Minneapolis property taxes are going up — as homeowners are learning in letters from the county landing in mailboxes now — but they haven’t gone up as quickly since the pandemic as in most other major U.S. cities, according to a new report from national real estate company Redfin
Counties are sending out proposed taxes and levy notices to property owners, letting them know how much their counties, cities, school boards and other taxing entities plan to increase — or decrease — tax levies.
The truth-in-taxation notices let people know the maximum they’ll have to pay each entity, although those numbers could change during budgeting. The city of Minneapolis has a maximum levy increase of 8.3%, for example, but Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey wants the City Council to keep it at his originally proposed 8.1%.
In August, Frey outlined that 8.1% levy — the amount of money raised through property taxes — to fund a $1.9 billion annual budget. That’s the biggest increase since the mid-2000s, fueled by a combination of inflation, higher city employee salaries, declining downtown property values, millions the city must invest in police reform and the loss of federal pandemic funds.
The Minneapolis school board approved a maximum levy of 4.5% as it grapples with declining enrollment and the end of federal pandemic relief funds, which required it to close a more-than $100 million budget gap earlier this year. Voters also approved a $20 million school technology levy on Nov. 5, increasing taxes by $96 per year for a $350,000 home.
The size of a property tax bill is a function of several factors, including the individual levies, the estimated market value of the property, and what happened to the values of other properties in the city.
Property tax bills have increased in almost every major U.S. city since before the pandemic, particularly in Florida, where people flocked during the pandemic, driving up home prices, and where climate disasters have driven up public spending, Redfin found.
Minneapolis’ residential property tax increase from 2019 to 2024 lies in the middle of the pack, at 26th out of the 50 largest cities. Minneapolis’ median property tax bill went up 28%, bringing the monthly tax bill to $321. The median property tax bill rose the most in Indianapolis, where the typical homebuyer pays 67% more today than in 2019, with an annual tax bill of $2,460.