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No win, no fee. That's the whole pricing model.

You pay only a share of your first-year tax savings — and only if we win. If your appeal doesn't lower your bill, you owe us nothing at all. We quote your exact rate, in writing, before you ever sign.

We'll tell you if you even have a case.

Most property tax companies make pricing feel like the fine print. We'd rather it be the headline: you don't pay us to try. You pay us only when we actually cut your tax bill — and only a portion of what we save you in that first year.

How it works, in one breath

Our fee is a contingency fee: a share of the tax you save in the first year, charged only if your appeal succeeds. No retainer. No filing charge. No hourly billing. If the Board doesn't lower your value, there's no fee — you've lost nothing but the time it took to type your address.

If we win

A share of
year-one savings

You keep the majority of the first-year reduction, and every dollar of the savings in years two and three. We earn a portion of year one only.

If we don't win

$0

No reduction means no fee. The risk of the appeal sits with us, not you — which is exactly why we won't file one we don't believe in.

The exact rate

We don't bury a percentage on a pricing page and spring it on you later. When we review your parcel, we quote your exact contingency rate in writing — before you sign anything. You'll know precisely what a win costs and what it nets you, in dollars, up front.

Why we price it this way

Contingency keeps our incentives pointed the same direction as yours. A weak appeal costs us — our time, our filing effort, our reputation — and earns us nothing. So we have every reason to be honest with you about whether you have a case before a single form is filed.

It also means the homeowners who need this most aren't priced out. You don't need cash on hand to challenge an over-assessment. If we're right that your value is too high, the appeal pays for itself out of the savings. If we're wrong, you're not out a dime. That's the honest version of "aligned interests" — we put our fee where our read is.

One win. Three years of savings.

Here's the part that makes the math work in your favor. Under Georgia's 299(c) value freeze (OCGA § 48-5-299(c)), a successful appeal generally locks your assessed value for the appeal year plus the next two years — barring major additions or improvements. Our fee is tied to the first year only, but the lower bill keeps coming for three.

So a single win isn't a one-time discount you split with us. It's three years of a lower tax bill, and you pay a share of just the first. We break down exactly how the freeze works in our guide to the Georgia 3-year property tax freeze.

What you'll never see from us

  • No upfront fee. Checking your assessment is free, and filing on contingency means nothing is due before a win.
  • No "guaranteed reduction" claims. Anyone promising a guaranteed cut is selling, not advising. We quote honestly and only file cases we believe we can win.
  • No surprise percentage. Your exact rate is in writing before you sign — not discovered on an invoice.
  • No charge for an honest "no." If your number looks fair, we'll tell you, free, and that's the end of it.

See your real number first — free.

Before we ever talk price, enter your address and we'll pull your real Fulton County assessment and give you an honest read: strong case, weak case, or no case. Pricing only matters if you have a case worth filing.

Check my assessment — free

We'll tell you if you even have a case.

How we compare to flat-fee and DIY

You have three honest options, and we'll lay them out plainly:

  • Do it yourself. Filing an appeal with the county is free, and for a clean property-record error or an obvious purchase-price gap, plenty of homeowners win on their own. Our guide to appeal costs walks through the DIY path.
  • Flat-fee firms. Some charge a fixed amount whether you win or lose. That can work out, but you carry the risk — you pay even if nothing changes.
  • Contingency (us). You pay only on a win, only a share of year one, with the exact rate quoted up front. The risk is ours.

Pricing questions

What exactly does it cost if you take my case?

A contingency fee — a share of the property tax you save in the first year — charged only if your appeal wins a reduction. We quote your exact rate in writing before you sign, so you'll know the precise dollar figure a win costs and what it nets you. We don't publish a fixed percentage here because the right number can depend on your parcel; what we promise is that you'll see it, in writing, before you commit.

What if you don't win my appeal?

Then you owe us nothing. That's the entire point of no win, no fee — the risk of the appeal is ours. It's also why we won't take a case we don't believe we can win: we only get paid when you actually save money.

Is there any upfront or filing fee?

No. Checking your assessment is free, and there's no retainer or filing charge to start. Our fee only ever comes out of a successful result.

Do you charge for all three years of the freeze?

No. Our fee is tied to your first-year savings only. The 299(c) value freeze generally holds your reduced value for the appeal year plus the next two — and those additional years of lower bills are entirely yours.

Can you guarantee a reduction?

No honest firm can, and we won't pretend otherwise. Georgia law guarantees your right to appeal, not a specific outcome. What we do is give you an honest read of your case before filing, and only take it on if we believe we can win.