Did You Know Series
Did You Know? Georgia's Homestead Tax Exemption Can Save You Hundreds Every Year
One of the most valuable tax benefits available to Georgia homeowners is also one of the most frequently missed. Here's how the homestead exemption works, what it saves you, and the one deadline that matters.
When you close on a home in Georgia, there is a tax benefit available to you that can reduce your annual property tax bill by a meaningful amount — every year, for as long as the home is your primary residence. The base exemption requires a single application and does not need to be renewed annually. But the full picture is more layered: additional exemptions become available as your circumstances change — when you reach qualifying ages, if your income changes, or if veteran or disability status becomes applicable — and those require separate applications at the right time. A significant number of homeowners miss both the initial filing and the additional savings they become eligible for over the years, simply because nobody told them to check back.
That benefit is Georgia's homestead exemption, and understanding how it works is one of the most financially valuable things a new Georgia homeowner can do.
What the Homestead Exemption Is
The homestead exemption reduces the assessed taxable value of your primary residence for property tax calculation purposes. In Georgia, property taxes are calculated on 40 percent of a property's fair market value — the assessed value. The homestead exemption reduces that assessed value by a set amount, which in turn reduces the tax bill calculated against it.
The base exemption amount varies by county, and each county also offers additional exemptions beyond the base — for qualifying seniors, veterans, disabled homeowners, and in some cases for school tax portions of the bill. The cumulative effect of the base exemption plus any applicable additional exemptions can reduce a homeowner's annual property tax bill by hundreds of dollars per year, every year, compounding in value over the full period of ownership.
The Deadline That Matters: April 1
The most important practical fact about Georgia's homestead exemption is the application deadline: April 1 of the tax year in which you want the exemption to take effect. Miss April 1 and the exemption will not apply until the following tax year.
This deadline creates a specific problem for homeowners who close in the fall or winter. A buyer who closes in November has approximately four months before the April 1 deadline — which is enough time if they know about it, and frequently not enough if they don't. Many new homeowners assume that the homestead exemption is applied automatically at closing or handled by the title company as part of the transaction. It is not. The application is the homeowner's responsibility, and the county has no mechanism to apply it retroactively after the deadline has passed.
If you closed on a Georgia home after April 1 of last year and have not yet filed for the homestead exemption, filing before April 1 of this year is the most valuable administrative task on your homeownership to-do list.
How to Apply in Paulding, Cherokee, and Cobb Counties
The application process is straightforward in all three counties. You will need to provide proof that the property is your primary residence — typically a Georgia driver's license or ID showing the property address, or a combination of documents such as a vehicle registration and a utility bill. The application itself is brief.
Paulding County: Applications are filed with the Paulding County Tax Assessor's office, which maintains an online application portal as well as in-person filing at their Dallas location. The base exemption in Paulding County applies to the county general and county school tax portions of the bill. Additional exemptions are available for qualifying seniors and veterans — the Paulding County Tax Assessor's website lists current exemption amounts and eligibility requirements.
Cherokee County: The Cherokee County Tax Assessor's office processes homestead exemption applications online and in person at their Canton location. Cherokee County offers the base homestead exemption plus several additional exemptions for seniors, disabled veterans, and surviving spouses of certain veterans. The Cherokee County senior school tax exemption — which can eliminate the school tax portion of the bill entirely for qualifying homeowners age 62 and older — is one of the more valuable age-based exemptions in NW Metro Atlanta and is worth understanding if you or your household will qualify in the foreseeable future.
Cobb County: Applications are filed with the Cobb County Tax Assessor's office, which has multiple locations and an online filing option. Cobb County's base homestead exemption plus the available senior and veteran exemptions create a meaningful reduction for qualifying homeowners. Cobb County's millage rate structure makes the dollar value of the exemption particularly significant at higher assessed values.
The Exemption You Apply For Once — And Keep
The base homestead exemption in Georgia does not require annual renewal. Once filed and approved, it remains in place as long as the property is your primary residence — you do not need to reapply each year for the same exemption you already hold. That said, the exemption is not entirely set-and-forget. Your overall exemption package can and should evolve as your circumstances change. New exemptions become available at specific age thresholds — 62 and 65 are common qualifying ages in NW Metro Atlanta counties — and each new exemption requires a separate application. A change in income, veteran status, or disability classification may also open eligibility for programs you didn't qualify for when you first filed. The base exemption persists; the opportunity to expand your savings requires periodic attention.
If you sell the home, the exemption does not transfer to the buyer — the new owner must file their own application. If you purchase a new primary residence, you file a new application for that property. And as life circumstances shift — a spouse passes away, a disability is recognized, you cross an age threshold, or your income changes — it's worth revisiting what your county currently offers and whether you now qualify for programs you didn't before. Your county tax assessor's office is the right place to ask.
Additional Exemptions Worth Knowing
Beyond the base homestead exemption, Georgia and its counties offer a range of additional property tax relief programs that many homeowners qualify for without knowing they exist.
The senior exemption — available in some form in every NW Metro Atlanta county — reduces or eliminates portions of the property tax bill for homeowners who meet age and income thresholds. The thresholds vary by county and by the specific exemption, and some apply at age 62 while others apply at 65. For homeowners approaching these ages, understanding which exemptions will become available and what they provide is a meaningful financial planning consideration.
Veterans and surviving spouses of veterans may qualify for additional exemptions on top of the base homestead exemption, with the extent of the benefit varying based on disability rating and other factors. Disabled homeowners may also qualify for specific relief programs. The county tax assessor's office is the definitive resource for current eligibility requirements and amounts for each of these programs.
The Bottom Line
The homestead exemption is one of the simplest and highest-value actions a new Georgia homeowner can take. It requires one application, imposes one deadline — April 1 — and delivers recurring annual savings for the life of your ownership. If you are a new homeowner in Paulding, Cherokee, or Cobb County and have not yet filed, doing so before April 1 is the most financially impactful 15 minutes you will spend on homeownership administration this year.
If you have questions about the homestead exemption or other financial considerations related to buying or selling in NW Metro Atlanta, I'm happy to point you in the right direction.
Marna Friedman · 678-920-3099 · [email protected]
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