1. Check your assessment
We compare the County's valuation against Nassau property records, recent sales, and neighborhood assessment patterns to identify possible over-assessment signals.
What FairValue does
FairValue helps Nassau County homeowners check whether their property may be over-assessed, understand the evidence behind the estimate, and choose the right filing path: a DIY evidence pack or full-service grievance support.
We compare the County's valuation against Nassau property records, recent sales, and neighborhood assessment patterns to identify possible over-assessment signals.
We organize comparable sales, equity comparisons, and property-specific facts into a clearer valuation argument that can support a grievance filing.
File yourself with a DIY Evidence Pack, or use full-service support if the estimated savings signal is strong enough to justify done-for-you help.
Instant assessment review for Nassau County homes
DIY Evidence Pack from $99 early bird or $149 regular
Full-service option with $0 upfront and 25% early bird or 30% regular success fee
Built around the 2027 grievance cycle for 2028/29 tax bills
In Nassau County, each assessment roll is a new valuation cycle. A prior reduction may help, but it does not guarantee that your next assessment is still fair. Filing annually helps preserve your opportunity to challenge the current roll before the deadline closes.
The tentative assessment roll is published on January 2, 2027. That new value controls the 2028/29 challenge cycle, even if you filed in a prior year.
Recent sales, comparable homes, and neighborhood equity patterns can shift year to year. Current evidence is usually stronger than relying on last year’s argument.
The next filing deadline has not yet been announced. Once the annual grievance window closes, homeowners generally lose the chance to challenge that year’s assessment.
FairValue organizes your appeal around the facts ARC reviewers need to see: the County's valuation, comparable sales, neighborhood assessment patterns, and property-specific conditions that may support a lower value.
The report compares your home against relevant nearby sales, helping show whether the County's market value is higher than recent evidence supports.
FairValue checks whether similar nearby homes appear assessed more favorably, turning local assessment patterns into a clearer grievance argument.
If your home has documented defects or deferred maintenance, the report can explain why those conditions may reduce value compared with renovated peer properties.
Instead of submitting a loose claim that taxes feel too high, FairValue structures the appeal as a valuation record: what the County says, what the market suggests, how nearby homes compare, and what property-specific facts may justify an adjustment.
Read common filing questionsEvidence pack preview
Nassau County assessment challenge
Explore Nassau property tax appeal opportunities by local area and school district.
These are the questions Nassau homeowners usually ask before deciding whether to file a grievance.
FairValue analyzes Nassau County assessment records, comparable sales, neighborhood equity data, and property details to help homeowners decide whether a property tax grievance is worth filing.
No. In Nassau County, the Assessment Review Commission cannot increase your assessment because you filed a grievance. The result is either a reduction or no change.
No. Homeowners can file through Nassau County ARC themselves. FairValue offers a flat-fee DIY evidence pack and a managed full-service option for owners who want help with the process.
The 2027 filing window begins when the tentative roll is published on January 2, 2027. The current deadline display is Not yet announced.