Northern Kentucky courthouse and Ohio River skyline
Northern Kentucky & Greater Cincinnati

Pay Your Property Tax.
Find Your Local Office.

Locally verified PVA and County Treasurer office info — hours, payment options, deadlines, and exemptions for Boone, Kenton, Campbell, and Hamilton counties.

✓ Kentucky & Ohio covered ✓ Verified office hours ✓ Payment deadlines included
⚠ 2025 Deadline Reminder: Kentucky property taxes are due December 31, 2025 (2% discount if paid before November 1). Hamilton County OH bills mailed July 2025 — first half due August 2025.

County Property Tax Offices

Select your county for verified office locations, hours, phone numbers, payment options, and local deadlines.

KY

Campbell County, Kentucky

PVA + Sheriff's Office Collects
Tax Rate (est.) $0.127 per $100 assessed (County) + levies
Payment Deadline Dec 31 (2% discount by Nov 1)
Collected By Campbell County Sheriff's Office

Campbell County PVA

330 York St
Newport, KY 41071

📞 (859) 292-0218

🕐 Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM

Campbell County Sheriff (Tax)

601 Central Ave
Newport, KY 41071

📞 (859) 292-3000

🕐 Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Detailed page coming soon

KY

Grant County, Kentucky

Williamstown area

Grant County PVA

101 N Main St, Williamstown, KY 41097

📞 (859) 824-2924

🕐 Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Detailed page coming soon

OH

Clermont County, Ohio

Batavia area

Clermont County Treasurer

101 E Main St, Batavia, OH 45103

📞 (513) 732-2280

🕐 Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM

Detailed page coming soon

Kentucky vs. Ohio: How Property Tax Works

The two states have completely different systems. Here's what you need to know before you pay.

🏛 Kentucky

  • Who assesses: County PVA (Property Valuation Administrator) — elected official
  • Who collects: County Sheriff's Office — yes, really. In KY, the Sheriff collects property tax, not a treasurer.
  • When bills go out: Late September / early October each year
  • Payment window: October 1 – December 31
  • Early discount: 2% off if paid by November 1
  • Late penalty: 10% penalty added after January 1; delinquent taxes transferred to County Clerk
  • Assessed value: 100% of "fair cash value" (full market value — unlike some states that use a fraction)
  • Appeal window: January 1 – March 1 (next calendar year after assessment)
  • Homestead exemption: $46,350 reduction in assessed value for homeowners 65+ or totally disabled

⚖️ Ohio

  • Who assesses: County Auditor — elected official
  • Who collects: County Treasurer — separate office from the Auditor
  • When bills go out: Summer (July–August) and winter (December–January)
  • Payment schedule: Two semi-annual installments — not one annual payment like KY
  • Assessed value: 35% of appraised value (Ohio taxes on 35%, not 100%)
  • Effective rate: Higher nominal millage, but applied to 35% of value — total burden comparable to KY
  • Appeal route: County Board of Revision (BOR) — file between January 1 and March 31
  • Homestead exemption: ~$26,200 reduction in taxable value for seniors 65+ or disabled; Enhanced exemption for low-income seniors
  • Owner-occupancy credit: 2.5% rollback for primary residences (automatically applied)

Property Tax Estimator

Estimate your annual property tax for NKY/Cincinnati area counties. This is an estimate — your actual bill depends on your specific taxing district, levies, and exemptions.

How the estimate works

Kentucky counties: Assessed at 100% of market value. County, state, school, and special district rates are added together. Typical combined rate in NKY is $0.90–$1.20 per $100.

Ohio counties: Assessed at 35% of appraised value. Millage rates are applied to that 35% figure. Hamilton County effective rate is approximately 1.5–1.8% of market value.

The 2% early-pay discount (KY) and the owner-occupancy rollback (OH) are shown when applicable.

Exemptions & Discounts

You may qualify to reduce your property tax bill. These programs are often under-used because homeowners don't know they exist.

🏠

Kentucky Homestead Exemption

Reduces the assessed value of your primary residence by $46,350 if you are age 65 or older, or totally disabled. Apply once with your county PVA — it renews automatically unless your status changes.

  • Must be primary residence (not rental)
  • Must be 65+ or totally disabled as of January 1
  • Apply at your County PVA office — no deadline but apply early in the year
  • Saves roughly $45–$55 per year per $1,000 in exemption value
⚖️

Ohio Homestead Exemption

Reduces the taxable value of your primary residence by $26,200 for seniors 65+ or permanently disabled homeowners. An enhanced exemption exists for qualifying low-income seniors.

  • Apply at your County Auditor's office
  • Ohio DTE 105A form required
  • Deadline: December 31 of the year you're applying for
  • Enhanced exemption for income under $36,100/year (indexed)
💰

Ohio 2.5% Owner-Occupancy Rollback

Ohio automatically reduces the tax on your primary residence by 2.5%. This is applied automatically — you don't need to apply separately. Rental properties and second homes don't qualify.

  • Automatic if property is your primary residence
  • Applied by the County Auditor to your tax bill
  • Verify it's showing on your bill — contact Auditor if not
📋

Assessment Appeals

If you believe your property is assessed at more than its fair market value, you can appeal. Both states have a formal process with specific windows.

