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Bay City considers expanding poverty tax exemption for owner-occupied homes
Summary
City assessors recommended increasing the poverty exemption for owner-occupied homes — proposing 50% local tax relief for households at or below the federal poverty level and 25% for those up to 50% above it — and the commission referred the proposal to staff for options that could add discretion or higher relief in extreme cases.
Bay City officials heard a presentation Feb. 16 on a proposed expansion of the city’s poverty tax exemption for owner-occupied homes.
City Assessor Wade Slavik told the commission that residential taxable values in Bay City rose sharply — about 14% from 2024 to 2025 — and that the assessing office has been reviewing similar programs in nearby jurisdictions. City appraiser Selena Christopher said the existing poverty exemption reduces taxable value for owner-occupied properties that meet federal poverty thresholds after annual application and income-and-asset verification and that the city currently receives only a small number of applications each year.
Christopher summarized local estimates: roughly 14,500 single-family homes in the city, about 10,000 of…
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