Start With The Property Value
The Cook County Assessor estimates your property's value. For many homeowners, this is the number that matters most in an appeal because it affects the rest of the calculation.
See how Cook County models market value
Your bill is not one mystery number. It is a step-by-step calculation that starts with property value, then applies Cook County's residential assessment level, the state equalizer, your local tax rate, and exemptions.
The Cook County Assessor estimates your property's value. For many homeowners, this is the number that matters most in an appeal because it affects the rest of the calculation.
See how Cook County models market value
Cook County residential property generally starts with 10% of the estimated market value. This assessed value is the value used in our property data before the state equalizer is applied.
The state equalizer is a multiplier that adjusts assessed values. Think of it as the bridge between Cook County's local assessment system and the statewide system. This multiplier is determined by the State of Illinois and is countywide for Cook County. For the current tax year shown here, the Cook County equalizer is 3.0355.
The tax rate comes from local taxing districts, including schools, city or village government, parks, libraries, and other bodies. In Cook County, this is tied to the property's tax code, so two similar homes can have different rates.
Exemptions reduce the Equalized Assessed Value before the tax rate is applied. Common examples include homeowner and senior exemptions.
An appeal usually challenges the assessed value of the property. It does not directly challenge the local tax rate or the state equalizer.
The Assessor's Office publishes open-source code for its automated valuation models. In plain English, the model studies recent sale prices and property characteristics, learns which patterns tend to explain prices, and estimates what each property would likely sell for on the assessment date.
The model is not guessing from one nearby sale. It is trained on many sales, then learns a mathematical relationship between sale price and property signals. A "feature" is one of those signals, like square footage or location. "Training" means updating the model until its price predictions fit known sales reasonably well.
Cook County uses validation and ratio-study metrics to test performance, but the model is still a mass appraisal tool. It depends on the data it receives. If a property's characteristics, condition, classification, or comparable sales look wrong, that is where an appeal can matter.
CCAO has a separate condominium AVM. Its documentation says condos are often evaluated with building-level context because units in the same building usually move together in price. That is why in-building sales can be especially important for condo appeals.
Change the editable inputs to see how each part of the calculation affects the estimated bill.
A similar property value can still produce a different bill if the local tax rate is different. Schools and other local taxing districts are a major reason rates vary by area.
Check whether your property's value, class, building size, age, condition, and similar nearby properties look accurate. Those are the signals most connected to assessment appeals.
This is an educational estimate. Actual bills depend on official Cook County values, tax rates, exemptions, equalization factors, and rounding.