Frisco Property Taxes
How Much Are Property Taxes in Frisco, TX?
The combined 2026 rate is about 1.6755%, roughly 1.68% of assessed value, before any exemption is applied. Here is what that means in real dollars, how the homestead exemption actually lowers your bill, where new and relocating buyers get caught off guard, and how to protest your appraisal if it is wrong.
Every relocating buyer we work with, especially the California and Canadian families who make up a large share of our clientele, asks some version of the same question the week they go under contract: why is the property tax bill so much bigger than what they were paying at home. The honest answer is that Texas has no state income tax, so property taxes carry more of the load for cities, counties, and schools than they do almost anywhere else, and Collin County’s total effective rate is among the higher ones in the state as fast-growing suburban districts fund new schools and infrastructure (Texas Real Estate Research Center, 2026; Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Property Tax Basics).
That trade-off is real, but it is also predictable and manageable once you understand three things: the actual combined rate, how the homestead exemption changes what you pay versus what a buyer sees on day one, and what recourse you have if the county’s appraised value is wrong. This guide covers all three, plus the price-tier math so you can see your real number, not a rounded estimate.
What is Frisco’s combined 2026 property tax rate?
Frisco property owners do not pay one tax bill to one entity. The county appraisal district sets your property’s value, and then four separate taxing units each apply their own rate against that value: the City of Frisco, Collin County, Collin College, and Frisco Independent School District. For fiscal year 2026, that combined rate lands at approximately 1.6755 per $100 of assessed value, roughly 1.68%, before any exemption is applied (City of Frisco, FY2026). We covered the full line-item breakdown by taxing entity in our Frisco home value guide, so we will not repeat that table here. What matters for this guide is what that rate actually costs you, how much of it you can legally reduce, and where the number surprises people who are new to Texas.
School district taxes are the largest single piece of that combined rate by a wide margin, funding Frisco ISD’s classrooms, teachers, and facilities as the district continues to grow. That is also the piece most affected by the exemptions covered in the next section, because Texas law requires school districts specifically to grant the largest mandatory homestead exemption in the state (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Tax Code Section 11.13).
The honest version: Texas trades a lower overall tax burden, no state income tax, moderate sales tax, for a property tax bill that looks larger in isolation than what many relocating buyers are used to seeing. Compared against total tax burden rather than one line item, Texas residents come out ahead of most states (Texas Real Estate Research Center, 2026), and Frisco’s own combined rate, about 1.6755 per $100 of assessed value, is the concrete number that actually determines your bill once you look past the headline comparison.
Relocating to Frisco?
Get the real monthly number before you write an offer
Call the Kaitlin Lovern Team at 214.429.4907 for a true payment estimate, taxes and insurance included, before you fall in love with a house you have not fully priced out.
How much does the homestead exemption actually save you, and why is it not automatic?
The homestead exemption is the single most misunderstood piece of the Texas property tax system, and it is the one that costs new owners real money when they miss it. A homestead exemption reduces the taxable value of your primary residence before any tax rate is applied to it. It is not automatic. You have to file for it, and until you do, you are taxed as if the exemption does not exist (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Residence Homestead Exemptions).
What it is worth
State law requires every Texas school district to grant a mandatory $140,000 exemption off your home’s assessed value for school tax purposes, which is the largest piece of your bill (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Tax Code Section 11.13(b)). On top of that, Frisco’s city council raised its own local homestead exemption to 20% of assessed value, the maximum the state allows, effective for the 2026 tax year, up from 15% previously (City of Frisco, June 2025 council action). Homeowners who are 65 or older, or who have a qualifying disability, receive an additional exemption on top of the general one, $60,000 more off school taxes and $80,000 off Frisco’s city taxes specifically, plus in many cases a tax ceiling that freezes the school portion of the bill at its current dollar amount going forward (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Tax Code Section 11.13(c); City of Frisco, FY2026).
How to file
You apply through the Collin Central Appraisal District, not the tax office, using Form 50-114. There is no fee. The standard window is January 1 through April 30 of the tax year, but if you close later in the year, you generally have up to two years from your qualifying date to file, so a late file is not a lost cause, it is just lost time (Collin Central Appraisal District, Homestead Exemption FAQs). You do not need to wait for your first tax bill or your first Notice of Appraised Value to apply. File as soon as you close and the home is your primary residence as of January 1 of the tax year you are claiming.
