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Silver Bow County · Montana

Property Tax in Silver Bow County, 2026

A calculator and field guide for Butte-area homeowners — and for anyone considering a move to Silver Bow County — including Montana's 2025 reform package HB 231 + SB 542 (graduated Class 4 homestead rates 0.76%-1.90% replacing the flat 1.35% rate, in response to the 22% statewide median value jump from the 2023 reappraisal), the 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate enrollment system (apply by Mar 20, 2026 at Homestead.MT.gov), the income-tested PTAP and Form 2EC senior credit (up to $1,150), and the FULL DAV Vet exemption (MT Code §15-6-211 — full taxable-value reduction at HHI ≤ $50,166 single / $60K joint, sliding 50%-80% at higher tiers up to $80K). Montana has NO state sales tax — one of only 5 such US states.

Median Effective Rate
0.92%
tax bill ÷ market value
Median Home Value
$215,000
single-family, 2026
Typical Annual Bill
$1,978
on Class 4 graduated taxable value (homestead 0.76%-1.90% per HB 231 of 2025) × combined mill levy / 1000 (state 95 K-12 + 6 university + local)
Assessor
MT DOR Silver Bow
Thinking of moving? Compare Silver Bow County side-by-side with any other county we cover.

Silver Bow County is part of Montana's structurally restructured property tax system, fundamentally rewritten for tax year 2026 by HB 231 + SB 542 of 2025 — the most significant changes to Montana property tax since 2009. Primary residences (owner-occupied 7+ months/year, enrolled at Homestead.MT.gov) receive a graduated Class 4 homestead rate: 0.76% on the portion up to the statewide median residential value (~$395,400), 0.9% on portion between median and 2× median, 1.10% on portion between 2× and 4× median, 1.90% above. Non-homestead second homes, short-term rentals, and non-enrolled properties pay a flat 1.90%. The Class 4 rate converts market value to TAXABLE VALUE; the combined mill levy (state K-12 95 + state university 6 + county/municipal/school local mills, typically 500-800 total) then applies to TV. Silver Bow County's combined mill levy is approximately 850 mills, producing typical homestead effective rates around 0.92%.

How the bill is built

Montana property tax follows a 4-step calculation under the new TY2026 system. Step 1: Market value determination. The Montana Department of Revenue determines market value via the 2-year reappraisal cycle (2025-2026 cycle uses 2024 market data; next reappraisal 2027-2028). Step 2: Apply Class 4 rate to determine TAXABLE VALUE. For homesteads (enrolled): graduated rate 0.76%-1.90% by tier. For non-homestead: flat 1.90%. Step 3: Apply combined mill levy. Tax = TV × combined mill levy / 1000. The 95 K-12 + 6 university state mills are mandatory across all jurisdictions; local mills (county, city, school, special districts) vary substantially. Step 4: Apply applicable reductions. Disabled American Veteran (DAV) reduction (income-tested 50%-100% for 100% disabled vets), Property Tax Assistance Program (PTAP, income-tested AV reduction for low-income homeowners), Elderly Homeowner/Renter Credit (Form 2EC, refundable up to $1,150 for 62+). Bills are typically issued November (first half due Nov 30, second half due May 31).

The 2023 reappraisal cycle drove the 2025 reform. Median residential market value jumped 22% ($67,000) in one cycle, with bills rising 30-40% in many counties. HB 231 + SB 542 of 2025 restructured Class 4 residential into graduated homestead rates that intentionally shift burden from primary residences onto second homes and short-term rentals (which pay flat 1.90%).
MT joins the categorical full-vet-exemption states. The DAV program (MT Code §15-6-211) provides full taxable-value reduction for 100% disabled veterans at income ≤ $50,166 single / ~$60,000 joint, sliding down to 50% at $70K-$80K. Most qualify for full or near-full reduction. Stacks with the 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate.

2026 Silver Bow County rate breakdown (combined mill levy (mills/1000 of taxable value); Class 4 graduated homestead rates 0.76%-1.90% per HB 231 of 2025, Butte district)

Taxing entityRate
Silver Bow County combined mill levy (state K-12 95 + state university 6 + county/municipal/school local mills, including substantial post-mining environmental and reclamation levies); Class 4 graduated homestead rates 0.76-1.90% per HB 231 of 2025850.0000
Combined total850.0000

As of April 27, 2026 · From Montana Department of Revenue — Silver Bow County.

