Vermont Property Tax Calculator
Vermont effective property tax rate is 1.89% — about $7,560/year on a $400,000 home. This calculator lets you model exemptions, project 10 years out, and compare to other states.
Property tax in Vermont
Vermont ranks #48 of 51 for property tax burden (one of the highest-tax states in the country). The state-wide effective rate of 1.89% is a weighted median — individual counties and municipalities can be meaningfully higher or lower.
How property tax is calculated
The basic formula is straightforward:
Annual Tax = (Assessed Value − Exemptions) × Effective Tax Rate
Three numbers determine your bill: the assessed value (set by your county assessor, often lower than market value), any exemptions you qualify for (homestead, senior, veteran, disability), and the combined millage rate applied by your state, county, school district, and any special districts.
Common exemptions in Vermont
- Homestead exemption — reduces the taxable value of your primary residence. Most states offer one; some (like Florida and Texas) have generous caps.
- Senior (65+) exemption — additional reduction or rate freeze for older homeowners; check Vermont eligibility rules.
- Veteran / disability exemption — partial or full exemption for qualifying veterans and people with disabilities.
- Agricultural / conservation — for qualifying land use; not applicable to most residential calculations.
Use the exemption fields above to model your specific situation. Confirm eligibility and current dollar amounts with your Vermont county assessor — exemption amounts change annually.
How Vermont compares
Lowest-tax states (effective rates under 0.6%): Hawaii, Alabama, Colorado, Nevada, Louisiana. Highest-tax states (above 2%): New Jersey, Illinois, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Vermont. Vermont's 1.89% effective rate puts it in the upper third of US states.
Property tax in other states
Disclaimer: Estimates only. Property tax rates vary by county, school district, and municipality within Vermont. Your actual bill depends on local assessment practices, exemptions you qualify for, and any special district levies. Confirm with your Vermont county assessor.