The 10% appraisal cap, and why timing matters
Once your homestead exemption is in place for a full tax year, Texas law caps how much your home’s appraised value can rise in any future year, capped at 10% per year plus the value of any new improvements, regardless of how much market values actually move (Collin Central Appraisal District, Homestead Exemption FAQs). That cap does not start protecting you the moment you buy. It takes effect the second year after your exemption is granted. Every month you delay filing is a month you are not accruing toward that protection, on top of paying more than you should have to in the meantime.
Greatness is demonstrated, not declared. The same is true of your tax bill. File the exemption, do not assume it happened automatically, and verify it shows up on your next statement.
Why relocating and new-construction buyers get caught off guard
We see the same handful of surprises repeat, almost every closing, especially with the California, Canadian, and East Coast families who make up a large share of our relocation business.
No income tax does not mean low taxes overall
Buyers coming from a state with income tax often mentally price Texas as cheaper across the board. It usually is, on total tax burden, but the property tax line item alone is frequently higher in dollar terms than what they paid in a comparable home elsewhere, because Texas shifts more of the funding burden onto property (Texas Real Estate Research Center, 2026). On a Frisco home near $850,000, that combined rate of 1.6755% works out to roughly $14,241 a year before any exemption, a number that surprises far more relocating buyers than it should. We walk every relocating client through the real combined monthly number, taxes and insurance included, before they write an offer, not after.
New construction has no exemption yet, and no tax history to judge by
A newly built Frisco home is appraised based on land value plus a construction estimate the first year, and it carries no homestead exemption until the buyer files one after closing. That means the first full tax bill on a new-construction home is often noticeably higher, in both percentage and dollar terms, than the builder’s estimated payment shown during the sales process, which frequently reflects only the land value or a partial-year proration. Ask your builder’s sales office directly whether their quoted payment includes a full year at the home’s completed, appraised value or a partial-year estimate, and do not treat that number as your steady-state payment until you have filed your own homestead exemption and seen a full tax cycle.
Frisco ISD boundaries do not always match the mailing address
Attendance zones inside Frisco shift periodically as the district manages enrollment and opens new campuses, and a handful of Frisco addresses actually sit in a neighboring ISD depending on exact boundary lines, which changes your effective rate. Always confirm the specific taxing entities tied to a property’s parcel, not just its city name, before you assume a rate applies.
Sellers with a long-held homestead exemption can make a buyer’s first bill look artificially low
If you are buying from a longtime owner whose homestead exemption and 10% cap have been compounding for years, the listing’s current tax bill reflects their exemption, not yours. Your first full year, before your own exemption takes effect, will typically be higher than the number on the seller’s most recent statement, a gap that can run in the range of the roughly $1,980 to $2,450 in annual homestead savings shown later in this guide. We flag this for every buyer client before they get attached to a monthly payment that will not actually be theirs.
First-Time and Relocating Buyers
Do not price a home off the seller’s tax bill
We build every buyer client a real, written monthly payment estimate, current tax rate, your own exemption timeline, and insurance, before you make an offer.
What Frisco homeowners actually pay, by price tier
The combined 1.6755% rate is fixed, but what it costs in real dollars depends entirely on assessed value, and assessed value is not the same as sale price once a homestead exemption and the 10% cap have had time to work. Here is the unexempted annual tax at Frisco’s actual price tiers, plus what a first-year owner-occupant homestead exemption alone (the mandatory $140,000 school exemption plus Frisco’s 20% city exemption) removes from that bill before any other factors.
| Price tier | Annual tax at full assessed value (no exemption) | Approximate first-year owner-occupant savings from the homestead exemption |
|---|---|---|
| Under $700K (≈$650K) | ≈$10,890 | ≈$1,980 |
| $700K – $1.0M (≈$850K) | ≈$14,241 | ≈$2,150 |
| $1.0M+ (≈$1.2M, luxury) | ≈$20,105 | ≈$2,450 |
Unexempted tax is calculated at each tier’s representative assessed value multiplied by the FY2026 combined rate of 1.6755% (City of Frisco, FY2026). Homestead savings apply the mandatory $140,000 school exemption to the Frisco ISD portion of the rate (1.0194 per $100) and the 20% city exemption to the City of Frisco portion (0.425517 per $100), per Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts Tax Code Section 11.13(b) and City of Frisco’s 2026 homestead exemption increase; actual savings vary by exact appraised value and do not include county or college exemptions, which are smaller and vary by taxing unit.