Note: Silver Bow County is consolidated with the city of Butte (Butte-Silver Bow is one of only two Montana consolidated city-counties — the other being Anaconda-Deer Lodge). Butte was once known as "the Richest Hill on Earth" — the most productive copper mining district in the world during the 1880s-1920s, with 39 active mines underground and ~75,000 residents at its 1917 peak (more than double its current population). The ore body is estimated to have produced over 21 billion pounds of copper, plus substantial silver, gold, lead, zinc, and manganese.
Note: Silver Bow’s 0.92% effective rate is the highest among the major Montana counties — a function of (1) low median home values around $215,000 (most homes fall fully into the first 0.76% Class 4 bracket), (2) a substantial mill levy of ~850 mills (well above state average) reflecting elevated post-mining environmental and reclamation costs, and (3) the consolidated city-county tax structure that consolidates municipal and county levies into a single rate structure. Despite the higher effective rate, absolute median bills of ~$1,978 remain among the lowest in Montana due to the low home values.
Note: The Berkeley Pit — an 1,800-foot-deep, 1.5-mile-by-1-mile open-pit copper mine operated by the Anaconda Company 1955-1982 — sits at the eastern edge of downtown Butte and is one of the largest Superfund sites in the United States. After mine closure, groundwater pumping ceased and the pit began filling with acidic, metals-laden water (current pH ~2.5, comparable to vinegar). The pit currently holds ~50 billion gallons of contaminated water; the EPA-supervised Pit Water Treatment Plant (operational since 2019) treats outflow water to remove heavy metals before release.

Deductions and exemptions for 2026

Montana homeowner property tax relief operates through THREE primary mechanisms post-2025-reform. (1) The 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate (HB 231 of 2025) provides graduated Class 4 tax rates (0.76%-1.90% by tier) for primary residences vs. flat 1.90% for second homes / short-term rentals — applies to all primary-residence homeowners regardless of age. (2) The Disabled American Veteran (DAV) Property Tax Assistance Program (MT Code §15-6-211) provides 50%-100% taxable value reduction for 100% disabled veterans, income-tested. (3) The Property Tax Assistance Program (PTAP) + Elderly Homeowner/Renter Credit (Form 2EC) provide income-tested relief for low-income homeowners, particularly seniors. Montana has NO state senior valuation freeze. Montana also has NO state sales tax (one of only 5 such states), making property tax structurally important for local revenue.

2026 Homestead Reduced Rate (HB 231 of 2025, effective TY2026)

The Homestead Reduced Rate (HB 231 of 2025, signed by Governor Gianforte May 2025) provides graduated Class 4 tax rates for primary-residence homeowners: 0.76% on portion up to statewide median residential value (~$395,400 for 2025-2026 cycle), 0.90% on portion between median and 2× median (~$790,800), 1.10% on portion between 2× and 4× median (~$1,581,600), and 1.90% on portion at or above 4× median. Non-homestead second homes / short-term rentals / non-enrolled properties pay a flat 1.90%. Enroll at Homestead.MT.gov between December 1, 2025 and March 20, 2026 for tax year 2026. Eligibility: own AND occupy primary residence for 7+ months/year. Properties that received the 2025 property tax rebate (235,000+ Montana homeowners) automatically qualify if ownership has not changed and the property remains a primary residence. Long-term rentals (rented for 28+ days/period for at least 7 months/year, tenants use as residence) also qualify and apply during the same window. False attestation can result in loss of classification + significant legal/financial penalties.

Disabled American Veteran (DAV) Property Tax Assistance Program (MT Code §15-6-211)

The DAV Property Tax Assistance Program provides 50%-100% reduction in taxable value for veterans with 100% VA service-connected disability (P&T or IU rating). Income-tested with sliding scale: full reduction (100%) at income ≤ $50,166 single / ~$60,000 joint (2024 limits), 80% reduction at $50K-$60K income, 70% reduction at $60K-$70K, 50% reduction at $70K-$80K, ineligible above $80K. Apply with Montana Department of Revenue annually (income re-verified). Submit VA disability rating letter (must show 100% P&T or IU rating) + DD-214 + tax return showing prior year income. Surviving spouses may continue receiving the reduction until remarriage. MT joins the categorical full-vet-exemption states at the most-common-case income tier. Disabled veterans can stack the DAV reduction on top of the Homestead Reduced Rate for compounded benefit.

