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Linn County · Iowa

Property Tax in Linn County, 2026

A calculator and field guide for Cedar Rapids-area homeowners — and for anyone considering a move to Linn County — including Iowa's residential rollback (44.5345% for FY2026), the consolidated levy structure, the Homestead Tax Credit and 65+ Homestead Exemption, and Iowa's unique two-installment September/March payment schedule.

Median Effective Rate
1.94%
tax bill ÷ market value
Median Home Value
$162,000
single-family, 2026
Typical Annual Bill
$3,138
on Taxable Value (44.53% rollback) × consol rate
Assessor
LCA
Thinking of moving? Compare Linn County side-by-side with any other county we cover.

Linn County, home to Cedar Rapids and roughly 230k Iowans, uses Iowa's distinctive "rollback" system: assessed value is set at 100% of market value, but only a fraction of that value is actually subject to taxation. The fraction — the residential rollback — is set annually by the Iowa Department of Revenue to limit aggregate statewide residential taxable value growth to no more than 3% per year. For FY2026, the residential rollback is 44.5345%.

How the bill is built

Iowa's tax math has three steps and one unique constraint. Step 1: Assessed Value. The local assessor (county or city — seven Iowa cities have their own city assessors, including Cedar Rapids) values your property at 100% of fair market value, per Iowa Code 441.21. Step 2: Taxable Value. Multiply Assessed Value by the residential rollback (44.5345% for FY2026) to get Taxable Value. The rollback is a uniform statewide percentage set annually by the IDR. Step 3: Apply the consolidated levy rate. Multiply Taxable Value by the consolidated rate (38.27 per $1,000 for Cedar Rapids) and divide by 1,000.

Then subtract credits: the Homestead Tax Credit (typically $50-150 for primary residences), the 65+ Homestead Exemption ($6,500 of taxable value, FY2026 onwards), and the Military Service Exemption ($4,000 of taxable value for wartime veterans). 100% disabled veterans receive a full property tax credit equal to their entire bill.

The rollback limits aggregate growth, not individual property growth. If your home's assessed value rises 18% in one biennial cycle (which happened to many Iowa homes in 2023), your taxable value will likely rise much faster than 3% — because the rollback only caps the STATEWIDE total residential taxable value increase. Properties that appreciated faster than the state average bear a disproportionate share of the increase. This is why Iowa property tax bills often rise sharply for individual homeowners even when the state median bill is "only" growing 3-5%.
Bills due September 30 and March 31. Iowa property taxes are paid in two installments: the first half is due September 30 of the year following assessment, and the second half is due March 31 of the year after that. (Example: A January 1, 2025 assessment generates a tax bill payable September 30, 2026 and March 31, 2027.) Mail postmarked through these dates is accepted; assessment notices arrive in spring (typically mid-April) with Local Board of Review hearings May 1-31.

2026 Linn County rate breakdown (consolidated levy per $1,000 of Taxable Value, Cedar Rapids district)

Taxing entityRate
Cedar Rapids City + CR Schools + Linn County (consol)38.2700
Combined total38.2700

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

Note: Linn County has the highest median effective property tax rate in our Iowa coverage (1.94%) — meaningfully above the state median of ~1.50%. Cedar Rapids has invested heavily in flood-recovery infrastructure since the 2008 flood and the 2020 derecho, both of which damaged a substantial portion of the city tax base and drove sustained levy increases.
Note: The City of Cedar Rapids has its own city assessor (separate from the Linn County Assessor) — one of seven cities in Iowa with a city-level assessor, alongside Ames, Sioux City, Mason City, Davenport, Dubuque, and Iowa City. Property within Cedar Rapids city limits is assessed by the city assessor, not the county.
Note: Linn County's rural townships (Bertram, Clinton, Boulder, etc.) have consolidated rates of 24-28 per $1,000 — much lower than Cedar Rapids proper at 38.27, due to the absence of city levies and lower school district debt service.

Credits and exemptions for 2026

Iowa's exemption system has two distinct mechanisms working in parallel: credits (which reduce the final tax bill in dollars) and exemptions (which reduce the taxable value before the rate is applied). Both must be filed with your local assessor (county or city) and most are one-time filings that continue automatically once granted.

Homestead Tax Credit — for primary residences

If you own and occupy Cedar Rapids as your primary residence, file Form 54-028 (Homestead Tax Credit and Exemption) with your local assessor. The Homestead Credit reduces your tax bill by an amount equal to $4,850 × your school district's portion of the consolidated rate ÷ 1,000 — typically $50 to $150 per year. Filing deadline: July 1. One-time filing; automatic renewal as long as you continue to qualify.

To qualify, you must (a) be an Iowa resident, (b) own the home, and (c) actually live in the property on July 1 and for at least 6 months of the tax year. Exceptions exist for active military and nursing home residents.

65+ Homestead Exemption — added by HF 718 (2023)

Owners aged 65 or older receive an additional $6,500 exemption from taxable value (FY2026 onwards). This is in addition to the Homestead Credit — both can be claimed by qualifying senior owners. The exemption was phased in: $3,250 for FY2025, $6,500 for FY2026 and onwards. Use the same Form 54-028.

This is an exemption (reducing taxable value before the rate is applied), not a credit (reducing the final bill). On a 38.27 per $1,000 consolidated rate, the senior exemption saves approximately $249 per year.

