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Fresno County · CaliforniaAppeal Your Fresno County Property Tax.
The Fresno County Assessor's office in Fresno values every property on California's January 1 lien date. When that assessed value overshoots the market, you have two tools: an informal Prop 8 decline in value review with the assessor, or a formal Assessment Appeals Board filing with the Clerk of the Board.
Fresno County Assessor
Source: California State Board of Equalization county directory.
Fresno County Prop 8 Filing Steps
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Check if your property qualifies
Run your address or APN through vulorean.com to see if your assessed value exceeds current market value as of January 1. If it does, you have a viable Prop 8 claim.
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Get your Vulorean valuation report
The report produces a market value opinion as of the January 1 lien date and includes comparable sales. Choose DIY (you file using the report) or Concierge (Vulorean handles everything from here).
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Contact the Assessor to file your informal review
Fresno has no dedicated online Prop 8 e-form — reviews are initiated by contacting the Assessor directly.
DIY Call or email the Assessor and submit your Vulorean report as supporting documentation.Concierge Your Vulorean rep contacts the Assessor and handles the submission on your behalf.- Assessor info: fresnocountyca.gov/Departments/Assessor/Real-Property
- Assessor phone: (559) 600-3534
- Assessor office: 2281 Tulare Street, Room 201, Fresno, CA 93721
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Await assessor response
DIY If approved, your reduced value is reflected on your tax bill and reviewed annually. Note: Fresno uses automated mass review models — a Vulorean report with property-specific comps strengthens your case significantly.Concierge Your Vulorean rep monitors the response and keeps you informed. -
Formal appeal if denied
DIY File an Application for Changed Assessment (BOE-305-AH) with the Fresno County Clerk of the Board between July 2 and November 30. File in parallel with step 3 to protect your rights.Concierge Your Vulorean rep handles the appeal filing on your behalf.- Appeals info / Assessor forms: fresnocountyca.gov/Departments/Assessor/Forms
Fresno County reminder: California's Prop 13 caps annual taxable value growth at 2%, so a successful appeal keeps paying dividends every year your market value sits below the Prop 13 base. Prop 8 is the complement. It lets you capture temporary market dips. Both paths run through the Fresno County Assessor in Fresno.
When You Probably Qualify for a Fresno County Reduction
- Your current assessed value is above recent sales of comparable homes in Fresno County
- You bought in Fresno County in the last 12 months below the county's assessed value
- Your Fresno Assessor parcel record has errors, wrong square footage, added features that don't exist, or incorrect grade
- Your home has unrepaired damage, structural issues, foundation settling, or major deferred maintenance
- Your neighborhood's market softened but the Fresno Assessor hasn't adjusted
Fresno County Appeal Package · $50 Flat
We pull your Fresno County Assessor record, build comparable sales, and produce a filing ready BOE-305-AH appeal in 48 hours. You keep 100% of the savings.
Start My Fresno County Appeal →Fresno County Property Tax FAQ
When does Fresno County mail assessment notices?
California counties, including Fresno, typically mail notices in June or July. Your window to file BOE-305-AH opens July 2 and closes either September 15 or November 30 depending on the county's Clerk of the Board schedule. Confirm with the Fresno Clerk's office.
Do I have to use an attorney?
No. The California Assessment Appeals Board is designed for pro se homeowners. Filing BOE-305-AH is a two page form and hearings are informal. Most Fresno County homeowners file and represent themselves.
Will my Fresno County taxes go up if I appeal?
No. California appeal outcomes at the Assessment Appeals Board are strictly reductions or no change. Prop 13 caps assessed value growth at 2% per year regardless.
Is Prop 8 the same as Prop 13?
No. Prop 13 is the base year rule that caps annual assessment growth. Prop 8 is the companion rule that lets the assessor (or you) temporarily drop your value below the Prop 13 base when the market falls. When the market recovers, your value can rise back up to the Prop 13 cap, but not above it.