The takeaway: the homestead exemption is worth more in dollar terms as price climbs, because the school district’s rate is applied against a bigger number, but it is worth more proportionally on a lower-priced home, where a couple thousand dollars is a larger share of the total bill. Either way, the gap between what a home is taxed at year one, before your exemption is fully reflected, and what it settles into over a few years under the 10% cap is real money, from about $1,980 a year at the entry tier to about $2,450 at the luxury tier. Do not budget off the unexempted number as a permanent figure, and do not budget off a longtime seller’s exempted number as your own.
Greatness is demonstrated, not declared
Get your real tax and payment number for Frisco
Whether you are buying, selling, or just trying to understand what you actually owe, the Kaitlin Lovern Team will walk you through the real math, not a rounded estimate, for Frisco, Prosper, McKinney, Plano, Celina, Allen, Little Elm, or Flower Mound.
How property taxes affect your mortgage escrow payment
Most Frisco buyers finance their home with a lender who collects property taxes and homeowners insurance as part of the monthly mortgage payment, held in an escrow account and paid out to the county once a year on your behalf. That means your quoted “mortgage payment” is not just principal and interest, it includes roughly one-twelfth of your annual tax bill every month, and that piece is the one most first-time and relocating buyers underestimate when they compare a listing price to what they were paying elsewhere.
Two mechanics matter here. First, lenders typically require an initial escrow cushion at closing, often two to three months of taxes and insurance collected up front, on top of the prorated amount owed to the seller, so your cash-to-close is higher than the down payment and closing costs alone. Second, escrow accounts get reviewed annually, and if your actual tax bill or insurance premium comes in higher than what the lender estimated, your monthly payment adjusts upward the following year to cover the shortfall, plus rebuild the cushion. This is exactly why a new-construction buyer’s first-year payment, based on land value only, often jumps in year two once the home is appraised at its completed value.
The fix is not complicated: ask your preferred lender to model your monthly payment using the property’s likely completed assessed value and the current 1.6755% combined rate, not a builder’s promotional estimate. Our team routes every buyer to a lender who does this modeling before you are under contract, not after your first escrow adjustment notice arrives. Sellers should know this cuts both ways: a buyer’s lender is running this same math against your listing, so an accurate, easy-to-verify tax picture on your seller net sheet keeps their approved payment, and their offer, where it should be.
How does the appraisal and protest process work, step by step?
Your tax bill is your appraised value multiplied by the combined rate, minus exemptions. If the appraised value is wrong, too high relative to what the home would actually sell for, you have a legal right to challenge it, and the process costs nothing to start.
1. Read your Notice of Appraised Value
Collin Central Appraisal District sets your property’s value as of January 1 each year and mails a notice when it changes meaningfully. Read it closely against recent comparable sales in your specific neighborhood, not a citywide average.
2. File your protest by the deadline
The standard deadline is May 15, or 30 days after your notice was mailed, whichever is later (Collin Central Appraisal District, 2026 Property Tax Protest and Appeal Procedures). You can file online through the district’s e-Services portal, by mail, or in person. Texas law does not allow the appraisal district to raise your value as a penalty for protesting, so there is no downside to filing if you believe the number is off.
3. Go through the informal review first
Most protests resolve here. An appraiser reviews your evidence, comparable sales, photos of condition issues, your own closing statement if you bought recently, against the district’s model and often adjusts the value without a formal hearing.
4. Escalate to the Appraisal Review Board if needed
If the informal review does not resolve it, your case goes to a formal hearing before the Appraisal Review Board, a panel of local citizens who hear disputes between property owners and the appraisal district (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Property Tax Basics). Bring your strongest comparable sales and be specific about condition issues the district’s model would not know about.
