$1,000 saved at 25%
A 25% fee would be $250. The homeowner would keep about $750 before any other costs.
No-upfront-fee appeal help can still be expensive after a successful result. Enter an estimated annual tax savings amount and fee percentage to see the tradeoff in plain English.
This is an educational calculator. It does not estimate whether your appeal will win, what your assessment should be, or whether any provider is right for you.
At 30%, a $2,000 savings result would create a $600 fee. You would keep about $1,400 before any other costs.
Public fee examples show how percentage-of-savings models can turn a successful appeal into a larger invoice as the savings grow. That can be a fair trade for convenience, but homeowners should see the dollar amount before signing.
This page is built for homeowners, advisors, brokers, local reporters, and neighborhood groups who need a simple way to explain the math without turning it into a sales fight.
A 25% fee would be $250. The homeowner would keep about $750 before any other costs.
A 30% fee would be $600. The homeowner would keep about $1,400 before any other costs.
A 35% fee would be $1,750. The homeowner would keep about $3,250 before any other costs.
The calculator uses the savings and percentage entered by the reader. It does not know the provider's contract, appeal year, tax rate, exemptions, billing definition, or refund timing.
Always read the actual agreement before relying on any percentage or fee example.