Texas County Appraisal District Online Filing Portals
Most Texas property tax protests are filed online through your county's CAD portal. You'll need the PIN from your Notice of Appraised Value to access the portal.
Texas County Filing Portals
| County | Appraisal District | Portal | Notes | Last Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bexar County | Bexar Central Appraisal District | File online | PIN not available by phone; upload within 7 days | |
| Dallas County | Dallas Central Appraisal District | File online | Open April 15–May 15; upload evidence during filing (uFile) | |
| Harris County | Harris Central Appraisal District | File online | iFile + iSettle online settlement; 5-day post-submission upload window | |
| Tarrant County | Tarrant Appraisal District | File online | Online Value Negotiation Tool; PIN from notice |
For all 254 Texas counties, find your county's appraisal district and portal at the Texas Comptroller county directory.
Filing by mail or in person? Download Form 50-132 from the Texas Comptroller.
Texas Property Tax Protest — Frequently Asked Questions
How do I file a Harris County property tax protest online with HCAD iFile?
Harris County owners file online through HCAD's iFile system: use the iFile number printed on your notice of appraised value to submit your Notice of Protest electronically at the appraisal district's online filing site before the May 15 deadline.
Harris County, the largest appraisal district in Texas, runs an electronic filing system called iFile that lets you protest from home.
What iFile is. iFile is the Harris Central Appraisal District (HCAD) online tool for filing your Notice of Protest electronically instead of mailing Form 50-132. HCAD describes iFile and its companion iSettle on its online services pages. The electronic filing portal is hosted at owners.hcad.org and reached through the ONLINE SERVICES menu on hcad.org.
What you need. Your iFile number (sometimes called an online PIN) is printed on your HCAD notice of appraised value, along with your account number. You'll need both to start.
How to file: 1. Locate your account on hcad.org or go to the electronic filing site. 2. Enter your iFile number and account number to authenticate. 3. Select your grounds — for a home, typically both value over market and unequal appraisal (the equal-and-uniform ground under Tex. Tax Code §41.43). 4. Enter your opinion of value if you want to be considered for iSettle (HCAD's online settlement option). 5. Request the district's evidence so you receive HCAD's data at least 14 days before any hearing under Tex. Tax Code §41.461. 6. Submit and save your confirmation as proof of timely filing.
Deadline. File by May 15 or within 30 days of your notice's delivery, whichever is later, per Tex. Tax Code §41.44. HCAD's iFile system is generally open during the protest season once notices mail.
After you file. HCAD may extend an iSettle offer (an online settlement), schedule an informal review, or set an ARB hearing. You can accept a reasonable iSettle/informal offer or proceed to the Appraisal Review Board if it's too low. Upload or bring your comparable-sales and equal-and-uniform evidence either way. Verify the current portal link and deadlines on HCAD's site each season, as the appraisal district periodically updates its online tools.
How do I file a Dallas County property tax protest online with DCAD uFile?
Dallas County owners file online through DCAD's uFile system: search your account on the appraisal district's website, click the Online Protest link, and submit your protest and evidence electronically before the May 15 deadline.
Dallas County uses an online protest and settlement system called uFile to let homeowners protest and submit evidence electronically.
What uFile is. uFile is the Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD) online protest and settlement program. DCAD's uFile help explains that you search for your property using the Search Appraisal function, open your property's page, and click the Online Protest link to file. DCAD encourages owners to file and submit evidence through uFile because it streamlines the appraisal staff's settlement review.
When it opens. DCAD typically brings uFile online in mid-April each protest season (around April 15), once notices of appraised value have mailed.
How to file: 1. Search your account at dallascad.org using the property search. 2. Open your property page and click Online Protest / uFile. 3. Authenticate with the information DCAD requests (account details from your notice). 4. Select your grounds — for a home, typically both value over market and unequal appraisal under Tex. Tax Code §41.43. 5. Upload your evidence — comparable sales, an equal-and-uniform comparison, photos, repair estimates — directly through uFile. 6. Request the district's evidence so DCAD provides its data at least 14 days before any hearing under Tex. Tax Code §41.461. 7. Submit and keep your confirmation.
Deadline. File by May 15 or within 30 days of your notice's delivery, whichever is later, per Tex. Tax Code §41.44.
After you file. Through uFile, DCAD may propose an online settlement value you can accept, or schedule an informal review and/or a formal Appraisal Review Board hearing under Tex. Tax Code §41.45. Accept a fair settlement or proceed to the ARB with your evidence. Verify the current uFile link and open date on DCAD's site each season, since the appraisal district updates its online system annually.
How do I protest my Tarrant County property taxes online through the TAD portal?
Tarrant County owners protest through the Tarrant Appraisal District online portal: create a dashboard account using the Online PIN on your value notice, file your protest, and use TAD's online value-negotiation tool to seek a reduction before the May 15 deadline.
Tarrant County runs its protests through the Tarrant Appraisal District (TAD) online portal, which pairs electronic filing with an automated value-negotiation tool.
What the portal is. The Tarrant Appraisal District provides an online dashboard where Tarrant County owners file protests and access value-negotiation features. TAD describes the portal and account setup on its new-portal page: you create a dashboard account using the Online PIN found on your notice of appraised value.
How to file: 1. Create or log in to your TAD dashboard account using the Online PIN from your value notice. 2. Start a protest for your property through the dashboard. 3. Select your grounds — for a home, typically both value over market and unequal appraisal under Tex. Tax Code §41.43. 4. Use TAD's online value-negotiation tool, which weighs sale comps, equity (equal-and-uniform) comps, your subject sale price if available, and your input to offer a reduction if the data supports one. 5. Request the district's evidence so TAD provides its data at least 14 days before any hearing under Tex. Tax Code §41.461. 6. Submit and save confirmation.
The online negotiation tool. TAD's tool is an informal-settlement channel: if it offers a reduction you find acceptable, you can resolve the protest online without a hearing. If the offer is too small — or the tool can't reduce your value — you keep your right to a formal Appraisal Review Board hearing under Tex. Tax Code §41.45.
Deadline. File by May 15 or within 30 days of your notice's delivery, whichever is later, per Tex. Tax Code §41.44.
Tip: before accepting an online offer, compare it against your own comparable-sales and equal-and-uniform evidence. A tool-generated reduction is convenient, but if you have strong comps the ARB may go further. Confirm the current portal link and account-setup steps on TAD's site each season, since the appraisal district has re-platformed its portal in recent years.
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