Property Tax Assistance Program (PTAP) + Elderly Homeowner/Renter Credit (Form 2EC)

The Property Tax Assistance Program (PTAP) is an income-tested AV reduction for primary residence — applied via Montana Department of Revenue (income limits ~$26,500 single / ~$35,000 joint for 2024, indexed). The Elderly Homeowner/Renter Credit (Form 2EC) is a refundable Montana state income tax credit up to $1,150 for homeowners or renters age 62+ with household income under ~$45,000 (2024 limits). Claimed on Form 2EC with Montana income tax return; refundable regardless of state income tax owed. Both PTAP and the Elderly Credit are POST-BILL state-level mechanisms — they do not reduce the calculated property tax bill in this calculator but factor into total annual relief for low-income filers. AARP Tax-Aide and VITA provide free filing assistance.

Appealing your assessment

Montana property tax appeals follow a multi-tier process anchored in the 2-year reappraisal cycle (current cycle 2025-2026). Level 1: Informal Review with Montana DOR. Within 30 days of receiving the Notice of Classification and Appraisal (typically July of even years — cycle midpoint), file informal review request with local DOR field office. The DOR appraiser will review your file and may adjust. Level 2: County Tax Appeal Board. If unsatisfied with informal review, file formal appeal with the County Tax Appeal Board (CTAB) within 30 days of the informal review decision. The CTAB is a 3-member board appointed by the county. Level 3: Montana Tax Appeal Board (MTAB). Appeal CTAB decisions to the Montana Tax Appeal Board within 30 days. Level 4: Montana District Court. Final administrative remedy. Most appeals are resolved at Level 1 or 2. The 2023 reappraisal cycle generated unprecedented appeal volume across Montana — many counties saw 5x-10x increases in appeals filed.

Cities and towns in Silver Bow County

Silver Bow County contains 4 incorporated municipalities, ranging from Butte 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 Silver Bow County is subject to Silver Bow County's tax rolls, while the portion outside is subject to the adjacent county's.

City or town Type Population (2020)
Butte County seat city 35,000
Walkerville town 700
Centerville Census-designated place 200
Meaderville Census-designated place 100

About city-level property tax rates: The rate breakdown and calculator on this page reflect the Butte tax district. Other cities in Silver Bow 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 Montana Department of Revenue — Silver Bow County before relying on any estimate.

Frequently asked questions

When are Montana property taxes due?

Montana property tax bills are typically issued annually in October by the county treasurer. Most counties allow split-payment: first half due by November 30, second half due by May 31. Late payments accrue interest at 5/6 of 1% per month plus 2% penalty. After 3 years delinquent, the property may be sold at tax lien sale. Most homeowners pay through escrow via mortgage servicer. The 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate (HB 231 of 2025) requires enrollment at Homestead.MT.gov by March 20, 2026 to receive the lower graduated rates for 2026 — properties not enrolled by the deadline pay the flat 1.90% non-homestead rate (significantly higher) but can claim a refund between January 1, 2027 and May 31, 2027 if they enroll for 2027.

How do Montana's NEW 2026 graduated homestead rates work?

Montana's 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate (HB 231 of 2025) provides a graduated Class 4 tax rate based on home value tier — but each portion of value is taxed at its tier rate, NOT the entire value at the highest applicable tier. 0.76% applies to the portion up to the statewide median residential value (~$395,400 for 2025-2026). 0.90% applies to the portion between median and 2× median (~$790,800). 1.10% applies to the portion between 2× and 4× median (~$1,581,600). 1.90% applies to the portion at or above 4× median. Example: a $725,000 Bozeman homestead would have $395,400 taxed at 0.76% ($3,005 TV) + $329,600 taxed at 0.90% ($2,966 TV) = $5,971 total taxable value. Tax = $5,971 × ~750 mills / 1000 = ~$4,478. The "Class 4 rate" converts market value to TAXABLE VALUE; the combined mill levy (state + local) then applies to TV. Non-homestead second homes / short-term rentals pay flat 1.90% on entire value (NOT graduated).

How do I enroll for the Montana Homestead Reduced Rate?

Enroll at Homestead.MT.gov between December 1, 2025 and March 20, 2026 for tax year 2026. Eligibility: own AND occupy primary residence for 7+ months/year. Properties that received the 2025 property tax rebate (235,000+ Montana homeowners — must have owned + lived in residence for 7+ months in 2024) automatically qualify if ownership has not changed and the property remains a primary residence. Long-term rentals (rented for 28+ days/period for at least 7 months/year, tenants use as residence) also qualify and apply during the same window. False attestation can result in loss of classification + significant legal/financial penalties. The DOR Call Center (406-444-6900) can assist with documentation or eligibility questions.

