About
An independent project, built to help any Harris County homeowner figure out whether their 2026 HCAD appraisal is actually high — and what to do about it if it is.
What this is
A static map of every residential single-family parcel in Harris County, TX. Each pin is colored by how the parcel's 2026 HCAD appraisal compares, on a per-square-foot basis, to the median of its 5 closest comparable neighbors under Tex. Tax Code §41.43(b)(3). Click any pin to open a personalized appeal report with comps, fair-value math, a hearing script, and filing steps.
It's designed to answer one question fast: is my appraisal high enough to be worth protesting? Everything else — the stats page, the playbook, this About page — is in service of that.
What this isn't
- It's not legal advice. If your situation is unusual, talk to a property tax lawyer or a CPA.
- It's not a guarantee. The tool is an indicator; every ARB panel weighs comps slightly differently.
- It's not affiliated with HCAD (the Harris Central Appraisal District) or any tax-protest firm.
- It doesn't file your protest for you, and the report itself isn't evidence. You still log in to HCAD's iFile portal — this site helps you identify your comps and understand the math so you can build your own evidence packet from HCAD's records.
Data sources
- HCAD 2026 property tables —
real_acct.txt,building_res.txt,jur_value.txt,jur_exempt.txtfrom hcad.org/pdata. These are the same source files HCAD uses internally; the tool reads them as-is. - HCAD 2026 parcel shapefile — from hcad.org/pdata-gis-downloads. Used to place each pin and compute distances between comp candidates.
- HCAD ARB protest + hearings files — 2023–2026 from HCAD's ARB data release. Powers the Appeals & History page's win-rate and filer breakdown.
- Base map tiles — CartoDB Positron, served via their free tier.
Parcel data refreshes when HCAD publishes a new certified roll (typically April each year). Hearings data refreshes weekly during the ARB cycle (roughly May through October). Last refresh: —.
Methodology
For each parcel, the tool picks 5 comparable homes from the HCAD roll: same neighborhood code, same grade, within ±15% of square footage, within ±10 years of build year, closest by geographic distance. It computes the median $/sqft of those 5, multiplies by the subject's square footage to get an implied fair value, and colors the pin by how far the HCAD appraisal sits above or below that fair value.
Per-sqft is how HCAD's own mass-appraisal model is built and what the Texas Comptroller's Property Value Study audits for uniformity, which is why it's the right yardstick for a §41.43(b)(3) claim. The bucket thresholds, the comp-spread math, and §23.23 homestead-cap detection are all computed at pipeline-build time and surfaced per parcel on each report page.
Note that the comparison is relative: each parcel is measured against the median of similar HCAD-appraised neighbors, not absolute market value. That's the test the §41.43(b)(3) statute applies, but it means the tool cannot detect district-wide over- or under-appraisal — if all your neighbors are appraised low, your “fair” value will look low too.
Privacy
The site has no user accounts and never asks for personal information. Two analytics tools are used to count visitors and see which pages are useful:
- Cloudflare Web Analytics — cookieless, country-level location only. Run by the site's host.
-
Google Analytics 4
— sets a
_gacookie used to recognize a repeat visitor within a session. Aggregate page views, approximate location (country, region, city, estimated from IP), browser, and referrer are sent to Google. No personal data, account info, or parcel-search history is sent.
All parcel data displayed here — owner names, addresses, appraised values, prior-year values, year built, square footage — is public record at hcad.org, searchable by address or owner name with no account needed. This site presents the same data in map form.
Contact
Questions, corrections, or a comp that doesn't look
right — write to
[email protected].
One person reads that inbox; don't expect instant replies, but
everything gets read.
Disclaimer & terms of use
Not legal advice. This site is an educational indicator based on public HCAD data. Nothing on it should be read as legal counsel on your specific tax situation. Every ARB panel weighs comps slightly differently, and ARB outcomes are never guaranteed.
Not an agent. The author is not your authorized representative and is not filing any protest on your behalf. You are solely responsible for all filings, submissions, and deadlines. If your situation is complex, consult a qualified property tax attorney or CPA.
No guarantee. The site's data is provided as-is based on public records. The author makes no claim as to the absolute accuracy of this information or the outcome of any appeal. Use of this site is at your own risk; the author accepts no liability for filing decisions, hearing outcomes, or tax consequences.
ARB authority. The Appraisal Review Board (ARB) can lower a noticed appraisal or leave it unchanged. Under SB 2 of the 86th Texas Legislature (2019), codified at Tex. Tax Code §41.47(c), the ARB cannot raise your appraisal above the noticed value during a §41.43 protest, except as the property owner specifically requests and agrees to. The pre-2019 framework that allowed routine upward adjustment no longer applies to the protests this site addresses. Earlier versions of this site warned of upward-adjustment risk on purple-bucket parcels; that framing was based on the pre-SB 2 statute and has been corrected.
Under Tex. Tax Code §41.43(b)(3), an ARB is required to lower an appraisal to the median of a reasonable number of appropriately-adjusted comparables if the protest establishes that median. But "reasonable" and "appropriately adjusted" are judgment calls by the panel. Review your comps before filing.
Deadlines. You are solely responsible for meeting the HCAD filing deadline shown on your iFile dashboard. The 2026 deadline is Monday, May 18 for most homeowners this cycle. Missing it waives your right to appeal for that tax year.
Non-commercial. This site and its reports are provided free of charge as a community resource. They may not be sold, repackaged, or used for commercial purposes.
By using this site, you acknowledge that you have read and accept this Disclaimer & Terms of Use. If you do not accept these terms, please do not use the site.
Built by an independent citizen developer. Not affiliated with HCAD (the Harris Central Appraisal District).