Politics & Government
Newton Homeowners Will See Property Tax Increase In 2021
Newton City Council approved a residential property tax rate of $10.76 for $1,000 of assessed value.

NEWTON, MA — If you own property in the city, your property taxes are going up again. Newton City Council approved a residential property tax rate of $10.76 for $1,000 of assessed value and a commercial tax rate of $20.12 for $1,000 of assessed value.
Rates ticked upward slightly from $10.44 and $19.92 this year, and most property owners will see an additional increase because of an increased city budget, combined with a debt exclusion override.
The Fiscal Year 2020 budget is $439.5 million, $9.3 million or 2.15 percent greater than the previous budget. The owner of a single-family home assessed at the median value in Newton of $1,055,600 will pay $10,898.316 or about $450 more in property taxes for fiscal year 2020 from last. The owners of a commercial property assessed at the median value in Newton of $1,016,850 will pay $583 more in property taxes.
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Commercial property owners whose property represent 10 percent of Newton’s taxable value will be responsible for 17.3 percent of the total amount of taxes collected. Residential property owners will be responsible for 82.7 percent of the total taxes collected.
Assessors do not raise or lower taxes, rather they report market value. Each year the tax increase or decrease is determined by the budgetary requirements of the mayor and the City Council to run the city.
Find out what's happening in Newtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
From the Newton assessors' website:
Rising or falling assessed values do not mean rising or falling tax bills. The increase or decrease in taxes seen by the property owner is a direct result of the increase or decrease in the budget. The budget increase or decrease determines the tax increase or decrease. There may also be some shifting of tax liability among classes of property (residential, commercial, industrial, personal) based upon the overall increase or decrease in value of the particular class. The primary reason for a tax increase or decrease is based on the budget requirements of the Mayor and the City Council to fund city operations.
Proposition 2 ½ limits all Massachusetts communities from raising the amount of citywide taxes more than 2.5 percent from the previous year’s levy limit, but it does not limit any individual property tax increase or decrease.
There are tax exemptions for veterans with at least 10 percent service related disability, income-eligible elderly, surviving spouses, and people who are blind, infirm, and have other hardship cases, according to Newton City Hall.
More from the assessor's office:
- FY2021 total taxable assessed property in Newton: $32,193,160,800.
- FY2020 Taxable Real Estate Value in Newton is: $31,268,089,400
- FY2020 Taxable Business Personal Property: $472,007,200, which, when added to the real estate, results on a total taxable assessed value of: $31,740,096,600
- FY2019 taxable real estate value in Newton was $29,965,698,200.
- FY2019 taxable business personal property value was$459,149,400 which, when added to the real estate, results in a total taxable assessed value of $30,424,847,600 in Newton.
- FY2018 taxable real estate value in Newton was $27,670,576,000.
- FY2018 taxable business personal property value was $$434,148,500 which, when added to the real estate, resulted in a total taxable assessed value of $28,104,724,500 in Newton.
Check out the assessor's info here.
RELATED:
- Newton Homeowners Will See Property Tax Increase In 2020
- Newton City Council Approves Higher Property Taxes 2018
- Average Newton Property Tax Bill Is $9,907 (From 2014)
Jenna Fisher is a news reporter for Patch. Got a tip? She can be reached at Jenna.Fisher@patch.com or by calling 617-942-0474. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram (@ReporterJenna). Have a something you'd like posted on the Patch? Here's how.
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