How does Montana's Disabled American Veteran (DAV) Property Tax Assistance Program work?

The DAV Property Tax Assistance Program (MT Code §15-6-211) provides 50%-100% reduction in taxable value for veterans with 100% VA service-connected disability (P&T or IU rating). Income-tested with sliding scale: full reduction (100%) at income ≤ $50,166 single / ~$60,000 joint (2024 limits, indexed annually), 80% reduction at $50K-$60K income, 70% reduction at $60K-$70K, 50% reduction at $70K-$80K, ineligible above $80K. Apply with Montana Department of Revenue annually. Submit VA disability rating letter (must show 100% P&T or IU rating) + DD-214 + tax return showing prior year income. Surviving spouses may continue receiving the reduction until remarriage. MT joins the categorical full-vet-exemption states at the most-common-case income tier (WI, MI, IA, MN, NJ, PA, VA, MD, SC, AL, LA, MS, AR, OK, NM, WV, MT). Disabled veterans can stack the DAV reduction on top of the 2026 Homestead Reduced Rate for compounded benefit.

Why does Montana have no state sales tax?

Montana is one of only 5 US states without a state sales tax (along with Alaska, Delaware, New Hampshire, Oregon). Montana voters have repeatedly rejected sales tax proposals (most recently in 1971 and 1993, both rejected by ~70-30 margins). The constitutional structure does not prohibit sales tax — Montana could legally adopt one — but voters have remained consistently opposed. The result is a revenue mix unusual for US states: property tax + state income tax (graduated, 4.7% to 5.65% for 2026, dropping to 5.4% for 2027 per HB 337 of 2025) carry the substantial revenue load that property + sales + income tax carry in most other states. Approximately 80% of property tax revenue from residential homeowners flows to local jurisdictions; the remaining 20% goes to the State of Montana, which returns the amount in full to fund K-12 public schools (the 95 K-12 state mills). The 2025 reform legislation (HB 231 + SB 542) was intentionally redistributive WITHIN the property tax — not a structural change away from property tax reliance.

About Silver Bow County

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

Weird fact
In November 1995, a flock of approximately 342 migrating snow geese landed on the Berkeley Pit’s contaminated water during a snowstorm. All 342 died from the water’s acidic, metals-laden chemistry — the largest single bird-kill incident at the pit. Subsequently, the Berkeley Pit has installed extensive bird-deterrent systems (lasers, ultrasonic devices, propane cannons, falconry programs) to discourage waterfowl from landing. Despite these measures, periodic large bird-kill events continue (a December 2016 event killed several thousand snow geese during a similar weather-induced landing). The pit is open for paid public viewing from a viewing platform — one of the few Superfund sites in the US with formal tourist access.
Hometown hero
Evel Knievel (Robert Craig Knievel)
The American daredevil (1938-2007) — born in Butte on October 17, 1938 — performed motorcycle stunt jumping from the late 1960s through the 1970s, attempting (and frequently failing) jumps over rows of buses, fountains at Caesars Palace (December 31, 1967, where he sustained a 29-day coma after crashing), and the Snake River Canyon (September 8, 1974, in a steam-powered "Skycycle X-2" rocket — the parachute deployed prematurely and the craft drifted down without crossing). Knievel suffered ~433 broken bones over his career (Guinness Book record) and is buried at Mountain View Cemetery in Butte. The annual Evel Knievel Days festival (mid-July) draws ~25,000 motorcyclists to Butte. The Evel Knievel statue stands outside the Butte-Silver Bow Courthouse.
Biggest annual event
Montana Folk Festival
Held annually for 3 days in mid-July in uptown Butte since 2011 (replacing the National Folk Festival’s 2008-2010 run in Butte), the Montana Folk Festival is one of the largest free outdoor music festivals in the western United States — drawing ~150,000 attendees over the weekend and featuring ~25 traditional folk musicians from around the country and world. Butte also hosts An Ri Ra Montana Irish Festival (mid-August — Butte was historically Montana’s Irish-immigrant capital, with peak Irish population over 25% during the early 20th century) and Evel Knievel Days (mid-July).

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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