Property Tax Savings in Connecticut: Every Exemption and Program Available (2026)

Connecticut's mill rates are among the highest in the US. Elderly and disabled tax relief, veterans' exemptions, and the freeze program can help.

PropertyTaxFight Team
3 min read
In This Article

Property Tax Savings in Connecticut: Every Exemption and Program Available (2026)

Connecticut homeowners pay an average effective property tax rate of 1.96%, with the typical homeowner paying about $6,300 per year. Like every state, Connecticut offers exemptions and programs that can significantly reduce your bill, but most homeowners never take full advantage. Here's everything available.

TL;DR

  • Average effective rate: 1.96% (average annual bill: $6,300)
  • Multiple exemption and relief programs available for homeowners, seniors, veterans, and disabled residents
  • Income-based programs may be available depending on your household income
  • Filing for every exemption you qualify for is the fastest path to savings

Key Programs and Exemptions

No general homestead exemption. Elderly/disabled tax relief: up to $1,250 credit for 65+ or disabled with income limits. Veteran exemption: $1,500 off assessed value. Renters rebate up to $900 for 65+/disabled. Local option property tax freeze for seniors. Assessment at 70% of market value. Revaluation every 5 years. Appeals to Board of Assessment Appeals.

General Savings Strategies for Connecticut Homeowners

1. Claim Your Exemptions

File for every exemption you qualify for. Start with the homestead-type exemption if available, then add senior, veteran, disability, or income-based programs on top. See our homestead exemption guide and stacking exemptions guide.

2. Check Your Property Record

Verify that the assessor has correct information about your home: square footage, bedrooms, bathrooms, lot size, and condition. Errors inflate your assessment. See our error-checking guide.

3. Appeal If Over-Assessed

Compare your assessed value to recent sales of comparable homes. If similar homes sold for less than your assessed value, you have grounds for an appeal. The appeal process in Connecticut involves filing with the local assessment review body within the deadline stated on your notice.

The most persuasive appeals include 3 to 5 comparable sales, property record corrections, and a clear written argument. PropertyTaxFight builds this evidence for $79.

4. Don't Miss Deadlines

Exemption and appeal deadlines are firm. Missing them means waiting another full year. Mark your calendar for when assessment notices arrive and file immediately.

Senior and Veteran Benefits

Seniors and veterans have access to the most generous Connecticut property tax programs. If you're 62 to 65+ or a veteran with a service-connected disability, contact your county assessor immediately to find out which programs apply to you. See our senior exemption guide and veteran exemption guide.

Start Saving Now

Every year you delay filing for exemptions or appealing an inflated assessment is a year of overpaying. The process takes a few hours, costs little or nothing, and the savings last for years.

Check your Connecticut assessment for free and see how much you could save.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I know about property tax savings in connecticut: every exemption and program available (2026)?

Connecticut homeowners pay an average effective property tax rate of 1.96%, with the typical homeowner paying about $6,300 per year. Like every state, Connecticut offers exemptions and programs that can significantly reduce your bill, but most homeowners never take full advantage. Here's everything available.

What should I know about key programs and exemptions?

No general homestead exemption. Elderly/disabled tax relief: up to $1,250 credit for 65+ or disabled with income limits. Veteran exemption: $1,500 off assessed value.

What should I know about general savings strategies for connecticut homeowners?

File for every exemption you qualify for. Start with the homestead-type exemption if available, then add senior, veteran, disability, or income-based programs on top. See our homestead exemption guide and stacking exemptions guide.

What are the benefits of senior and veteran benefits?

Seniors and veterans have access to the most generous Connecticut property tax programs. If you're 62 to 65+ or a veteran with a service-connected disability, contact your county assessor immediately to find out which programs apply to you. See our senior exemption guide and veteran exemption guide.

What should I know about start saving now?

Every year you delay filing for exemptions or appealing an inflated assessment is a year of overpaying. The process takes a few hours, costs little or nothing, and the savings last for years.

Disclaimer: PropertyTaxFight is an informational tool for property tax appeal preparation. We do not provide legal, tax, or appraisal advice. Results are not guaranteed.

PropertyTaxFight Team

PropertyTaxFight provides expert guidance and tools to help you succeed. Our content is reviewed for accuracy and kept up to date.

Related Articles