actually supports for these homes.
Johnson County homeowners saved $303 million in assessed values through protests in recent years, and that number keeps growing as values rise. What most people don’t realize is that the Chisholm Trail Parkway corridor effect inflates values even for homes that aren’t directly on the corridor. If you’re in Cleburne, Joshua, or Keene and you haven’t protested, you’re almost certainly paying too much.
Our team knows the Johnson County market inside and out. We know which comp adjustments Johnson CAD relies on, and we know exactly how to challenge them with real market data.
– Colby Riggs, North Texas Residential Lead at ResoluteYour Johnson County Property Tax Protest: Why Resolute
A Johnson County property tax protest requires the kind of individual property analysis that no mass-protest firm can provide. From Chisholm Trail Parkway developments to Cleburne’s established neighborhoods, Resolute’s North Texas team builds every case from the ground up.
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We analyze your property individually using proprietary data and technology. Our agents build a case specific to your property and your neighborhood. No mass-processing. No cookie-cutter approaches.
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We file all the paperwork with Johnson CAD and schedule your hearing. You don’t touch a single form.
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We show up for you meeting with the district on your behalf, presenting your case, and fighting for the highest reduction possible. Informal review, ARB hearing, and beyond.
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You only pay if we save you money. No reduction, no fee. That’s our promise.
Johnson County Property Tax Rates (2025)
Johnson County property taxes are calculated by multiplying your property’s taxable value by the combined rate of all applicable taxing entities. Every property in Johnson County is subject to multiple overlapping taxing jurisdictions including the county itself, your municipality, and your school district. Johnson County’s combined rates are among the higher rates in the DFW metroplex, particularly in cities like Keene and Burleson.
| Taxing Entity | 2025 Rate (per $100) |
|---|---|
| Johnson County | $0.3350 |
| City of Cleburne | $0.5885 |
| City of Burleson | $0.6627 |
| City of Joshua | $0.6512 |
| City of Keene | $0.8441 |
| City of Grandview | ~$0.7500 |
| City of Alvarado | ~$0.7300 |
| City of Godley | ~$0.5600 |
| Burleson ISD | $1.2552 |
| Joshua ISD | $1.0872 |
| Grandview ISD | $1.1059 |
| Godley ISD | $1.4746 |
| Keene ISD | $1.1655 |
| Venus ISD | $1.3661 |
| Alvarado ISD | $1.3700 |
The combined tax rate for most Johnson County properties falls approximately 1.7% to 2.6% of assessed value, depending on which entities apply to your specific property. Keene carries the highest median tax rate in the county at 2.58%, while Cresson has the lowest at 0.82%. Godley ISD’s $1.47 rate is notably high, reflecting the infrastructure investments accompanying rapid growth in that part of the county. View official Johnson County tax rates here.
How Johnson CAD Calculates Your Assessed Value
The Central Appraisal District of Johnson County (Johnson CAD) appraises all taxable property in Johnson County using a mass appraisal process. Rather than inspecting each property individually, Johnson CAD uses statistical models to value properties simultaneously based on comparable sales, property characteristics, and neighborhood data. Your assessed value is intended to reflect the market value of your property as of January 1 of each tax year.
Two values matter on your notice: market value and assessed value. For homesteaded properties, Texas law caps the increase in assessed value at 10% per year regardless of how much market value rises. This cap is especially significant in Johnson County, where the 2024 reassessment pushed single-family home values up 12.6% overall, and luxury homes saw increases as high as 29%. Non-homesteaded properties, including investment and rental properties, carry no such cap and can be reassessed at full market value each year.
Because Johnson CAD is working with a market undergoing rapid transformation, driven by the Chisholm Trail Parkway expansion, major commercial development, and thousands of new homes, its mass appraisal models frequently rely on new construction sales data that doesn’t accurately reflect the value of older existing homes. When your assessed value does not reflect your property’s true market value, or when comparable properties nearby are assessed lower than yours, you have strong grounds for a Johnson County property tax protest.
