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Can the PTABOA raise my assessed value if I appeal in Indiana?

Can the PTABOA raise my assessed value if I appeal in Indiana?

Yes — in Indiana the Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals can adjust your value in either direction once you appeal, so it can be lowered, left the same, or raised; file only when comparable-sales evidence clearly supports a lower value.

This is the most important thing to understand before filing in Indiana.

Indiana is a can-increase state. When you appeal, the Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals (PTABOA) reviews the assessment and can lower it, leave it the same, or raise it. The appeal puts the value on the table — it is not a one-way ratchet that can only go down.

What this means for you. File only when the comparable-sales evidence clearly supports a lower value. If your home is assessed at roughly what it would sell for — or below — appealing carries downside risk and little upside.

The appeal framework. The taxpayer appeal process, including the permitted and prohibited claims and how the PTABOA reviews your case, is governed by Ind. Code §6-1.1-15-1.1 and §6-1.1-15-2. The Indiana DLGF explains that an appeal can result in an assessment that increases, decreases, or stays the same.

How a free check helps. The point of checking first is to flag exactly the cases where the data supports a reduction — and to steer you away from filing when it doesn't. You decide whether to file; the evidence is there to inform that decision.

Also asked: can Indiana raise my assessment on appeal · does appealing property taxes Indiana risk increase · PTABOA increase value