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Montgomery County · Indiana

Property Tax in Montgomery County, 2026

A calculator and field guide for Crawfordsville-area homeowners — and for anyone considering a move to Montgomery County — including certified 2026 tax rates, the Homestead Standard and Supplemental Deductions, and the 1% circuit-breaker cap that limits most homestead bills.

Median Effective Rate
0.79%
tax bill ÷ market value
Median Home Value
$158,100
single-family, 2026
Typical Annual Bill
$1,247
post homestead + credits
Assessor
Montgomery Assessor
Thinking of moving? Compare Montgomery County side-by-side with any other county we cover.

How the bill is built

Indiana calculates property tax in a very different way from most states. Start with your home's gross assessed value (AV), subtract the $48,000 Homestead Standard Deduction, then subtract 40% of what's left as the Supplemental Homestead Deduction. What remains is your net AV, and that is multiplied by your tax district's combined rate (per $100 AV). The result is then capped at 1% of your gross AV under Indiana's circuit breaker — meaning most homesteads in high-rate districts effectively pay 1% flat.

Important for 2026: Under Senate Enrolled Act 1 (2025), every homestead also receives a new Supplemental Homestead Credit equal to 10% of your tax liability, up to $300 per year. This is applied automatically — no form required — starting with bills due in 2026.

2026 Montgomery County rate breakdown (per $100 AV, Crawfordsville district)

Taxing entityRate
City of Crawfordsville combined rate (per $100 AV)4.0795
Combined total4.0795

As of April 25, 2026 · From Montgomery County Assessor.

Note: Montgomery County is the home of Wabash College — one of only three remaining all-male four-year liberal arts colleges in the United States (alongside Hampden-Sydney in Virginia and Saint John's University in Minnesota). Founded in 1832, Wabash has approximately 850 students and is a major economic and cultural force in Crawfordsville. The college's famously strict student conduct code (the "Gentleman's Rule") and its high percentage of students who go on to graduate school keep Wabash in the top tier of national liberal arts rankings despite its small size.
Note: Crawfordsville's combined rate of approximately $4.08 per $100 AV (2021 data) is high in nominal terms but Indiana's 1% circuit breaker cap means most homestead bills are capped at 1% of gross AV. The county is also famous as "The Athens of Indiana" — a 19th-century nickname earned because of the unusually high concentration of writers, scholars, and artists who lived in or were associated with Crawfordsville (notably General Lew Wallace, author of "Ben-Hur").
Note: Montgomery County contains some of the most-photographed historic covered bridges in Indiana — including the Deer's Mill, Mansfield, and Cox Ford bridges. The annual Covered Bridge Festival (centered in Parke County, Montgomery's southwestern neighbor, but with several Montgomery sites) draws an estimated 1.5+ million visitors over its 10-day October run, making it one of the largest tourist events in the Midwest.

Deductions and credits for 2026

Homestead Standard + Supplemental Deductions

Indiana's two-part homestead deduction is the single most valuable tax reduction available to homeowners. For 2026, the Standard Deduction is $48,000 off your gross AV, and the Supplemental Deduction is 40% of what remains after the Standard is applied. Together these typically shield about 65% of a typical home's AV from taxation before any rate is even applied.

File Form HC10 (Homestead Property Tax Deduction) with the Montgomery County Assessor by December 31 of the year preceding the tax year. Many closings handle this automatically — verify on your next tax bill that "Homestead Standard Deduction" appears as a line item.

Phase-in schedule: Under SEA 1, the Standard Deduction drops to $40,000 in 2027 and phases out entirely by 2030, while the Supplemental percentage rises from 40% (2026) to 66.7% by 2031. The net effect is roughly revenue-neutral for most homeowners — just a different calculation path.

The 1% Circuit Breaker Cap

Indiana's constitution caps homestead property tax at 1% of gross assessed value. If your calculated tax would exceed that amount (which is common in high-rate districts like Hammond, Gary, and South Bend), the bill is reduced to the cap. Non-homestead residential property is capped at 2%, and commercial at 3%.

Supplemental Homestead Credit (new in 2026)

Under SEA 1, qualifying homesteads receive a credit equal to the lesser of 10% of your tax liability or $300. This is applied automatically to your bill — no application needed.

Over 65 Credit

Replacing the old Over 65 Deduction, this new credit provides up to $150 directly off your tax bill. Income limit is $60,000 single / $70,000 joint. File Form 43708 with your county auditor by January 15 of the tax year.

100% Disabled Veteran Exemption

Veterans with a 100% service-connected disability qualify for a full exemption on their primary residence. Partial disability deductions vary by rating.

Appealing your assessment

If you believe Crawfordsville-area assessed values on your property are too high, you can file Form 130 (Taxpayer's Notice to Initiate an Appeal) with your township assessor within 45 days of receiving your Form 11 assessment notice, which typically arrives in the spring. Most appeals are resolved informally with the assessor; unresolved disputes go to the county Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals (PTABOA).

Cities and towns in Montgomery County

Montgomery County contains 7 incorporated municipalities, ranging from Crawfordsville to the smallest village. Search volume for property tax is often city-specific, so here is the complete list — with population from the 2020 US Census, rounded to the nearest 100.

Data: US Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census. Populations rounded. Cities marked as "split" straddle a county border — the portion inside Montgomery County is subject to Montgomery County's tax rolls, while the portion outside is subject to the adjacent county's.

