ROGERS, Texas · Bell County · public appraisal records
192 homes in ZIP 76569 may be over-assessed
We analyzed 460 single-family homes in 76569 (ROGERS, Texas) against comparable homes nearby. About 41.7% are assessed more than 15% above the typical home on their own block — an estimated $555K a year in property-tax overpayment. Is yours one of them?
Free, 30 seconds, no signup, no email. Straight from Bell County public records.
Where over-assessment clusters in 76569
Streets in ROGERS with the most homes assessed above comparable homes nearby. We show the street and a count only — never a specific address or owner. Enter your address below to see if yours is one of them.
Enter your address to see if yours is one of them
Free instant analysis against comparable homes in 76569. No signup. About 30 seconds.
Check my ROGERS home, freeKnow someone in ROGERS?
If 41.7% of homes in 76569 are over-assessed, your neighbors probably are too — and most never check. Send them this page.
How we measured this
We compared every single-family home in 76569 to the median comparable home in the same ZIP, using public assessment rolls, and counted a home as over-assessed when it sits more than 15% above that median. This is a ZIP-level screen — it shows where over-assessment is common, not whether any specific home is over-assessed. See the full nationwide methodology and ranking. Data as of June 2026.
Other overtaxed ZIPs in Texas
Frequently asked
How many homes in ZIP 76569 are over-assessed?
In ROGERS, Texas (ZIP 76569), about 41.7% of single-family homes — roughly 192 of the 460 we analyzed — are assessed more than 15% above the typical comparable home in the same ZIP. That points to an estimated $555K a year in property-tax overpayment across the ZIP.
Does living in 76569 mean my home is over-assessed?
Not necessarily. This is a ZIP-level screen built from public appraisal records — it shows where over-assessment is common, not whether your specific home is over-assessed. The only way to know is a per-home comparison against similar properties, which our free address check does in about 30 seconds.
What can I do if my ROGERS home is over-assessed?
You can file a property-tax appeal (or "protest") with your county, usually once a year within a filing window. If comparable homes are assessed for less than yours, that's the standard "unequal appraisal" grounds for a reduction. AppealMyTax builds the pre-filled protest kit and appeal letter for $49 flat — sign and submit, and you keep 100% of any savings.