Submitted by n3gative_c00l t3_ygubs4 in jerseycity
We bought a condo in the Heights last summer, and just got our first property tax bill covering Q4 2022, Q1 2023, and Q2 2023.
The condo is in an old building that had a total gut renovation to it, for context. The renovation took place around a year ago, and it sat on the market for awhile before we bought it, for context.
Our 22Q4 bill is huge — around $4800. Our 23Q1 and 23Q2 bills are more reasonable — around $1800.
I am trying to make sense of why the 22Q4 bill is so large in general, but also relative to the others. I know about the BOE budget controversy etc. — is that what I am seeing? I presume so since the "distribution" of it shows that almost $2K is going to district school tax and another $1800 going to local tax (with a whole $6 going to "arts and culture," LOL).
Why would that only be for 22Q4 and not 23Q1, though?
The "distribution of taxes" thing says (I am rounding):
> LAND: 0. > IMPROVMENT: 343,000 > TOTAL: 343,000 > EXEMPTIONS: 0 > NET TAXABLE: 229,000 > GROSS TAX: 4,800 > DEDUCTION: .00 > NET TAX: 4,800 > FIRST HALF BILLED: .00 > BALANCE DUE: 4,800 > PRELIMINARY 2021 TAX: 3,600
I am really not sure what any of the above means, other than the idea that the improvements increased the overall bill. But I don't understand why the 22Q4 bill is so high, at least compared to the others. Note that the "preliminary 2021 tax" line is exactly what the 23Q1 and 232Q2 totals add up to. What's up with that?
Thank you for any insight. I apologize for using Reddit for this, but the JC tax website is not very helpful.
n3gative_c00l OP t1_iuaiw5p wrote
Ah, I see that 22Q4 is supposed to be extremely high. Does this mean that they basically didn't smooth the increase out over 4 quarters, so it is like ~3X higher than normal? That would make sense (and be less despairing), even if it is about the most maximally painful way you could do a tax increase.