Print this Page Improper Use of Cap Rates Proves Costly
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Developing a capitalization rate for tax assessment purposes seems like
a relatively simple task. Using the market extraction approach, the one
most commonly employed by assessors and appraisers, a property's net
operating income (NOI) is divided by the sale price to extract a cap
rate. Sounds simple, right? While the math offers no challenge, the
proper application of this method for tax assessment purposes presents
a quite complex problem. What's so complicated? Effects of improper methods |
Your property, on the other hand, has above-market rental rates and long-term leases with national tenants who have outstanding credit. As you investigate the 9% cap rate, you discover that one of the assessor's comparables sold for $5 million and produced $450,000 NOI. The assessor divided that income by the sales price and derived a cap rate of 9%. Additional research, however, reveals that the property had below-market leases that were about to expire. Further, when you adjust the property leases to market rates, the comparable creates at least a $500,000 NOI. This $500,000 is divided by the $5 million sales price, yielding a 10% cap rate, rather than the 9% rate developed by the assessor. By applying the 10% cap rate to your property's income of $1.25 million, the assessed value would be $12.5 million. As the accompanying chart shows, you'd cut your property tax assessment by just over $1.4 million. In developing property tax assessments, assessors too often rely on the extraction method and its simple math to generate what they see as a correct cap rate. In fact, the proper extraction and application of a cap rate is a complex calculation that takes into account many factors to provide taxpayers with fair and equitable valuations of their properties. By understanding all the factors used in developing your cap rate, you can avoid excessive property taxes. |
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Mark Hutcheson is a partner with the Austin, Texas law firm of Popp, Gray & Hutcheson. The firm devotes its practice to the representation of taxpayers in property tax disputes and is the Texas member of the American Property Tax Counsel (APTC), the national affiliation of property tax attorneys. Mr. Hutcheson can be reached at mark@property-tax.com. |
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