FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
WHAT
IS PROPERTY TAX?
Property
tax is a tax based on the value of the property owned.
For this reason it is often called an ad valorem tax.
HOW
DID PROPERTY TAXES ORIGINATE?
When
Illinois became a state in 1818, the Constitution contained a
provision for taxing property in direct proportion to the value of
property. From 1818 to
1930, amendments to the Constitution provided the State with various
powers and authorities concerning property tax.
The Revenue Act of 1872 gave Illinois final authority for
setting valuations. The
last year the State levied real estate taxes was 1932.
Since then, property
taxes have been levied at the local level.
Property tax is a local tax assessed by the County (or
township). Revenues
from property tax are collected and spent at the local level.
WHAT
IS CONSIDERED PROPERTY?
Property
can be divided into two classes – real and personal.
Real property is land and anything permanently attached to
the land. Examples are
buildings and fixtures permanently or constructively attached to a
building. Personal
property is all property which is not real property. Personal property includes automobiles, livestock, money and
furniture.
WHO
MUST PAY PROPERTY TAXES?
All
owners of real property must pay property tax unless specifically
exempted by State law. Leaseholders
must pay property tax if they are leasing real estate from an owner
whose property is exempt. Owners
of business, industrial, agricultural and residential all pay
property tax directly. In
Illinois, taxpayers now pay property taxes only on their real
property.
WHO
SPENDS THE PROPERTY TAXES ONCE THEY ARE COLLECTED?
Over
6,000 units of local government in Illinois use property taxes including county
governments, townships, municipalities, school districts, and
special purpose districts. Property
taxes are raised, spent and distributed locally.
They finance a major part of the services provided by local
governmental units which benefit citizens and their property.
HOW
IMPORTANT ARE PROPERTY TAXES?
Property tax is the major source of tax revenue for
local governments in Illinois, as it produces more than
three-fourths of their total tax revenue.
Municipalities, townships, counties, schools and park
districts all use property taxes to finance the majority of services
that they provide to their citizens.
The largest share of local property taxes goes to school
districts for education. Other
services include police and fire protection, road maintenance,
sanitation and recreation.
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