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Frequently Asked Questions

Below you will find information that might help you understand how to find things or learn about information you might need to know about your city or town.

Board of Assessors

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  • Individual assessments may rise or fall depending on characteristics of the property. The purpose of mass appraisal is to value all property by the same standards at the same time to create an equitable distribution of the tax levy. If the same amount of money is to be raised for the current year after a valuation update from the previous year, and each assessment has doubled, the tax rate would be cut in half. And vice versa, if each assessment decreased by 20%, and the same amount of money was to be raised, the tax rate would increase by 20%. Increases or decreases in assessed values do not cause a tax increase or decrease.

    In reality, the tax levy increases each year by 2 1⁄2% per Proposition 2 1⁄2 and any "new growth" (new constructions, additions, etc.) occurring in the previous year. If after the Annual Town Meeting, where the expenses of the Town are voted on each year, there is excess levy, the Select Board, through a subsequent Town Meeting, make the determination to tax up to the levy. *An approved Proposition 2 1/2 override and/or Capital Debt Exclusion will cause an increase in the levy, therefore, increasing tax bills.

    Board of Assessors
  • Every year the Assessors subject the arms-length sales that occurred in the prior calendar year to a statistical examination based on market area, style of house, age of house, effective area, size of lot, and sale price to see what changes the market has shown. The tables used in the Computer-Assisted Mass Appraisal (CAMA) system are adjusted so that the median assessment of the sales sample is within 10% of 100% of market value and the dispersion of the assessments to sales ratios in the sample are within State guidelines. These new factors are then applied to all properties for the new fiscal year.

    Every fifth year the Department of Revenue (DOR) requires each city or town to conduct a revaluation. This is a year-long process during which the DOR examines every phase of the assessing operation before certifying the values. During the four years in between revaluations, the Assessors change the values as sales activity so indicates. These yearly updates are called Interim Year Adjustments.

    Board of Assessors
  • Mendon Town Hall

    Attn: Tax Collector

    20 Main Street

    Mendon, MA. 01756

    Board of Assessors
    • An exemption is a discharge from the obligation to pay all or part of a real estate tax based on certain age, income, military, or disability status as set forth by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
    • Exemptions are available for seniors, low-income seniors, surviving spouses or surviving minor child, veterans with disabilities, and blind persons.
    • An abatement happens as a result of an adjustment that lowers a property valuation after the actual (not preliminary) tax bill has been issued.
    Board of Assessors
  • Please view this informational video produced by the MA Division of Local Services



    Board of Assessors
  • Please view this informational video produced by the MA Division of Local Services


    Board of Assessors
  • Please view this informational video produced by the MA Division of Local Services 

    Board of Assessors
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