MO Missouri Porch

Assessment appeals

If you appeal, argue value instead of just shock.

Missouri's appeal path starts locally. The first step is usually an informal conversation with the assessor after the assessment notice arrives. If that does not resolve it, the county Board of Equalization is the next local step, and the State Tax Commission can come after that. The Missouri State Tax Commission FAQ lays out the state appeal path in plain official terms.

What evidence helps

The key issue is market value. Photos, recent comparable sales, a recent sale of the property, appraisals, condition problems, square-footage corrections, and record-card errors are more useful than saying taxes are too high.

The deadlines are not all statewide

County informal-review windows and Board of Equalization deadlines vary. The State Tax Commission FAQ says an appeal to the STC is due by September 30 or 30 days after final action of the board, whichever is later. Check the STC appeal filing page before relying on a date.

Missouri-specific watch item

In an odd-numbered reassessment year, do not wait until the tax bill arrives. The appeal work usually needs to begin when the value notice arrives.

Find your next step

Where are you in the process?

Pick your stage to see the next step, the deadline, and the evidence that actually helps. Deadlines vary by county — confirm yours with the county clerk. This is general information, not legal advice.

Where are you right now?

Pick where you are to see the next step and the deadline. The deadlines vary by county — always confirm yours with the county clerk. This is general information, not legal advice.

Evidence that helps

  • Recent closed sales of similar homes (actual sales, not listings)
  • A recent purchase price or closing statement, if you bought lately
  • An appraisal by a licensed appraiser (who must appear to testify)
  • Photos of condition problems plus written repair-cost estimates
  • Record-card errors — wrong square footage, lot size, or features

Not grounds for an appeal

  • “My taxes are too high” — the appeal is about value, not the bill or levy
  • Not being able to afford the taxes
  • Your own opinion of value with nothing to back it up
  • For-sale listings or ads (those are not closed sales)
  • What other homes are assessed at

Helpful next steps

What to check next

A good appeal starts with the right value evidence and the right local deadline.

Sources and review

Where this information comes from

This page gives the short version, then points you back to the office or agency that controls the rule.

Data used
Missouri assessment-appeal statutes (RSMo 137.385 Board of Equalization, 138.430 State Tax Commission) and STC guidance
Last reviewed
June 18, 2026

Use this carefully: Deadlines and forms vary by county — confirm your exact Board of Equalization date with the county clerk. The appeal is about the assessor's value or classification, not the tax bill, and you carry the burden of proof. This is general information, not legal advice.

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