With the newest round of property tax payments due this month, too many Iowans are staring at their bills and wondering how long they can keep up with the rising costs. While most of us can feel the strain year after year, once factors like valuations, rollbacks, and “growth” are considered, it can be difficult to know exactly how much property tax pain we’re experiencing.
ITR Foundation has once again compiled year-over-year changes in property tax revenue for cities (population over 1,000), counties, and schools, and calculated the cost on a per capita basis. The results are broken down into the following categories:
- Unspeakable Pain = Growth greater than 20%
- Excruciating Pain = Growth between 9% and 20%
- Severe Pain = Growth between 6% and 9%
- Moderate Pain = Growth between 4% and 6%
- Mild Pain = Growth up to 4%
- No Pain = No growth or a decline
Cities
Of the 275 cities with populations greater than 1,000, nearly 80% chose to increase the property tax pain on their residents. The five highest per capita increases were:
- Brooklyn – 52.4%
- George – 49.8%
- Robins – 39.2%
- Rock Rapids – 26.6%
- Le Mars – 22.4%
Counties
Seven counties passed on double-digit increases. The five highest were:
- Henry County – 20.2%
- Montgomery County – 18.6%
- Wapello County – 17.1%
- Hardin County – 13.3%
- Plymouth County – 13.2%
School Districts
Twelve school districts increased per-student property tax revenue by more than 20%. The five highest were:
- Le Mars CSD – 48.6%
- Belmond-Klemme CSD – 31.1%
- GMG CSD – 29.6%
- Tipton CSD – 29.4%
- Kingsley-Pierson CSD – 25.0%
The Bigger Picture
Behind all the percentages and rankings is a simple truth: Iowa taxpayers are being asked to carry more each year, with little say in how much heavier the load becomes. Rising property taxes are not the result of some mysterious formula—they stem from local government budgets that grow faster than family budgets.
If policymakers are serious about delivering real relief, the answer is not to shuffle levies or tweak formulas, but to put hard limits on how fast local governments can spend. Until that happens, taxpayers will continue to be treated as an endless source of revenue. Serious reform that reins in local spending is the only way to stop the pain and finally provide Iowa families and businesses the relief they deserve.
