Homeowner Guide

Got a Letter From Homespring? Here Is How It Works

Why You Got a Letter

Property assessment records are public. Homespring reviews them to find homes that may be over-assessed, and then it lets those homeowners know they might be able to lower their property taxes. Your letter is a legitimate piece of outreach from a real company. It is not a bill, and it is not an obligation. Finding out whether your home is over-assessed costs nothing, and a fee only applies if Homespring actually lowers your taxes.

How Homespring Works

  • Homespring analyzes hundreds of data points to build your case, files a formal appeal with your county on your behalf, and represents you at the hearing if one is scheduled.
  • You never pay anything before you see savings. The fee is 25% of your first-year savings, and it applies only when your taxes actually go down.
  • You can confirm any appeal Homespring files directly with your county.
  • You can always appeal on your own for free. Homespring is for homeowners who would rather have it handled.

Doing It Yourself Versus Using Homespring

You can appeal your property taxes on your own, the same way you can file your own income taxes. Most people still use TurboTax or a CPA, because the right expertise saves time and usually leads to a better result. Homespring does the same for your property taxes, handling the evidence, the filing, and the hearing for you, at a scale a single homeowner cannot match. You only pay if your bill actually goes down.

Property tax scams are real, and they tend to ask for payment up front while delivering nothing you can check. Homespring works the opposite way. There is no upfront fee, and any reduction is recorded in the official portal for your jurisdiction, so you can verify the savings yourself.

Ready to Lower Your Property Taxes?

No upfront cost. You only pay if we save you money.

Check Your Savings