No. of Recommendations: 8
From looking into various articles over time about Mar-a-lago's valuation, there are likely many problems at work.
An article in Forbes
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brianbushard/2023/09/...indicates:
* Palm Beach County Asssessor previously estimated the property value between $18 and $27.6 million between 2011 and 2021
* Palm Beach County Assessor also issued document in 2023 valuing the property at $37 million
* that 2023 valuation was said to be $6 million higher than the 2022 valuation so that 2022 valuation must have been $31 million
* earlier in 2023, experts consulted by Forbes estimated the property's value at $325 million
* some Trump documents provide values between $427 and $612 million
* recently, Trump and family have cited a valuation near $1.5 billion (BILLION)
Everyone who owns a home should know there tends to be a SIGNIFICANT difference between a valuation a real estate agent might provide if you prepare to sell your house on the open market and the ASSESSED valuation from your county assessor for property tax purposes. I presume everyone gets a yearly notice early in the year from their county assessor reflecting that ASSESSED value and some indication of the tax rate that will apply for the actual bill due towards the end of each year. The real estate tax rate depends on your city / county / school district / etc. In some (hopefully all?) jurisdictions, it is likely that whenever you materially remodel the home or add a deck or pool or an outbuilding and file building permits, sign-off on those building permits typically triggers a site visit from a county appraiser to explicitly update the appraised value kept on file for your property. Most jurisdictions adjust the ASSESSED valuations automatically every two years by running statistical analysis of recent sales of nearby properties with similar characteristics (# storeys, square footage, etc.). As market home prices go upwards, these mechanisms keep ASSESSED values roughly in sync with those MARKET values.
The PROBLEM with all of this is that many communities incorporate weird formulas when determining ASSESSED valuation. One would think it would be easier to only use MARKET prices as the baseline so if you purchase a brand new home for $300,000, then your assessed value starts at $300,000 as well. If you stay in the house 20 years but 7 other homes in the same subdivision with the same design sell for $378,000, then your ASSESSED value would be updated to $378,000 as well and everyone can argue with the same set of numbers -- SALES PRICES.
In reality, many municipalities only use some PERCENTAGE of the "market" price as the assessed price. If your house and identical houses are SELLING for $500,000, the ASSESSED value would be 80% of that or $400,000. I'm not sure why communities do this. Maybe to make their voters think they're saving money on taxes when in fact it isn't the assessed value ALONE that matters, its the product of ASSESSED VALUE and TAX RATE. The problem with that is it isn't clear what scheme is used in Palm Beach County. When an assessor from the county sends you a letter saying he/she thinks your property is worth $30 million and you think it shoulbe worth $37.5 million, are you both in agreement? It depends on whether the county attempts to sync "assessed value" with actual value or if the assessed value is a PERCENTAGE (maybe 80%) of actual value.
There are more important questions with this process. What is the taxpayer's legal obligation to "correct" faulty information provided BY THE ASSESSOR? If they come to your house, walk around the lot, maybe even walk inside with your permission and come up with an estimate of $30 million and you think it's $300 million -- TEN TIMES their estimate -- are you obligated to volunteer a higher amount? Are you committing "fraud" if you don't insist on paying taxes on $300 million when the assessor came and walked around to estimate his own number? I don't think that is the case in any jurisdiction. It's up to the county to hire competent inspectors / assesors and keep their books in order. It is in the jurisdiction's financial interest to do this to generate tax revenue. One could argue that it is in the OWNER'S interest to have a correct assesment value on file with the county as well -- if you decide to sell the property and ask $378,000 for it but county records show it assessed at $300,000, potential buyers (smart ones, anyway) should be looking up the assessed value to verify they aren't overpaying and can use the low-ball ASSESSED value to drive your sale price DOWN. I suspect most owners focus on keeping their yearly real estate tax bill as low as possible and don't contemplate any downward pressure that might apply if they need to sell.
Clearly, there appears to be gross incompetence in Palm Beach County if they are issuing correspondence to Trump AFTER 2021 providing valuations in the $30 million dollar range if the taxpayer himself is blabbing in the media about a $500 million or $1 billion dollar property. It's likely the property's value should have spiked in 2016 and 2017 as We The People paid for numerous security improvements for a location that would be used as a common residence of an active President. Those improvements alone might have been $30 million dollars. Even if assessed value is a percentage of market value, a $30 million assessment when your property owner is mouthing off about BILLION figures indicates something is seriously wrong.
So what IS wrong in Palm Beach County? Incompetent assessors? Corrupt assessors? Flawed automation algorithms in their bi-annual reassessments? How many other properties is the county under-assessing by 10x to 30x orders of magnitude?
In this case, I suspect the judge saw public comments referencing a billion dollars, saw legal documents from Trump citing valuations of $417 million and saw county tax records reflecting figures between $17 and $37 million and said these figures are all not even within 50-100% of each other and do not reflect information being supplied by a BUSINESS in good faith to local jurisdictions -- Florida or New York State. Again, given how Trump organizes his finances, Trump the individual doesn't own these properties. His corporation owns them so any figures involving these properties aren't a personal tax issue, they are corporate records keeping issues that affect both Florida and New York.
WTH