Evidence packets

Argue Your Recent Purchase Price as Market Value

3 min read

Template, not legal or appraisal advice. Fill in the bracketed fields, base your case on real evidence, and check the deadline on your own assessment notice — rules vary by state and county.

If you bought the property recently in a normal (arm’s-length) sale, your purchase price is often the single best evidence of market value — a real buyer and seller agreed on it. When the assessment lands above what you just paid, that’s a strong, simple appeal.

When this works best

The letter

[Your full name]
[Your mailing address]
[City, State ZIP]
[Phone] | [Email]

[Date]

[County Assessor / Appraisal District / Board]
[Address]

Re: Recent purchase price as evidence of market value
Owner: [Name]   Parcel / account number: [number]
Property address: [address]
Noticed value: $[amount]   Purchase price: $[amount]   Purchase date: [date]

To whom it may concern:

I purchased the property above on [date] for $[amount] in an open-market,
arm's-length transaction. The [year] assessed value of $[amount] exceeds what I
actually paid near the valuation date, so it overstates the property's market
value.

A recent arm's-length sale is strong evidence of fair market value. I respectfully
request that the assessed value be reduced to $[amount] (my purchase price),
adjusted only for any documented changes since closing.

Enclosed: closing/settlement statement (closing disclosure) showing the purchase
price and date.

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
[Your printed name]

How to send it

Attach the closing disclosure / settlement statement (you can redact loan and SSN details — keep the price, address, and date). File it with your informal review or formal appeal by the deadline.


Notes. Some assessors discount a single sale or argue the market rose after your purchase — pair it with a couple of comparable sales to reinforce it. A few states limit how much a sale alone can drive the assessment, and a few “recapture” to sale price at purchase — rules vary by jurisdiction. If you bought a fixer-upper cheap and then renovated, expect the value to reflect the improvements. General information, not legal or appraisal advice.

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