City or town Type Population (2020)
Crawfordsville County seat city 16,162
Ladoga town 1,099
Waynetown town 901
Darlington town 793
Linden town 705
New Market town 691
New Richmond town 318

About city-level property tax rates: The rate breakdown and calculator on this page reflect the Crawfordsville tax district. Other cities in Montgomery County may pay into different school districts, city rates, and special districts — so their combined rates can differ, sometimes substantially. Always verify the specific rates for your address with the Montgomery County Assessor before relying on any estimate.

Frequently asked questions

How does the Indiana 1% circuit breaker cap actually work?

Indiana's constitution caps homestead property tax at 1% of your gross assessed value. If your calculated tax (after deductions) would exceed 1% of gross AV, the excess is automatically "forgiven" — you never pay more than 1%. In Lake, Marion, and St. Joseph counties, a large share of homesteads hit this cap.

Do I have to apply for the Supplemental Homestead Credit?

No. If your property already has the Homestead Standard Deduction on file, the Supplemental Homestead Credit is applied automatically starting with your 2026 bill. Check that it appears on your bill under "Credits."

When does my homestead deduction need to be filed by?

File Form HC10 with your county auditor by December 31 of the assessment year. Many real-estate closings handle this paperwork — verify on your first full-year tax bill that the deduction appears.

About Montgomery County

Beyond the property tax — a few things you might not know about the place.

Weird fact
Crawfordsville is home to the Lane Place — the historic home of Henry S. Lane (US Senator and former Indiana governor) — which has the unusual distinction of being one of only a handful of US homes that hosted both Abraham Lincoln (during his 1860 campaign) AND William Howard Taft (during his 1908 campaign) as overnight guests. The home is now a museum operated by the Montgomery County Historical Society.
Hometown hero
General Lew Wallace
The Civil War Union general, lawyer, and author (1827-1905) was raised in Crawfordsville and made it his lifelong home. Wallace wrote "Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ" (1880) at his Crawfordsville study (still preserved as a museum on his original property) — the book was the best-selling American novel of the 19th century, and the 1959 film adaptation won 11 Academy Awards (a record matched only twice since). Wallace served as US Minister to the Ottoman Empire 1881-85.
Biggest annual event
Strawberry Festival
The Crawfordsville Strawberry Festival, held annually on the second weekend of June since 1969 in downtown Crawfordsville, draws 40,000+ visitors over its 3-day run. The festival serves an estimated 8,000 strawberry shortcakes and is operated as a fundraiser for the General Lew Wallace Study & Museum and the Lane Place historic home.

About this site's data and estimates. The Property Tax Almanac is an independent editorial reference. It is not affiliated with any government agency, tax assessor, or tax preparation service. The calculators and data on this site are informational and are not a substitute for advice from a qualified tax professional, attorney, or your official county assessor or appraisal district.

Accuracy, sources, and scope. Tax rate data is compiled from publicly available sources — including the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, the Indiana Department of Local Government Finance, the Illinois Department of Revenue, the Florida Department of Revenue, the Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury, the Arizona Department of Revenue, the North Carolina Department of Revenue, the Wisconsin Department of Revenue, the Michigan Department of Treasury, the Iowa Department of Revenue and Iowa Department of Management, the Minnesota Department of Revenue, the California State Board of Equalization, individual county appraisal and assessor offices, and the US Census Bureau — and is believed to be accurate as of the "revised" date shown on each page. Rates change annually (and sometimes mid-year) through local budget adoptions, legislative action, and voter-approved measures. Rates displayed reflect the primary tax district of the county seat; rates in other cities, school districts, Municipal Utility Districts (MUDs), Emergency Services Districts (ESDs), Mello-Roos Community Facilities Districts (CFDs), and special taxing units within the same county may be meaningfully higher or lower. Census population figures are from the 2020 Decennial Census and are rounded to the nearest 100.

How to use these estimates. The calculator produces a rough estimate based on the county seat's combined rate, statutory deductions and exemptions available statewide, and the value you enter. Your actual bill depends on your specific parcel's assessed or appraised value, the exact taxing entities covering your address, any local-option exemptions you qualify for, any assessment caps or circuit-breaker protections (e.g., Florida's Save Our Homes, Arizona's Prop 117 LPV cap, Indiana's 1% circuit breaker, North Carolina's Elderly/Disabled Exclusion, Wisconsin's Lottery & Gaming Credit, Michigan's Proposal A 5%/IRM cap, Iowa's residential rollback, Minnesota's Homestead Market Value Exclusion, California's Proposition 13 acquisition-value system and 2% annual cap), and any appeal or protest outcomes. For an authoritative figure, consult your county appraisal district (Texas), county assessor (Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Arizona, North Carolina, Iowa, Minnesota, California), county property appraiser (Florida), or municipal/township assessor (Wisconsin and Michigan — assessments are set at the city/village/township level rather than the county level; some Iowa and Minnesota cities also have city-level assessors). The contact information for the primary authority in each county is listed at the top of that county's page.

No legal or tax advice; no warranty. Nothing on this site constitutes legal, tax, financial, investment, or real estate advice. The Property Tax Almanac, its authors, and its publisher make no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, about the completeness, accuracy, reliability, suitability, or availability of the content on this site. Any reliance you place on the information is strictly at your own risk. We are not liable for any loss or damage — including without limitation, indirect or consequential loss or damage — arising from the use of this site or from decisions made based on its content.

Found an error? Property tax rules are complex and change often. If you spot an inaccuracy, please contact us — corrections help every reader who comes after you.

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