HomeUtahWasatch County
3,240 homes at risk in Wasatch County

40.5% of homes in Wasatch County are overassessed.

Your county is counting on you not checking.

Wasatch County homeowners at 0.60% effective tax rates are losing an estimated $774/year to an overassessment they don't know about. The appeal window opens once a year. Check your address now — it's free.

Free — results in under 10 seconds

Free to check
86% of pre-screened appeals win
Assessment can only go down, never up
Pay only if we save you money
$0 today. Our fee is 25% of your first-year tax savings — billed only on a confirmed reduction.
40.5%
of homes overassessed
$774
avg annual overpayment
$6,966
over your ownership
86%
of pre-screened appeals win

The Wasatch County Property Tax Problem

Wasatch County is a growing Utah county with an average effective property tax rate of 0.60%. Utah requires all taxable property to be assessed at 100% of fair market value under Utah Code § 59-2-103. Residential property receives a 45% exemption on the assessed value before taxes are calculated. But here's the problem: the Wasatch County Board of Assessors is responsible for valuing tens of thousands of properties every year using mass appraisal models that cannot account for the specific condition, improvements, or market dynamics of your individual home.

According to statewide Utah property tax data, roughly 40.5% of residential properties are assessed above their true fair market value — meaning homeowners are legally being charged more than they owe under Utah law. In Wasatch County alone, that's an estimated 3,240 households paying too much right now.

At the county's 0.60% effective rate, every $10,000 of overassessment costs you $60 per year. Over a nine-year median homeownership period, that's $540 lost on just $10,000 of excess assessed value.

About Wasatch County: Utah primary residential property receives 45% residential exemption; notice FMV is the contest target. Informal review with assessor encouraged before CBoE petition..

How Wasatch County Assesses Your Home

The Wasatch County assessor is responsible for valuing every property in the county annually. Mass appraisal models make systematic errors — and Utah law gives you the right to correct those errors through the formal County Board of Equalization appeal process. The county has no incentive to notify you when you're overpaying. You have to check yourself.

Your Wasatch County Appeal Rights

Appeal Deadline

Later of 45 days after assessment notice OR September 15 — file petition with County Board of Equalization (U.C.A. § 59-2-1004). CBoE decision appealable to Utah State Tax Commission within 30 days.

Missing this deadline means waiting a full year to appeal.

How to File

Wasatch County requires appeals to be submitted by mail using PT-200 form to the County Board of Equalization.

County Assessor, Heber City, UT

Utah appeals go first to the County Board of Equalization (BOE). Adverse decisions can be appealed to the Utah State Tax Commission, then to Utah District Court. To win, you need evidence. The most compelling evidence is recent comparable sales — homes similar to yours in Wasatch County that sold at prices implying a lower value than your assessment. A licensed appraisal is also highly effective.

Your assessment can only go down from an appeal, never up. Utah law prohibits assessors from raising your value as a result of an appeal you initiate. The only risk is the time it takes to file — which is why Fairmark does it for you.

What a Successful Wasatch County Appeal Is Worth

Over Your Ownership
$6,966
total overpayment (avg)
Per Year
$774
annual overpayment
Per Month
$65
monthly overpayment

These figures represent the average overassessment in counties with Wasatch County's tax profile. Your specific situation may differ — the only way to know is to check your assessed value against what your home would actually sell for today.

Fairmark Complete is $0 today — 25% of first-year savings only if we win. We file your property tax appeal, gather comparable sales evidence, and handle every step of the process remotely. You never attend a hearing or fill out a form. If the county doesn't reduce your assessment, you owe nothing.

86% of pre-screened appeals in Utah result in a reduction. The assessor's office knows their valuations are imperfect. When presented with credible evidence, they typically settle.

Check Your Wasatch Home

Is your home one of the 3,240?

Enter your Wasatch County address. We check the county assessment records, compare to current market value, and show you exactly how much you're overpaying — in under 10 seconds. No signup required.

Free — results in under 10 seconds

Why 95% of Wasatch County Homeowners Never Appeal

Nationwide, only about 5% of eligible homeowners appeal their property tax assessment each year — despite roughly 40% being overassessed. The gap exists for three reasons:

First, 53% of homeowners don't know they can appeal. The annual tax notice contains a legal disclosure of your appeal rights — but it's buried in fine print that most people skip. The county is legally required to disclose your appeal rights, but not to make them easy to act on.

Second, gathering evidence feels overwhelming. Pulling comparable sales data, analyzing assessment methodology, and building a credible case against the county's own records takes time and expertise most homeowners don't have.

Third, the county has no incentive to help you. Every dollar of overassessment is revenue. The system is designed to be just difficult enough that most people give up. We don't. Enter your address above and we'll show you exactly what you're overpaying — for free.

Your county is counting on you not checking.

Type your address. See exactly how much you're overpaying. Takes 10 seconds. $0 today — you owe nothing if we don't reduce your assessment.

Free — results in under 10 seconds

Free to check · $0 today · 25% of first-year savings only if we win