Keweenaw County Equalization Department
Keweenaw County Equalization Department
5095 Fourth Street
Eagle River, MI 49950
Jaikob Djerf, MAASO
Equalization Director
equalization@keweenawcountymi.gov
906-337-3471 [Phone]
906-337-2253 [FAX]
Office Hours
Wednesday: 9:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.
Closed legal holidays
Services
The Keweenaw County Equalization Department has the responsibility of ensuring that the county tax assessment practices are equal and uniform throughout the county. The director of the Equalization Department is appointed by the Board of Commissioners. Under guidelines established by the State Tax Commission, the Equalization Department assists the County Board to determine the equalized value of the county. State law requires that all property be assessed at 50% of market value.
The State Equalized Value (SEV) or assessed value of your property is calculated at 50% of the true cash value (fair market value) of the property. For example, let’s say you purchase a property from a friend, who gave you a deal and sold it to you for $70,000, but the property is actually worth $80,000 (market value). Your SEV or assessed value would be $40,000, which is 50% of $80,000, the true cash value. An individual sale price is not always a good indicator of the true cash value of the property due to a variety of reasons such as uninformed buyers or sellers, insufficient marketing time and distressed or family sales. Provided that ownership has not changed or there was no new construction, the taxable value of each parcel of property shall not increase each year by more than the increase in the general price level (inflation rate) or 5 percent, whichever is less, until the ownership of the of the parcel is transferred. When a parcel transfers ownership, the taxable value becomes uncapped. New construction on the property will also increase the taxable value. The taxable value is multiplied by the township millage rate to determine the amount of property tax, which is then levied by the township.
The Equalization Department does not determine individual assessments; that is the sole responsibility of the five townships’ assessors. The equalization process is accomplished using sales and appraisal studies performed on individual properties in each of the six classes of real property (Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial, Residential, Timber Cut-Over and Developmental) and five classes of personal property within each of the townships.
Other department duties include assisting in maintaining names and addresses of property owners in the county, following property transfers, maintaining parcel maps, assisting the general public with questions concerning property and values. The office also assists the townships with laws and procedures in the assessment function.
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