Practice

Every matter we take is a property tax matter.

01

Judicial Appeals (Ch. 42)

District court appeals of ARB orders under Chapter 42 of the Texas Tax Code, including market value and unequal appraisal claims.

02

Unequal Appraisal

Statistical and comparable-property analysis to prove unequal appraisal under § 42.26, the most powerful remedy available to Texas owners.

03

Exemption & Allocation

Pollution control, freeport, dealer inventory, and other exemption and allocation matters litigated in district court.

04

Pre-Acquisition Counsel

Tax liability modeling and risk review for investors, lenders, and developers underwriting Texas real estate.

05

Trial & Mediation

Trial-ready advocacy, including mediation, summary judgment, and bench/jury trial.

06

Post-Judgment & Refunds

Pursuing refunds, supplemental rolls, and corrections after a favorable judgment under §§ 42.41–42.43.

60
Critical Deadline

You have 60 days from the date the ARB's final order is received to file suit in district court.

Under Texas Tax Code § 42.21(a), a petition for review of an Appraisal Review Board order must be filed in district court within 60 days of the date the property owner received notice of the final order. This deadline is jurisdictional. Miss it, and the right to appeal is lost for the entire tax year — no extensions, no exceptions. If you have just received an ARB order, contact us immediately.

Read more on Ch. 42 deadlines
Sectors

We represent owners across the full spectrum of Texas commercial real estate.

Office
Industrial & Logistics
Multifamily
Retail & Mixed-Use
Hospitality
Energy & Pipeline
Data Centers
Land & Development

Discuss your assessment.

Initial consultations are confidential and without obligation.

Contact the Firm