Property Tax AppealApril 24, 2026

Denton County Property Tax Protest Deadline 2026: What You Need to Know

The 2026 Denton County Protest Deadline Is Almost Here

If you own property in Denton County — Denton, Lewisville, Flower Mound, Little Elm, The Colony, Highland Village, or anywhere else in the county — and you think your appraised value is too high, Texas law gives you the right to protest. But that right expires on a fixed date. Miss it, and you're stuck with whatever the Denton Central Appraisal District (Denton CAD) has decided your home is worth — and the tax bill that comes with it.

Here's what Denton County homeowners need to know about the 2026 protest deadline.

The Standard Deadline: May 15, 2026

For most Denton County homeowners, the deadline to file a property tax protest is May 15, 2026. This is set by Texas state law and applies to residential properties across the state.

Your protest must be received by Denton CAD on or before this date — not postmarked. If you're filing by mail, send it well in advance. Better yet, file online through Denton CAD's online protest system at dentoncad.com to avoid mail delays entirely.

The 30-Day Rule: Your Safety Net

There's one important exception under Texas Tax Code Section 41.44(a)(1). If Denton CAD mails your appraisal notice after April 15, 2026, you get 30 days from the date on the notice to file your protest — even if that date falls after May 15.

How it works in practice:

  • Notice dated April 10, 2026 → deadline is May 15, 2026 (standard deadline)
  • Notice dated April 22, 2026 → deadline is May 22, 2026 (30 days from the notice)
  • Notice dated May 3, 2026 → deadline is June 2, 2026 (30 days from the notice)

Always check the date on your appraisal notice. The 30-day rule can give you extra time, but only if your notice was mailed late. Don't assume — verify.

What Happens If You Miss the Deadline?

If you miss the deadline, Denton CAD will not accept your protest. There are no extensions, no grace periods, no appeals. Your appraised value for 2026 becomes final, and your tax bill will be calculated based on that number.

Denton County's combined tax rate runs around 2.2% depending on your city and school district. That means a $40,000 over-assessment can cost you roughly $880 in unnecessary property taxes for the year. A $60,000 over-assessment costs more than $1,300. For homeowners on fixed incomes — especially seniors in Denton, Lewisville, or Flower Mound — this is money you cannot afford to leave on the table.

How to File Your Protest With Denton CAD

Filing is simpler than most people think. You don't need a lawyer, and the filing itself is free. Denton County homeowners have three options:

Option 1: File Online (Recommended)

Denton CAD's online protest system is accessible from dentoncad.com. Most protests are filed this way. You'll need your property account number (it's on your appraisal notice) and some basic information.

Benefits of filing online: - Instant confirmation that your protest was received - Many protests can be settled through evidence review without an in-person hearing - You can upload evidence documents directly

Option 2: File by Mail

Download the protest form from dentoncad.com or use the one included with your appraisal notice. Fill it out, sign it, and mail it to the address listed on the form.

Important: Mail it at least 7-10 days before the deadline. Consider sending it via certified mail so you have proof of delivery.

Option 3: File in Person

You can bring your completed protest form directly to the Denton CAD office. This guarantees delivery but requires a trip and possible wait time.

What to Include When You File

The filing itself is straightforward. You need to:

  • Identify your property (account number or address)
  • State the reason for your protest (most homeowners choose "value is over market value")
  • Sign and date the form

You do not need to include your evidence when you file. Evidence — comparable sales, photos, property record corrections — comes later, either online or at your hearing. The filing just gets you in the door.

That said, start gathering evidence right away so you're not scrambling later.

A Simple 2026 Timeline for Denton County

  • Early April: Receive your appraisal notice from Denton CAD. Review it immediately.
  • Mid-April: Decide whether to protest. Look up comparable sales and check your property record for errors.
  • Late April: File your protest online through dentoncad.com. Don't wait until the last minute.
  • May – July: Settle through online review, or attend your informal hearing and/or ARB hearing.
  • After decision: If successful, your appraised value drops and so does your tax bill.

Why Filing Early Beats Filing Late

Denton County processes more than 100,000 protests each year, and that number grows along with the population. Filing early in April or early May gives you real advantages:

  • No risk of missing the deadline due to illness, travel, or forgetfulness
  • Earlier hearing dates — Denton CAD schedules in the order protests are received
  • More time to gather evidence and build a strong case
  • Informal settlement opportunities before your formal ARB hearing

Denton County's mix of established towns like Denton itself and rapid-growth suburbs like Little Elm and Cross Roads means mass-appraisal models often miss the mark — well-supported protests have a real chance of meaningful reductions.

Get Your Free Denton County Analysis

Not sure whether your home is over-assessed? You can find out in under a minute.

Enter your Denton County address at claimengine.org for a free, instant property analysis. We pull comparable sales data, check for over-assessment, and show you an estimate of potential savings. If there's a case to be made, we prepare everything you need to file a successful protest — before the deadline passes.

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