Disabled Veteran Homestead Tax Credit — full property tax exemption

Veterans with a 100% service-connected permanent and total disability rating from the VA — or unmarried surviving spouses of qualifying veterans — receive a credit equal to 100% of their property tax bill on their primary residence. This is a full exemption in practical terms.

File Form 54-049 (Disabled Veteran Homestead Tax Credit) with your local assessor, with VA disability rating documentation attached. One-time filing; automatic renewal as long as the veteran qualifies.

Military Service Tax Exemption

Veterans who served during a qualifying wartime period receive a $4,000 exemption from taxable value (raised from $1,852 by HF 718, effective FY2025). Available to all qualifying veterans regardless of disability status. File Form 54-146 (Military Service Tax Exemption) with your assessor by July 1.

Iowa Property Tax Credit (Elderly & Disabled, income-limited)

Owners age 70+ (and disabled owners 23+) with low household incomes can apply for the Iowa Property Tax Credit Claim (Form 54-001). Maximum credit is $1,000. Income guidelines are tied to federal poverty thresholds and updated annually. File with your county treasurer (not the assessor) between January 1 and June 1.

Appealing your assessment

Iowa's appeal process has a distinct multi-step structure. Your Assessment Roll Notice arrives in mid-April. You may first request an informal review with the assessor (deadline April 25). If unresolved, file a written protest with the Local Board of Review (deadline: between April 2 and April 30 in most counties; check with the Linn County Assessor). Board hearings run May 1-31.

If the Board's decision is unsatisfactory, you can appeal to the Iowa Property Assessment Appeal Board (PAAB) within 20 days of the Board of Review's final adjournment (typically mid-to-late June). Alternatively, you can appeal directly to the District Court within 20 days. PAAB is generally cheaper and faster for residential appeals; District Court for commercial.

Effective appeal strategy: focus on your assessed value (the assessor's market value estimate), not the rollback or rate. Iowa requires assessment at 100% of market value — if your assessment exceeds true market value, you have a strong case. The most useful evidence is comparable sales data within 12-18 months of January 1 of the assessment year.

Cities and towns in Linn County

Linn County contains 7 incorporated municipalities, ranging from Cedar Rapids 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 Linn County is subject to Linn County's tax rolls, while the portion outside is subject to the adjacent county's.

City or town Type Population (2020)
Cedar Rapids County seat city 137,710
Marion city 41,535
Hiawatha city 7,649
Mount Vernon city 4,506
Robins city 4,017
Lisbon city 2,197
Springville city 1,186

About city-level property tax rates: The rate breakdown and calculator on this page reflect the Cedar Rapids tax district. Other cities in Linn 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 Linn County Assessor before relying on any estimate.

Compare with neighboring counties

Frequently asked questions

When are Linn County property taxes due?

Iowa property taxes are paid in two installments: September 30 (first half) and March 31 of the following year (second half). Some counties (including Polk and Linn) auto-pay the first installment from your mortgage escrow without billing you separately — check your statement.

What is the residential rollback and why does it change every year?

The residential rollback is a state-set multiplier that determines how much of your assessed value is actually taxed. For FY2026 the rollback is 44.5345%, meaning only that fraction of your assessed value goes into the tax calculation. The Iowa Department of Revenue sets the rollback annually to limit aggregate STATEWIDE residential taxable value growth to 3% per year — when the housing market is hot statewide, the rollback drops; when it's flat, the rollback rises. Individual properties grow faster or slower than the statewide aggregate.

Do I need to file for the Homestead Tax Credit?

Yes — file Form 54-028 with your county assessor (or city assessor in Cedar Rapids, Davenport, Iowa City, Sioux City, Dubuque, Ames, or Mason City) by July 1. The credit is approximately $50-$150 per year depending on your school district's portion of the consolidated rate. Once filed, it auto-renews — only re-file if you move. Same form covers the 65+ Homestead Exemption (additional $6,500 of taxable value, FY2026 onwards).

How do I appeal my assessment?

Iowa has a tight appeal calendar. Informal review with the assessor: by April 25. Board of Review protest: April 2 - May 31. If unresolved, appeal to the Property Assessment Appeal Board (PAAB) in Des Moines or to district court — deadline October 31. The strongest appeal evidence is a recent independent appraisal or comparable sales. PAAB hearings are typically by phone or video and surprisingly approachable.

About Linn County

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

Weird fact
Cedar Rapids is the only US city with municipal government buildings on its own island — Mays Island in the Cedar River hosts City Hall, the Linn County Courthouse, and the Veterans Memorial Building. The island was purchased by the city in 1894 and has been the seat of local government ever since.
Hometown hero
Ashton Kutcher
The actor was born in Cedar Rapids and graduated from Clear Creek-Amana High School. He attended the University of Iowa briefly before being discovered as a model in Cedar Rapids and moving to New York. His twin brother Michael still lives in the area.
Biggest annual event
Freedom Festival
Held annually around Independence Day in downtown Cedar Rapids since 1983, the Freedom Festival is one of the largest community-organized Fourth of July celebrations in the Midwest — featuring the Big Parade, hot air balloon races, and a large fireworks display over the Cedar River. The festival draws 100,000+ attendees.

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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