Orange County guides
How to appeal your property taxes in Orange County, Florida
If the Orange County Property Appraiser's estimate of your home's value is higher than what it would actually sell for, you may be paying more property tax than you should. Florida gives every owner the right to challenge that estimate before the Orange County Value Adjustment Board — but only inside a short window each year. Here's the whole process, in plain English.
First: is your Orange County home actually over-assessed?
Before you spend time on forms, run the free check — enter your address and see whether your assessment looks out of line with the market. Estimates, not guarantees.
Run my free checkHow Orange County assesses your home
Every year, the Orange County Property Appraiser estimates what your home was worth on January 1 — Florida calls this the just value, and it's effectively the county's opinion of your home's market value. Your tax bill is then built from three numbers:
- Just value — the county's market-value estimate. This is the number an appeal challenges.
- Assessed value — just value minus any assessment caps. For homesteaded homes, the Save Our Homes cap limits annual increases to 3% or CPI, whichever is lower.
- Taxable value — assessed value minus exemptions (like the homestead exemption). Your millage rates apply to this number.
Tax rates in Orange County vary by municipality — Abatero maintains verified per-city millage tables for Orange County, so the savings estimate in your free check uses your city's actual combined rate.
Mass appraisal is exactly that — mass. The county values every parcel on its roll with statistical models, and individual homes get over-valued: wrong square footage, ignored condition issues, or comparable sales that don't actually compare. That's what the appeal process exists to fix. See Is my Orange County assessment too high? for how to spot it.
The Value Adjustment Board — who actually hears your appeal
Your appeal doesn't go to the Property Appraiser — it goes to the Orange County Value Adjustment Board, an independent board established by Florida law (Fla. Stat. ch. 194) in every county. In counties with 75,000 or more residents, Florida law requires the VAB to appoint special magistrates — state-certified appraisers for value petitions — to hear cases and weigh your evidence against the county's (Fla. Stat. §194.035); in smaller counties the board itself may hear petitions.
The petition itself is Form DR-486, the same statewide form in all 67 Florida counties, filed with the Orange County VAB clerk (the board is administered from Orlando). Orange County also operates an electronic VAB filing portal, so most owners can file online rather than by mail — check the clerk's website for the current e-filing option.
Filing comes with a small statutory fee — typically $15 for the first parcel (Fla. Stat. §194.013). Confirm the current amount and accepted payment methods with the Orange County VAB clerk before you file.
The 2026 timeline and deadline in Orange County
The clock is the most unforgiving part of a Florida appeal. In August, the Orange County Property Appraiser mails every owner a TRIM notice (Truth in Millage — the “Notice of Proposed Property Taxes”). From the date that notice is mailed, you generally have 25 days to file your petition (Fla. Stat. §194.011(3)). Miss it, and you typically wait a full year for another chance.
Orange County — 2026 appeal window
- TRIM notices mail (estimated): August 18, 2026
- VAB petition deadline (estimated): September 12, 2026 — 25 days after the TRIM mailing (Fla. Stat. §194.011(3))
Estimated — your county has not yet published the official date. Check your TRIM notice when it arrives (typically mid-to-late August) for the exact filing deadline.
For the full breakdown — what the TRIM notice contains, how the clock is counted, and what to do the day it arrives — see the Orange County TRIM notice & deadline guide.
Step by step: filing your appeal
- 1
Check whether you're actually over-assessed
Compare the county's just value to what similar Orange County homes have actually sold for. Abatero's free check does this in under 60 seconds using the county's own assessment roll and recent comparable sales.
Run your free check - 2
Watch for your TRIM notice in August
The deadline printed on it is the one date that matters. Note it the day the notice arrives.
- 3
Build your evidence
Strong residential appeals rest on comparable sales — similar homes, near yours, sold close to January 1 — adjusted for differences in size, condition, and features. Photos of condition problems and documentation of errors in the county's property record help too.
- 4
File the DR-486 with the VAB clerk before the deadline
Submit the completed petition and the filing fee (typically $15 — confirm with the clerk) through the county's e-filing portal, by mail, or in person. Keep proof of timely filing.
- 5
Present your case at the hearing
You'll get a hearing date — typically fall or winter. The hearing is informal: a special magistrate (or, in smaller counties, the board) hears both sides, and the burden of proof is on you, the petitioner (Fla. Stat. §194.301). If the evidence shows your just value is too high, it gets reduced and your bill is recalculated.
Is appealing worth it?
It depends on two things: how far the county's value is above the market, and whether a reduction actually flows through to your bill. For recently purchased homes and non-homestead properties, assessed value usually tracks just value closely — a successful appeal translates directly into savings. For long-held homesteaded homes, the Save Our Homes cap may already be doing the work, and an appeal only pays off if the market value falls below your capped assessed value.
That math is exactly what the free check runs for your address — including the homestead/Save Our Homes logic — before showing an estimated saving. Every savings figure is an estimate, not a guarantee; the VAB decides the outcome, and the burden of proof is on the petitioner.
If the numbers look good, you have three paths: file entirely on your own (free, beyond the filing fee), use Abatero's DIY packet — we build the petition draft and comparable-sales evidence, you file it — or done-for-you at 30% of first-year savings, no win, no fee.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I appeal my property taxes in Orange County?
- You file Form DR-486 (the statewide Florida petition) with the clerk of the Orange County Value Adjustment Board within 25 days of the date your TRIM notice is mailed (Fla. Stat. §194.011(3)), pay the small statutory filing fee (typically $15 — confirm the current amount with the VAB clerk), and present evidence — usually comparable sales — that your assessed just value is higher than your home's actual market value as of January 1.
- What is the deadline to appeal in Orange County?
- Generally 25 days after Orange County mails its TRIM notice. For 2026, the TRIM mailing is estimated around August 18, 2026, which would put the petition deadline around September 12, 2026 — these are estimates until the county publishes its official date. The exact deadline is printed on your TRIM notice; that date controls.
- How much does it cost to appeal in Orange County?
- Florida law sets a small petition filing fee — typically $15 for the first parcel (Fla. Stat. §194.013); confirm the current amount with the Orange County VAB clerk. Beyond the fee, you can file yourself for free, use Abatero's DIY packet for a flat fee, or use our done-for-you service at 30% of first-year savings — no win, no fee.
- Do I need a lawyer to appeal my assessment in Orange County?
- No — Florida's VAB process is an administrative proceeding, and property owners can file and present their own petitions. Abatero is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice; if your situation involves a legal dispute, consult an attorney.
- Will appealing lower my taxes if I have a homestead exemption?
- Not always. If you've owned your homesteaded Orange County home for years, the Save Our Homes cap may already hold your assessed value well below the county's market estimate — in that case a reduction in just value only saves money if the new value falls below your capped assessed value. The free check accounts for this before estimating savings, and all savings figures are estimates, not guarantees.
More on Orange County
- Orange County property taxes — overview
- Orange County TRIM notice & petition deadline
- Is my Orange County assessment too high?
Other Florida counties
See if your Orange County assessment is too high
Free, under 60 seconds, no obligation. If there's a case, we'll show you the estimated savings — estimates, not guarantees.
Check my home — freeAbatero is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Abatero is not affiliated with, or endorsed by, Orange County, the Orange County Property Appraiser, or the Orange County Value Adjustment Board.
All savings figures are estimates, not guarantees — no one can promise your assessment will be reduced. Deadline dates and filing fees shown on this page are estimates based on Florida statute and prior-year county data; always confirm the exact deadline and fee on your TRIM notice and with the Orange County VAB clerk before filing.