North Carolina property tax is estimated here using the state’s average effective rate of 0.77% — the typical ratio of property tax paid to home value across North Carolina. Enter your home value (and any homestead exemption) to project your annual and monthly property tax bill.
How it works
The estimate applies North Carolina’s 0.77% average effective property tax rate to your taxable value. If you enter a homestead exemption, it is subtracted from the value first:
taxable value = home value − homestead exemption
annual tax = taxable value × 0.0077
monthly tax = annual tax ÷ 12
The 0.77% rate (0.0077 as a decimal) reflects what North Carolina homeowners pay on average; your local county, city, and school-district rates may be higher or lower.
Example
A $300,000 home in North Carolina with no exemption is taxed at 0.77%: $300,000 × 0.0077 = about $2,310 per year, or roughly $193 per month set aside in escrow.
Notes
Estimate only — not financial or tax advice. The 0.77% rate is a statewide average effective rate; your actual North Carolina bill depends on local millage, assessment ratios, and the specific exemptions you qualify for. Confirm figures with your county assessor or the North Carolina Department of Revenue before relying on them.