5. Know your options after the ARB
If you disagree with the ARB’s decision, you have options, though each has its own conditions. You can appeal to district court. You can pursue binding arbitration through the Comptroller’s registry of qualified arbitrators, though arbitration is only available for properties valued at $5,000,000 or less and carries its own filing fee. Or, for properties valued over $1,000,000, you can elect an appeal to the State Office of Administrative Hearings instead of district court, provided you file that election within the required deadline after the ARB’s order (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Property Tax Basics; Texas Tax Code Section 42.225). An attorney or your agent can help you pick the right path for your specific value and timeline.
A seller’s most useful move before listing is simple: pull your own most recent Notice of Appraised Value and compare it honestly against what comparable homes in your neighborhood have actually closed for. If the appraisal is already low relative to market, that is a selling point for your buyer’s future tax picture. If it looks high, fixing it before you list protects your own bill in the meantime, and since filing a protest is free and the standard window runs through April 30, there is no cost to at least checking.
Frequently asked questions
Frisco’s combined fiscal year 2026 property tax rate is about 1.6755 per $100 of assessed value, roughly 1.68%, before any exemption (City of Frisco, FY2026). On a home assessed at $650,000 with no exemption applied, that is about $10,890 a year. A homestead exemption lowers that number meaningfully once it is filed and in effect. Call 214.429.4907 for your home’s exact figure.
No. You must file Form 50-114 with the Collin Central Appraisal District. It is free, and the standard deadline is April 30 of the tax year, though late filing is generally allowed up to two years from your qualifying date (Collin Central Appraisal District, Homestead Exemption FAQs). Nothing is applied until you file it. We remind every buyer client to file the day their deed records, or ask us at kaitlinlovern.com/buy/.
State law requires a mandatory $140,000 exemption off your home’s value for school taxes, the largest piece of your bill, and Frisco’s own city exemption is now 20% of assessed value, the state maximum, as of the 2026 tax year (Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Tax Code Section 11.13(b); City of Frisco, 2026). Combined, that typically saves an owner-occupant somewhere in the range of $1,980 to $2,450 a year depending on price tier, not counting county or college exemptions.
A newly built home has no homestead exemption in place at closing, and the first full tax bill is often based on the home’s completed appraised value rather than a builder’s promotional payment estimate. Filing your exemption immediately after closing, and asking your lender to model taxes at full assessed value rather than a builder quote, avoids the surprise.
Yes. The deadline is generally May 15, or 30 days after your Notice of Appraised Value was mailed, whichever is later (Collin Central Appraisal District, 2026 Property Tax Protest and Appeal Procedures). Texas law prohibits the appraisal district from raising your value as a result of filing a protest, so there is no risk in challenging a number you believe is too high. Book a 30-minute call if you want comparable sales to support your case.
Most lenders collect roughly one-twelfth of your annual property tax bill each month through an escrow account, along with insurance, as part of your total mortgage payment. If your actual tax bill comes in higher than the lender’s original estimate, your payment adjusts upward at the annual escrow review. Ask your lender to model your payment at full assessed value before you make an offer, or start at kaitlinlovern.com/buy/ and we will help you get it right.
Call the Kaitlin Lovern Team at 214.429.4907 for a real written estimate, current rate, your specific exemption timeline, and insurance, before you buy, sell, or protest. Buyers can start at kaitlinlovern.com/buy/ and sellers at kaitlinlovern.com/sell/.
About the author
Kaitlin Lovern
Founder & Lead Realtor · Real Brokerage LLC
Kaitlin Lovern walks every Frisco buyer and seller through the real tax and payment math, not a rounded estimate, before they sign anything. She is ranked in the top 1% of REALTORS® nationwide and is RealTrends Verified (Texas license #0634293). Learn more at kaitlinlovern.com/about, or reach the team at kaitlinlovern.com/contact or 214.429.4907.
Sources: City of Frisco published property tax rates and 2026 homestead exemption increase (FY2026); Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Property Tax Basics and Residence Homestead Exemptions (Tax Code Section 11.13); Collin Central Appraisal District, Homestead Exemption FAQs and 2026 Property Tax Protest and Appeal Procedures; Texas Real Estate Research Center, Texas A&M University (2026).