Using land and property values to fund public investment and vital government services

Tax systems are the engine for public action, providing resources needed to promote and improve civic well-being. An efficient tax system raises revenue while minimizing unintended consequences, and an equitable tax system imposes obligations on taxpayers in proportion to their resources.

Our Work

Our work addresses three major land-related tax issues:

  • Property taxation, a fair, stable, and efficient source of local revenue
  • Land value taxation, an economically efficient method of identifying the social contribution to property wealth
  • Valuation methods, the key to appraising the property tax base accurately and distributing tax obligations fairly

The property tax is the linchpin of municipal fiscal health:

Resources

Fiscally Standardized Cities 
Compare local government finances for over 200 large US cities across 115 categories of revenues, expenditures, debt, and assets. 

Significant Features of the Property Tax 
Discover data on the property tax in all 50 US states and the District of Columbia. 

State-by-State Property Tax at a Glance 
Use this visualization tool to compare property tax systems and key variables across the 50 US states and the District of Columbia. 

Standard on Property Tax Policy 
As part of an International Association of Assessing Officers task force, the Lincoln Institute has contributed to the content and focus of the organization’s Standard on Property Tax Policy. Drawing upon many Lincoln Institute resources, the guidelines in this publication provide best practices to improve and advance property tax systems. 

Vertical Equity App 
A well-administered property tax system is an efficient and equitable way to pay for local public services, and accurate assessments are critical for property tax equity. The Vertical Equity App is designed to provide assessment offices with the capacity to measure and evaluate vertical equity in assessment rolls and to communicate the results effectively.  

Value-Based Taxation in Eastern Europe 
The Lincoln Institute built on its ongoing initiatives to strengthen the property tax in Southern and Eastern Europe through its educational work in Latvia, where a highly regarded and technically sophisticated mass appraisal system faces political challenges that are common to many regions around the world. 

Cover of A Good Tax

Book

A Good Tax

Tax expert Joan Youngman skillfully considers how to improve the operation of the property tax and supply the information missing in public debate. The author analyzes the legal, administrative, and political challenges to the property tax in the United States and offers recommendations for its improvement. The book is accessibly written for policy analysts and public officials who are dealing with specific property tax issues and for those concerned with property tax issues in general.

Read the Book
Property Tax in Africa
Edited by Riël Franzsen and William McCluskey

Book

Property Tax

50-State Property Tax Comparison Study
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Minnesota Center for Fiscal Excellence

Other Publications

Property Tax

Property Tax in Asia
Edited by William McCluskey, Roy Bahl, and Riël Franzsen

Book

Property Tax

Our Experts

Adam H. Langley

Associate Director of Tax Policy

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Joan Youngman

Senior Fellow & Chair of Valuation and Taxation

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Bethany P. Paquin

Senior Research Analyst

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Daniel P. McMillen

Distinguished Scholar

Ronald Rakow

Fellow

Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Claudia De Cesare

Municipality of Porto Alegre, Brazil

Porto Alegre, Brazil