Louisiana Property Tax Estimator (2026)

Estimate annual Louisiana property tax at 0.55%

Estimate your annual Louisiana property tax using the state's 0.55% effective tax rate (the average ratio of tax paid to home value). Enter your assessed or market value to see the yearly and monthly property tax bill in Louisiana.

What is the effective property tax rate in Louisiana for 2026?

Louisiana's average effective property tax rate is about 0.55% of home value. That figure is the statewide average ratio of property tax actually paid to market value, so your local bill can be higher or lower depending on your county, city, and school district rates.

Louisiana property tax averages about 0.55% of a home’s value each year. This estimator applies that statewide effective rate to your home value to project an annual and monthly property tax bill for Louisiana in 2026.

How it works

Louisiana’s average effective property tax rate is 0.55% — the statewide ratio of property tax actually paid to market value. The estimate applies that rate to your home’s value after any homestead exemption:

taxable value = home value - homestead exemption
annual tax    = taxable value x 0.55%
monthly tax   = annual tax / 12

The tool can also subtract Louisiana’s homestead exemption of $75,000 from the value before applying the rate. Louisiana’s homestead exemption removes the first $75,000 of market value (the first $7,500 of assessed value at the 10% ratio) from parish taxes for owner-occupied primary residences.

Example

Take a $400,000 home in Louisiana. Applying the $75,000 homestead exemption first gives a taxable value of $325,000, so the estimated annual tax is $325,000 × 0.55% = about $1,788 ($149 per month).

Notes

This is an estimate only and not financial or tax advice. It uses Louisiana’s 0.55% statewide average effective rate; your actual bill depends on local county, city, and school-district millage, assessment ratios, assessment caps, and any local exemptions or credits. For an exact figure, confirm with the Louisiana Tax Commission and your parish assessor.