Montgomery County · Filing window now open

Your commercial property is over-assessed. We'll fix it.

We analyzed 5,067 commercial parcels in Montgomery County PA. 1,605 are over-assessed by 20% or more. If yours is one, we file the appeal, your attorney handles the hearing, you pay us 30% of the first year's savings. $1,000 to start — credited back on a win.

Montgomery County · live

$57.1M in identified first-year tax savings.

Parcels analyzed
5,067
Over-assessed by 20%+
1,605
Median over-assessment
59%
Top single-property savings
$3.14M
Appeal deadline: August 1, 2026. We need 3-4 weeks to prepare — so the realistic window to engage is before mid-July.
The problem

Your 1996 base-year assessment is quietly costing you tens of thousands a year.

Pennsylvania uses a Common Level Ratio to convert old assessed values to current market. When the ratio drifts and your property's income potential declines, you overpay — sometimes for a decade without knowing.

i.

The ratio is 48.5% — most assessments haven't kept up.

Montgomery County's 2026 Common Level Ratio means your assessment should equal roughly 48.5% of current market value. Commercial real estate values have moved; your assessor's records haven't.

ii.

Office and retail were hit hardest.

Post-2020 office vacancy and retail consolidation cut NOI for thousands of PA commercial properties. Assessed values didn't adjust. We find the gap using the income approach — the same method the board of appeals uses.

iii.

Less than 5% of eligible owners file.

The appeal process is intimidating, evidence-heavy, and requires an attorney for LLC-owned property. Most owners don't know they're over-assessed, and those who do don't know where to start.

Start here — free, 2 minutes

Tell us about your property. We'll tell you if it's over-assessed.

We'll pull your parcel from county records, run the income approach, and email you a 1-page report with the gap percentage and first-year savings estimate. No commitment.

We'll respond within 24 hours with your gap estimate. No sales calls unless you ask.

How it works

Five steps. You sign one document. We do the rest.

A Pennsylvania-licensed commercial tax appeal attorney files the formal appeal and represents the LLC at the Board of Assessment hearing — required by state law. We handle everything else.

1

Free property check

Submit your address. We pull county records, run the income approach, send a 1-page report with your gap and savings estimate.

~24 hours
2

Engage — $1,000

If the math works, sign our engagement letter and pay the $1,000 case initiation fee. Fully refundable if we decide not to file.

Day of signing
3

We file before the deadline

We prepare the evidence packet. Our partner attorney reviews, signs, and files the formal appeal with the Board of Assessment Appeals.

Before Aug 1
4

Hearing in the fall

Attorney represents your LLC at a 15-minute hearing. We prepare them with your full evidence package. You don't need to attend.

Oct – Dec
5

You pay 30% of year one savings

When the favorable decision is issued, you pay us 30% of projected year-one savings. Your $1,000 is credited back.

Jan – Feb 2027
Pricing

$1,000 to start. 30% of year one savings. We cover the rest.

The $1,000 is how we pay filing fees, evidence preparation, and attorney retainer. It gets credited back against your contingency on a win.

Case initiation fee
$1,000
one-time, at engagement
County filing fee (paid on your behalf)
Evidence package preparation
Attorney retainer — review, file, represent you at BOA hearing
Credited back against contingency on a win
Fully refunded if we decline your case
Plus contingency
30%
of year-one tax reduction, due 30 days after favorable decision

Optional 20% contingency on years 2 and 3 if the reduction holds.

What happens in each outcome

We win the appeal You get the reduction. We credit the $1,000 back against our 30% cut. Net cost for you = the contingency only (effectively $0 upfront on a win).
We file and lose at BOA No contingency charged. We retain the $1,000 (covers filing fee, evidence prep, attorney time). You owe nothing else.
We decline to take your case Full refund of the $1,000. Some cases don't pencil out and we'll tell you upfront rather than file a losing appeal.
Questions

Honest answers.

Why $1,000 upfront if it's "$0 net on a win"?

Running a commercial tax appeal takes real work before we know the outcome: a $100 county filing fee, 8-12 hours of evidence preparation, and a partner attorney who needs to be retained to review and file. The $1,000 keeps us honest about which cases we take. On a win, you're effectively paying $0 out-of-pocket because we credit the full amount back against our 30% contingency.

Can I appeal without you?

If the property is owned by an individual in their own name — yes, you can file pro se. For LLC-, LP-, or corporate-owned property (most commercial), Pennsylvania law requires an attorney to represent the entity at the Board of Assessment Appeals. You can hire one directly, typically for a $2,500-$5,000 flat retainer. Our model is usually cheaper — we handle the evidence work, our attorney partner is already retained, and you only pay more than the $1,000 if we win.

Who is the attorney?

We work with Pennsylvania-licensed attorneys who specialize in commercial property tax appeals. Each client gets a partner attorney assigned on engagement — we'll introduce you before filing. The attorney is retained by the engagement agreement, so they represent you, not us, at the hearing.

When do I see the reduced tax bill?

Montgomery County commercial appeals filed by August 1, 2026 are typically heard October-December 2026, with decisions issued December 2026-February 2027. Your reduced assessment takes effect for the 2027 tax year. County portion of the reduced bill arrives March 2027; the larger school district portion arrives July 2027.

What if we lose?

At the Board of Assessment Appeals level, appeals have a high settlement rate (typically 60-75% of filed cases see some reduction). If the BOA denies the appeal outright, we can escalate to Court of Common Pleas for a larger case — but that's a separate decision, usually made only when the potential savings exceed $50K/year. If we lose and don't escalate, you owe no contingency. We retain the $1,000 to cover sunk costs.

What about year 2 and year 3?

Reduced assessments typically stay in place until the next county reassessment, which in MontCo happens every 3-5 years. Our engagement letter includes an optional 20% contingency on years 2 and 3 if the reduction holds — which it usually does. You can opt out of that at signing.

How do you actually find over-assessed properties?

We pull the full county assessment roll, cross-reference with current commercial real estate market cap rates and building-level rent benchmarks, and calculate the income-approach market value. When assessed-value-divided-by-CLR is materially higher than the income-approach market, the property is a candidate. The methodology mirrors what the BOA itself applies — we just apply it at scale instead of one parcel at a time.

Is this a tax scheme? A loophole?

No. It's an explicit right granted by Pennsylvania's 72 P.S. § 5350 (the assessment appeal statute). Taxpayers have an annual right to appeal their assessment. We're just making it easier to exercise that right — same as a tax appeal attorney, with more data and better pricing.

The filing window closes August 1. Don't leave tax savings on the table for another year.

Takes 2 minutes to check your property. We'll email your gap estimate within 24 hours — no sales calls unless you ask.

Check my property → Email us directly