J DiMauro Law Firm - Rocky Hill

Property Tax Consultant in Rocky Hill, Connecticut

1(1 reviews)
(860) 757-304046 Church St, Rocky Hill, CT 06067View on Yelp

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About J DiMauro Law Firm - Rocky Hill

J DiMauro Law Firm has served property owners and families in Rocky Hill and the greater Hartford area for years, offering legal services across estate planning, elder law, and tax matters. The firm's tax practice includes property assessment challenges, with a focus on helping estate clients who discover that inherited or transferred property is carrying an inflated assessed value. The firm's combination of elder law and tax expertise is genuinely useful for a specific type of client: older homeowners who qualify for exemptions they've never claimed, or families managing a parent's estate who need an assessment reviewed before a sale or transfer. If your situation involves property taxes as part of a larger estate or elder care planning question, this firm's cross-discipline experience may be worth considering despite its mixed client reviews.

Services

Estate Planning Law
Tax Law
Elder Law

How They Can Help

The firm handles property tax matters primarily in the context of estate administration and elder law planning. Services include reviewing assessments on estate properties before sale, identifying exemptions available to elderly or disabled homeowners, and filing formal appeals when assessed values don't reflect current market conditions. On the estate planning side, the firm prepares wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. For elder law clients, services extend to Medicaid planning, which often intersects with real property questions around asset transfers and lookback periods. Property tax work at DiMauro tends to be most relevant when it touches one of these other practice areas. If you're looking for a firm that handles high-volume standalone property tax appeals across Connecticut, this may not be the best fit. But for families navigating estate administration with a property valuation component, the integrated approach can be efficient.

What to Expect

For property tax matters, the firm typically starts with a review of the assessment notice and the property record card. If the matter is part of an estate or elder planning engagement, it's often handled alongside the broader legal work rather than as a standalone service. For standalone appeals, the firm follows Connecticut's standard process: reviewing the assessor's records for factual errors, pulling comparable sales data, and filing with the Board of Assessment Appeals before the applicable deadline. Clients are informed of the hearing date and expected to participate or authorize written representation. Given the firm's mixed reviews, clients are encouraged to confirm timelines and communication expectations in writing at the outset. Ask specifically who will handle your matter and how updates will be communicated.

Service Area

DiMauro primarily serves clients in Rocky Hill, Wethersfield, Glastonbury, and the broader Hartford County area. Estate and elder law clients come from across central Connecticut. Property tax appeal work is concentrated in Hartford County municipalities, where the firm has experience with local assessment offices and boards. Out-of-county matters are taken selectively depending on the nature of the case.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can DiMauro handle my property tax appeal even if it's not part of an estate matter?
Yes, the firm takes standalone property tax appeals, but its strongest value-add is when the property tax question connects to estate administration or elder law planning. For purely standalone appeals, you may want to compare options with firms that focus exclusively on assessment challenges.
What Connecticut exemptions might I be missing as an older homeowner?
Connecticut offers several programs for residents 65 and older, including the Elderly Homeowner Tax Relief program, which provides credits based on income, and the Freeze Program available in some municipalities. Veterans and disabled homeowners may qualify for additional reductions. DiMauro's elder law practice is familiar with these programs.
How do I know if my property is over-assessed?
Request the property record card from your town assessor's office and check it for errors in square footage, room count, or condition ratings. Then compare your assessed value (which should be 70% of estimated market value in Connecticut) against recent sales of similar homes. If the implied market value is significantly higher than what comparable homes sold for, you may have grounds for an appeal.
What's the difference between an assessment appeal and a tax abatement?
An assessment appeal challenges the estimated market value of your property. A tax abatement is a separate process available in some municipalities for hardship cases or specific property types. Most Connecticut homeowners use the appeal process, not abatement, to reduce their bills.
Should I hire an attorney or use a consultant for my property tax appeal?
For straightforward residential cases, a tax consultant or appraiser can file a competent appeal. An attorney adds value when there are legal complexities, such as estate issues, Superior Court escalation, or tax lien questions. The right choice depends on your situation.
How does the firm's rating affect my decision?
A low rating is a legitimate concern and shouldn't be dismissed. It's worth reading available reviews to understand what past clients experienced. Ask the firm directly about its communication process and confirm expectations in writing before engaging. Some low-rated firms have isolated issues that may not affect your specific type of matter.
What happens if I miss the appeal deadline?
In most Connecticut municipalities, missing the Board of Assessment Appeals deadline means you can't challenge that year's assessment. You'd need to wait until the next revaluation or the next grand list year. This is why acting quickly when you receive a notice is important.
Can the firm help with back property tax debt?
Depending on the circumstances, the firm may be able to advise on options including payment plans with the municipality or the intersection of tax debt with estate administration. For complex tax debt situations involving liens or foreclosure, confirm at the outset whether the firm handles those matters or will refer you out.

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