Why Johnson County Assessments Keep Rising
Johnson County has grown nearly 49% since 2010, adding 7,000 to 8,000 new residents every year. The county is positioned at the intersection of Fort Worth’s southward expansion and the Chisholm Trail Parkway’s economic development corridor. The $250 million expansion of the parkway from two to four lanes, Amazon’s 1.7 million-square-foot operations facility representing a $200 million investment, and over 3,000 new homes in the pipeline are all pushing property values steadily higher. Nearly 38% of all residential value in Johnson County was built between 2001 and 2020, reflecting the dramatic pace of development.
For homesteaded properties, the 10% annual assessment cap provides some protection but does not prevent steady compounding year after year. For investment properties, new builds held as rentals, and non-homesteaded properties with no cap, the exposure is significantly greater. Johnson County residents have already saved $303 million through property tax protests, demonstrating both the scale of the overvaluation problem and the effectiveness of filing a Johnson County property tax protest annually.
How to Pay Your Johnson County Property Taxes
Johnson County property tax bills are mailed in October each year and are due by January 31 of the following year without penalty. Scott Porter, Johnson County Tax Assessor-Collector, administers tax collection for the county. Payments can be made in the following ways:
- Online: Pay at jcmtax.com by credit card, debit card, or eCheck.
- By mail: Send a check payable to the Johnson County Tax Assessor-Collector to the address on your tax statement.
- In person: Visit the Johnson County Tax Office at 2 North Mill Street, Cleburne, TX 76033. Bring your tax statement or property account number.
- Payment plans: Johnson County offers installment payment options for qualifying homesteaded properties. Contact the Tax Assessor-Collector’s office at (817) 558-0122 for details.
Taxes not paid by January 31 accrue penalty and interest beginning February 1. By July 1, delinquent accounts are turned over to a delinquent tax attorney and additional collection fees apply. If you are waiting on the outcome of a protest, you are still responsible for paying your taxes by the deadline to avoid penalties. Any overpayment resulting from a successful protest will be refunded.
Johnson County 2026 Protest Calendar
| Date | What Happens |
|---|---|
| January 1, 2026 | Valuation date, your property’s value is assessed as of this date |
| ~April 15, 2026 | Johnson CAD expected to mail Notice of Appraised Value |
| April 30, 2026 | Deadline to file homestead exemption for 2026 |
| May 15, 2026 | Protest filing deadline (or 30 days after notice, whichever is later) |
| June, Oct 2026 | Informal reviews and ARB hearings (Resolute attends for you) |
Don’t Forget Your Exemptions
Exemptions and protests work together. Make sure you’ve filed for everything you qualify for:
General Homestead
$140,000 off school district taxes (new for 2026). File by April 30.
Over-65 / Disabled
Additional $60,000 off school taxes, plus a tax ceiling (freeze) on school district taxes.
Disabled Veteran
Partial or full exemption based on disability rating. 100% disabled veterans pay zero property tax.
Johnson County Property Tax Protest FAQ
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What is the Johnson County property tax protest deadline for 2026?The Johnson County property tax protest deadline for 2026 is May 15, 2026, or 30 days after Johnson CAD mails your Notice of Appraised Value, whichever is later. Johnson CAD typically begins mailing notices in April.
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How much does Resolute charge to protest in Johnson County?Resolute works on a contingency basis, you pay nothing upfront, and no fee at all unless we reduce your property tax bill. Our commission is a percentage of the actual savings we secure. If we don’t get a reduction, you owe nothing.
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Is there any risk in protesting my Johnson County property taxes?No. There is no risk to protesting your Johnson County property taxes. If Johnson CAD does not grant a reduction, your appraisal simply remains at its current value. Your property value cannot increase as a result of filing a protest.
¶ Average tax savings based on assessed value reduction of Resolute’s Johnson County customers who saved on at least one property in 2025 as of 12/31/2025. Results vary.
※ Average reduction percentage on successful protests for Resolute’s Johnson County customers in 2025 as of 12/31/2025. Results vary.
Ready to protest? Colby’s Team can handle Your Johnson County Protest
No upfront fees. You only pay if we save you money.
No upfront fees. You only pay if we save you money.
