Tag
tax notice
21 Porch Notes tagged “tax notice,” from counties across Colorado.
Money and taxes - Jefferson County
Jeffco property tax notices live in the Treasurer's portal too
A missing tax notice does not pause the bill in Jeffco; the Treasurer portal lets owners view, pay, and pull a copy by address or parcel.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Moffat County
Missing a Moffat County tax notice does not erase the tax
Moffat County mails a tax notice each year, but never getting the statement does not stop the treasurer from collecting.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Delta County
Delta County tax notices can be missed even when the bill is due
Delta County owners can get electronic tax statements, but a notice that never arrives does not excuse a late payment.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Douglas County
Douglas tax mail follows the owner's written address change
The Douglas County Assessor changes a property's mailing address only with the owner's written, signed, dated consent.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Routt County
In Routt County, the tax notice still belongs on the owner's radar
Mortgage companies may research taxes, but Routt County sends the property tax notice to the owner of record.
Read note ->Money and taxes - San Miguel County
Keep your San Miguel tax mailing address current
San Miguel tax notices go to the owner of record, so a stale mailing address can route deadlines to the wrong place.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Summit County
Summit County tax payment questions go to the treasurer
Tax bills, payments, and balances run through the Summit County Treasurer; value questions go to the Assessor.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Rio Grande County
After closing in Rio Grande County, watch the Treasurer's tax record
Rio Grande County property taxes are billed a year behind, so after closing check your statement and watch for the Treasurer's notices that follow.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Clear Creek County
Clear Creek tax notices follow the owner of record
Property tax notices in Clear Creek go to the owner on the tax roll, so verify the treasurer record after a sale.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Morgan County
In Morgan County, missing the tax notice does not erase the tax
In Morgan County you owe property tax whether the notice arrives or not, so call the Treasurer if nothing comes by the end of January.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Yuma County
In Yuma County, a missed tax notice does not erase the tax
In Yuma County you owe property tax whether or not the statement reaches you, so a missing notice is a reason to call the Treasurer.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Alamosa County
Missing an Alamosa County tax notice does not erase the bill
A missing tax statement does not pause your Alamosa County property tax bill; the owner still owes it and must find the amount due.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Yuma County
Yuma County does not send a second-half tax reminder
Yuma County property taxes can be paid in full or in two halves, but no second-half reminder goes out, so the date is yours to track.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Jefferson County
A Jeffco mortgage escrow does not remove owner homework
Even when a mortgage company pays your Jeffco property taxes, the owner of record stays responsible for making sure they get paid.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Alamosa County
Alamosa County tax notices can be found through the property search
Current and prior Alamosa County tax notices live in the assessor property search, by owner, address, parcel, legal information, or subdivision.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Arapahoe County
Arapahoe tax notices go to the owner of record
A property tax notice still comes to you as owner of record even when your mortgage escrow handles the payment, so it pays to read it.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Conejos County
Conejos County property tax notices go to the owner of record
Tax notices follow the owner of record, so confirm your deed and mailing address after a Conejos County purchase or transfer.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Gilpin County
Missing a Gilpin tax notice does not erase the tax
In Gilpin County the property tax is owed every year even if the notice never reaches you, so keep your address current.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Rio Blanco County
Rio Blanco County tax notices go to the owner of record
Rio Blanco County mails the property tax notice to the owner of record, not your lender — even when escrow is paying the bill.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Custer County
Keep your Custer tax notice mailing address current
A move or a closing can send your Custer property tax notice to the wrong mailbox; the assessor and treasurer both take address changes.
Read note ->Money and taxes - Grand County
In Grand County, missing the tax notice does not erase the tax
Grand County property owners owe their property tax whether or not the once-a-year mailed notice ever reaches the mailbox.
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