Throckmorton County · Texas Property Tax Protest · 2026

Throckmorton Home Values
Jumped.
Your Tax Bill Doesn't Have To.

Texas's second-largest county has seen years of aggressive appraisal growth. We file and represent your protest with Throckmorton CAD — flat fee, no contingency, deadline May 15.

Protest Deadline
May 15, 2026
STATUTORY DEADLINE
Filing We handle it
Evidence We build it
Hearings We attend
Your time ~2 min to sign up
30%+
Median Throckmorton County home appreciation over the last 5 years — Throckmorton CAD appraisals followed
1.4M+
Taxable properties appraised by Throckmorton CAD annually across Throckmorton County
~65%
Of informal Throckmorton CAD protests result in a value reduction for the homeowner

We protest in all of Throckmorton County.

Texas Tax Lock handles property tax protests for homeowners throughout Throckmorton County, including Throckmorton, Garland, Irving, Mesquite, Richardson, Grand Prairie, Farmers Branch, DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Duncanville, Lancaster, Rowlett, Sachse, Balch Springs, and Hutchins. With over 2.6 million residents, Throckmorton County is one of the largest and most active appraisal markets in the state.

The Throckmorton Central Appraisal District (Throckmorton CAD) appraises all residential and commercial property in the county. Throckmorton-area home values have climbed sharply over the last five years — meaning your assessed value is likely higher than it should be. Throckmorton CAD has a well-established informal protest process, and evidence-backed cases consistently see reductions.

The statutory deadline to file a protest with Throckmorton CAD is May 15, 2026. Sign up and we handle everything — filing, evidence preparation, informal negotiation, and ARB representation if needed.

Cities We Serve
Throckmorton
Garland
Irving
Mesquite
Richardson
Grand Prairie
Farmers Branch
DeSoto
Cedar Hill
Duncanville
Lancaster
Rowlett
Sachse
Balch Springs
Hutchins
Glenn Heights

What we've been getting in Throckmorton County.

Mesquite — Single-Family
−$49,500
$412,000 assessed → $362,500 settled
2025 Protest Season
Richardson — Single-Family
−$63,000
$589,000 assessed → $526,000 settled
2025 Protest Season
Grand Prairie — Single-Family
−$38,000
$365,000 assessed → $327,000 settled
2025 Protest Season
Selected results from our 2025 protest season. Results vary by property — past outcomes do not guarantee future results.

Three steps. You do almost nothing.

STEP 01
Sign Up in 2 Minutes

Enter your property address and 2026 notice value. We immediately register as your authorized agent with Throckmorton CAD and file your protest before the May 15 deadline. No paperwork on your end.

STEP 02
We Build Your Case

Our team pulls comparable sales from Throckmorton CAD's records and MLS data, runs unequal appraisal analysis, and prepares a complete evidence package. We identify the strongest argument for your specific property — not a one-size-fits-all submission.

STEP 03
We Negotiate and Represent

We attend your informal hearing with Throckmorton CAD and present the evidence. If informal doesn't resolve, we proceed to a formal ARB hearing. You don't appear. We notify you when there's a final result.

You keep your savings.
We keep our fee.

Contingency-fee firms charge a percentage of your first year's tax savings — which means they take a cut of every dollar you save, every time. Our flat fee means you pay once, up front, and everything you save beyond that is yours to keep.

On a $50,000 value reduction at a 2.3% tax rate, you save approximately $1,150 per year — and every year after. A 25% contingency firm would take $288+ from year one alone. Our fee: $199.

On a $50,000 value reduction
Annual tax savings ~$1,150
Contingency firm (25%) −$288+
Texas Tax Lock −$199 flat
You keep (year 1) $951 more

Flat fee. No surprises.

One flat fee per property, based on your 2026 Notice of Appraised Value from Throckmorton CAD. No contingency fee on your savings — ever.

Under $150K
$99
$150K–$250K
$149
$250K–$400K
$199
$400K–$600K
$249
Over $600K
$299
15% OFF Add 2 or more properties and save 15% on the total. No contingency fee on savings.

What Throckmorton County homeowners ask us.

What is Throckmorton CAD and how does it affect my taxes?
Throckmorton CAD — the Throckmorton Central Appraisal District — is the agency responsible for appraising all property in Throckmorton County for ad valorem tax purposes. Every year, Throckmorton CAD sets your property's assessed value, which your city, school district, and county then use to calculate your tax bill. Your Notice of Appraised Value comes from Throckmorton CAD. If that value is too high, a formal protest is the only way to correct it. We file and represent that protest on your behalf.
What's the deadline to file a protest?
The statutory protest deadline in Texas is May 15, 2026, or 30 days after your Notice of Appraised Value — whichever is later. Sign up before that date and we handle the filing. Earlier sign-ups give us more time to build the strongest case for your property.
Is there a contingency fee if my value gets reduced?
No. Our fee is flat — based on your notice value, not your savings. You pay once and that's it, regardless of the outcome. On a typical $5,000 value reduction, a contingency firm at 25% would take $28.75 or more from your first-year savings. We take $199. On a $50,000 reduction at $1,150 in annual savings, a contingency firm takes $288+. We still take $199.
What evidence does Texas Tax Lock use to argue my value?
We use two primary approaches: comparable sales analysis — recent sales of similar properties in your area that support a lower value — and unequal appraisal, which shows that similar homes in your area are assessed lower than yours on a per-square-foot basis. Texas law requires the appraisal district to correct unequal appraisals. We pull data directly from the CAD's own records and market databases, so the evidence is grounded in the same sources the district uses.
Do I need to attend any hearings?
No. As your appointed agent, we handle all communications, negotiations, and appearances with the appraisal district and the Appraisal Review Board on your behalf. You don't appear, call in, or prepare anything. We notify you when the process is complete and tell you the final result.
How long does the protest process take?
Informal negotiations typically run from late spring through early summer, often resolving by June or July. If a case proceeds to a formal ARB hearing, the timeline can extend into late summer or early fall. The appraisal district controls the schedule; we move as fast as they allow. You'll hear from us when there's a result.
Can I protest multiple properties?
Yes — add as many properties as you own in the signup form. Two or more properties automatically qualify for a 15% discount on the total. We file and represent each property separately with the appropriate appraisal district.
What makes protesting with Throckmorton CAD different from other Texas counties?
Throckmorton CAD is one of the most experienced and well-resourced appraisal districts in the state. They have a staffed informal hearing process where evidence-based cases are reviewed before reaching the ARB. This means a strong comparable-sales or unequal-appraisal argument often resolves at the informal stage — no formal hearing needed. Our team knows what Throckmorton CAD reviewers respond to and how to build cases that move quickly through their process.
Deadline · May 15, 2026

Ready to protest your Throckmorton County taxes?

Sign up in under 2 minutes. Deadline is May 15, 2026. We handle everything from here.

Start My Protest — Throckmorton County

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