Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Buying and Selling RE › Homeowner’s Exemption for Property Taxes
- This topic has 10 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 5 months ago by UCGal.
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June 19, 2009 at 1:59 PM #15915June 19, 2009 at 2:05 PM #417631(former)FormerSanDieganParticipant
The exemption, if it was applied would have been applied to the regular bill, which was probably settled during escrow. The supplemental bill only accounts for the difference.
Just make sure you filled out the form for the homeowner’s exemption.
Either way it’s small potatoes, we’re talking about an exemption of 7000, which amounts to 75-80 bucks a year.June 19, 2009 at 2:05 PM #417865(former)FormerSanDieganParticipantThe exemption, if it was applied would have been applied to the regular bill, which was probably settled during escrow. The supplemental bill only accounts for the difference.
Just make sure you filled out the form for the homeowner’s exemption.
Either way it’s small potatoes, we’re talking about an exemption of 7000, which amounts to 75-80 bucks a year.June 19, 2009 at 2:05 PM #418128(former)FormerSanDieganParticipantThe exemption, if it was applied would have been applied to the regular bill, which was probably settled during escrow. The supplemental bill only accounts for the difference.
Just make sure you filled out the form for the homeowner’s exemption.
Either way it’s small potatoes, we’re talking about an exemption of 7000, which amounts to 75-80 bucks a year.June 19, 2009 at 2:05 PM #418192(former)FormerSanDieganParticipantThe exemption, if it was applied would have been applied to the regular bill, which was probably settled during escrow. The supplemental bill only accounts for the difference.
Just make sure you filled out the form for the homeowner’s exemption.
Either way it’s small potatoes, we’re talking about an exemption of 7000, which amounts to 75-80 bucks a year.June 19, 2009 at 2:05 PM #418353(former)FormerSanDieganParticipantThe exemption, if it was applied would have been applied to the regular bill, which was probably settled during escrow. The supplemental bill only accounts for the difference.
Just make sure you filled out the form for the homeowner’s exemption.
Either way it’s small potatoes, we’re talking about an exemption of 7000, which amounts to 75-80 bucks a year.June 20, 2009 at 7:30 AM #417882UCGalParticipantYou get one homeowners exemption. I assume you have it on your main tax bill, not the supplemental.
When we built our companion unit we got a supplemental tax bill. We can’t claim homeowners exemption on that since we’re claiming it on the main tax bill for our property.
June 20, 2009 at 7:30 AM #418115UCGalParticipantYou get one homeowners exemption. I assume you have it on your main tax bill, not the supplemental.
When we built our companion unit we got a supplemental tax bill. We can’t claim homeowners exemption on that since we’re claiming it on the main tax bill for our property.
June 20, 2009 at 7:30 AM #418377UCGalParticipantYou get one homeowners exemption. I assume you have it on your main tax bill, not the supplemental.
When we built our companion unit we got a supplemental tax bill. We can’t claim homeowners exemption on that since we’re claiming it on the main tax bill for our property.
June 20, 2009 at 7:30 AM #418442UCGalParticipantYou get one homeowners exemption. I assume you have it on your main tax bill, not the supplemental.
When we built our companion unit we got a supplemental tax bill. We can’t claim homeowners exemption on that since we’re claiming it on the main tax bill for our property.
June 20, 2009 at 7:30 AM #418602UCGalParticipantYou get one homeowners exemption. I assume you have it on your main tax bill, not the supplemental.
When we built our companion unit we got a supplemental tax bill. We can’t claim homeowners exemption on that since we’re claiming it on the main tax bill for our property.
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