What your result means
Rank is ordered by appraised value per square foot among similar homes. Lower rank means lower appraisals. Higher rank means more comparable homes sit below you, which can point to unequal appraisal.
NEIGHBOR COMPARE
#1 of similar homes
Lowest appraised among the similar homes we found nearby.
Middle of the group
Around the neighborhood median for homes like yours.
Last in the group
Highest appraised among the similar homes we found nearby.
How Neighbor Compare works
The point of this page is to answer a narrow question extremely well: how does your appraisal compare with similar nearby homes? That gives homeowners a fast way to see whether they look low, middle, or high inside their own neighborhood market.
Rank is ordered by appraised value per square foot among similar homes. Lower rank means lower appraisals. Higher rank means more comparable homes sit below you, which can point to unequal appraisal.
The tool focuses on nearby homes with similar size, age, and land characteristics. That keeps the comparison tied to the same neighborhood economics instead of mixing in unrelated properties from across San Antonio.
A median hides the spread below and above your home. The chart on this page matters because it shows whether several similar homes are still assessed lower than yours even when your home sits near the middle.
Mid-ranked homes can still support a protest when lower-assessed comparable homes exist, when market sales undercut the county value, or when property condition and land factors were not reflected correctly.
If the tool shows your appraisal is high for the neighborhood, that strengthens the unequal appraisal angle. If it shows you are closer to the middle, the next step is still to review market value, record errors, land value, and condition evidence before deciding whether to protest.
Common questions about Neighbor Compare and property tax protests in Bexar County, Texas.
Savings depend on how overassessed your property is, but Bexar County homeowners commonly save hundreds to thousands of dollars per year. Your Neighbor Compare result above shows how your assessment compares — the higher your rank, the stronger your case and the more you could save.
May 15, or 30 days after you receive your notice of appraised value, whichever is later. Sign up early so we have time to build the strongest possible case with comparable sales and equity evidence.
40% of your first-year tax savings. Nothing upfront, no retainer, no hourly fees. You only pay when we actually reduce your tax bill. No reduction means no cost to you.
Nothing. Your assessed value cannot increase as a result of filing a protest — it's 100% risk-free under Texas law. And since we work on contingency, you owe us nothing if we don't save you money.
Yes. Texas law allows you to protest your property tax assessment every year. We recommend protesting annually — BCAD raises values aggressively, and consistent challenges keep your assessment in check.
No. Bexar County Appraisal District must value your property using systematic methods based on market data, not social media activity.
Here's why you're protected:
Your property is valued as of January 1 each year using market data from comparable home sales. What you post online has no legal role in that appraisal.
Legal note: The information provided here is for educational purposes and is based on Texas property tax law. This is not legal advice. Every property tax case is unique. For specific questions about your property, start your protest and we'll handle everything for you.
For more property tax questions, visit our FAQ page.