  • Kentucky: File with County PVA between Jan 1 – Mar 1
  • Ohio: File with County Board of Revision (BOR) Jan 1 – Mar 31
  • Bring a recent appraisal, comparable sales, or photos of condition issues
  • Appeals are free and no attorney is required
  • Successful appeals can reduce your bill for multiple future years
🎖️

Kentucky Disabled Veteran Exemption

Veterans with a 100% service-connected disability rating may qualify for a full exemption on their primary residence. Apply with your County PVA with your VA disability rating letter.

  • 100% VA disability rating required
  • Primary residence only
  • Apply at County PVA — one-time application
  • Surviving spouses may continue to qualify
🎖️

Ohio Disabled Veteran Exemption

Ohio offers a $50,000 reduction in appraised value (not taxable value) for veterans with a 100% service-connected disability rating or unemployability status.

  • 100% VA disability rating or TDIU required
  • Apply at County Auditor — Ohio DTE 105I form
  • Primary residence only
  • Surviving spouses eligible if veteran died in service

How to Pay Your Property Tax

Each county offers multiple ways to pay. Here's what's available and what it costs.

Payment Method Boone KY Kenton KY Campbell KY Hamilton OH
Pay online (card) ✓ 2.5% fee ✓ Fee applies ✓ Fee applies ✓ 2.35% fee
Pay online (eCheck/ACH) ✓ Free ✓ Free Call to confirm ✓ Free
Pay in person ✓ Burlington ✓ Covington & Independence ✓ Newport ✓ Cincinnati + drop box
Pay by mail (check) ✓ Postmark counts ✓ Postmark counts ✓ Postmark counts ✓ Postmark counts
Drop box ✓ Outside Sheriff ✓ Outside Courthouse Confirm locally ✓ Room 402 exterior
Installment plan Not available Not available Not available ✓ Delinquent only

⚠ KY property tax is one lump payment per year, not installments. Ohio is two payments. If your mortgage servicer escrowed your taxes, they will pay directly — but always verify on your escrow statement.

Frequently Asked Questions

My mortgage company pays my property tax. Do I need to do anything?

If your lender has an escrow account set up for property taxes, they will receive the tax bill and pay it directly. You should still verify this each year by checking your annual escrow statement or logging into your loan servicer's portal. If you pay off your mortgage mid-year, notify your county's tax office immediately to redirect future bills to you.

Why is my Kentucky property tax bill collected by the Sheriff's Office?

In Kentucky, the County Sheriff has historically been the primary tax collector for real property taxes — it's embedded in state statute going back to the 1800s. The PVA assesses the value; the Sheriff sends the bill and collects the payment. This is different from most other states (and from Ohio, where a Treasurer handles it). If you have a billing dispute, contact the PVA. If you have a payment question, contact the Sheriff's tax division.

I moved in the middle of the year. Who owes the property tax?

In both Kentucky and Ohio, property taxes are assessed as of January 1 of each year. The person who owned the property on January 1 is technically liable for that year's full tax bill. In practice, at closing, taxes are typically prorated between buyer and seller — check your settlement statement (HUD-1 or Closing Disclosure) to see how this was handled on your transaction. If you closed without a proration, consult a real estate attorney.

What happens if I don't pay by the Kentucky December 31 deadline?

A 10% penalty is added to your bill on January 1. After that, the unpaid taxes are transferred from the Sheriff's Office to the County Clerk, who will eventually file a Certificate of Delinquency. That certificate can be purchased by third-party investors, who then have the right to collect the debt plus interest (up to 18% per year). If left unresolved long enough, the property can eventually be sold at a tax sale. Don't wait — contact your county's tax division as soon as you know you'll miss the deadline.

My Ohio property tax bill seems too high. How do I appeal?

You can file a complaint with the County Board of Revision (BOR) between January 1 and March 31 of the year following the tax year in question. Use form DTE 1. You'll need to show evidence that your property's assessed value exceeds its market value — a recent appraisal, recent comparable sales in your neighborhood, or documentation of property condition issues (structural problems, environmental issues) all help. The process is free; attorneys aren't required but some homeowners find a tax attorney or tax consultant useful for complex disputes.

Can I pay Hamilton County Ohio taxes with a credit card for free?

No — Hamilton County charges a 2.35% convenience fee for credit card payments. To pay with no fee, use eCheck (ACH bank transfer) through the Hamilton County Treasurer's website. You'll need your routing and account number. There is no fee for eCheck payments. Checks by mail (postmarked by the due date) are also free.

Where is the Kenton County PVA office? Is there parking?

The Kenton County PVA is at 303 Court St, Room 210, Covington, KY 41011 — inside the Kenton County Courthouse. Street parking is available on Court Street and adjacent blocks. The nearest parking garage is the Fifth Third Center Garage on Pike St. The office is open Mon–Fri 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM. Walk-ins accepted for general inquiries; appeal hearings require a scheduled appointment.

I own a rental property in NKY. Do I still get the homestead exemption?

No. The homestead exemption in both Kentucky and Ohio is only available for your primary residence — the home you actually live in. Rental properties, vacation homes, and investment properties are not eligible. You must occupy the property as your main dwelling as of January 1 of the tax year.