Senior Citizen Homestead Exemption – Homeowners age 65 or older and living in their own home could be entitled to an additional homestead exemption. The homeowner should sign up for this exemption during the year in which he or she will turn 65. You will receive a renewal every year around January 1st.
Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption The maximum amount of the reduction in equalized assessed value is $8,000 in Cook County and counties contiguous to Cook County or $5,000 in all other counties.
Exemption forms may be filed online, or you can obtain one by calling one of the Assessor's Office locations or your local township assessor. Do I have to apply every year? No. Once you apply, the Homeowner Exemption will renew automatically in subsequent years as long as your residency remains the same.
For the 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 property tax years, Homeowners Exemption savings are equal to $10,000 multiplied by the homeowner's property tax rate. The exemption is prorated for newly constructed homes that are not ready for occupancy until sometime after January 1.
In order to qualify for a property tax exemption, your organization must be exclusively beneficent and charitable, religious, educational, or governmental and own the property that is used exclusively for charitable, religious, educational, or governmental purposes and not leased or used for profit.
Cook County property tax officials announced today that second installment property tax bills for Tax Year 2023 will be available to property owners by July 2, 2024. Nearly 1.8 million tax bills will be accessible online and mailed out in early July, with a due date of August 1, 2024.
The Homeowner Exemption reduces the Equalized Assessed Value (EAV) of a property by $10,000.
To receive the Senior Citizen Homestead Exemption, the applicant must have owned and occupied the property as of January 1 and must have been 65 years of age or older during the tax year in question.