FairAppeal

The Appeal Process

Is FairAppeal Legit? A Plain Look at the Service Today

FairAppeal Editorial Team · February 10, 2025 · 4 min read

FairAppeal is a contingency-based property tax appeal service. Here is how the fee works, who handles the case, and what happens if there is no reduction.

A homeowner who finds FairAppeal after a high assessment has a fair first question: is this real? FairAppeal is a legitimate property tax appeal service built around a simple contingency promise: no upfront cost, FairAppeal handles the case, and you owe nothing if the appeal does not reduce your tax.

Is FairAppeal legit for property tax appeals?

FairAppeal exists for one narrow job: helping homeowners pursue a property tax appeal when their assessed value may be too high. The service is not a tax-rate protest, a loan, or a subscription that charges before anything happens. It is tied to the formal assessment appeal system that local governments already use.

The International Association of Assessing Officers' Standard on Assessment Appeal describes appeals as a normal part of assessment administration, not a loophole or a private workaround. Fair Appeal works inside that channel on behalf of the homeowner.

What does FairAppeal actually do for the homeowner?

FairAppeal reviews the property, decides whether to file, and handles the full appeal when the case moves forward. That is the part many homeowners are really asking about when they search "legit." The product is not advice that leaves the owner with the work. It is representation through the property tax appeal process.

That matters because the cost of a wrong assessment is not abstract. A value that sits too high can flow into the bill again and again. FairAppeal manages the case through resolution and keeps monitoring assessments every year, so the homeowner is not left treating one notice as a one-time paperwork problem.

How does the FairAppeal contingency fee work?

There are no upfront costs. If FairAppeal files and the appeal reduces the homeowner's tax, the fee is a percentage of first-year tax savings. If FairAppeal does not file, or if the appeal does not succeed, the homeowner owes nothing.

That fee structure is the easiest way to understand the service. FairAppeal makes money only from a property tax reduction, so the offer is tied to the same result the homeowner wants: a lower tax bill. The exact bill impact depends on local tax rules and how the local office applies the reduction.

What happens if there is no tax reduction?

If there is no tax reduction, there is no success fee. If the review does not lead to a filing, there is no success fee either. The homeowner is not paying for a look, a portal, or a report that never becomes savings.

When an appeal does reduce taxes, the result may show up differently depending on how the homeowner pays and how the local tax office processes the change. It can mean a lower bill, a refund, or a credit on a future bill. The fee, when it applies, remains tied to first-year tax savings.

See if your home is overassessed

FairAppeal reviews your property and files the appeal if it makes sense. No upfront cost, and we monitor your assessment every year going forward.