Average property tax rates in Arizona

Across the 15 Arizona counties we index here, modeled effective rates average about 1.08% (population-weighted), which works out to roughly $3,795 per year on each jurisdiction’s own benchmark before exemptions—open a row for the exact home-value assumption behind that place’s figure.

Summaries here include only counties in the current dataset—not every subdivision in the state.

Indexed counties
15
Avg. effective rate
1.08%
Population-weighted from indexed county rows in this state.

Avg. modeled annual tax (same basis): $3,795

Primary sources & market-comparable rates

This state’s county rows use primary sources (not U.S. Census ACS county medians). The statewide average, sortable rate column, and tools on this hub apply the same market-comparable rules Rate Gazetteer uses for interstate rankings—e.g. Arkansas and Arizona: modeled tax ÷ $350,000 (Arizona: ADOR $/100 on Class 3 net assessed = 10% of that LPV); Florida: × 0.72 taxable-to-market; California: × 0.58; Alabama and Alaska use each county’s modeled effective rate without an extra multiplier. County pages still show the benchmark each jurisdiction uses. Figures are for orientation—not your parcel’s bill.

Full detail: Methodology — modeled primary sources.

How this compares nationally

The population-weighted average modeled rate across indexed Arizona counties is 1.08%. That sits near the broad national band many surveys use for orientation (often roughly 1–1.3% of home value, varying by source and methodology)—use it as context, not a benchmark for “fair” taxation.

Orientation band (~11.3%): broad U.S. survey context. See Tax Foundation — Property taxes as a percentage of owner-occupied housing value (state / local, illustrative national context).

Tools

Ballpark from average rate

Uses a population-weighted average effective rate across the counties we publish for Arizona. Open a county page for jurisdiction-specific figures.

Your value

$0$2,500,000
Value
$

Illustrative annual tax

$4,338

Uses the state’s population-weighted average effective rate (1.08%) across indexed counties—not a specific jurisdiction.

Scaled by 1.08% — the population-weighted mean effective rate across indexed county rows in this state (weights fall back to equal per row when population is missing). Not specific to any one jurisdiction.

Not a tax bill, legal estimate, or appeal tool. Exemptions, caps, specials, and assessment rules can change your actual amount; confirm with your assessor or collector.

Counties

Sort by column headers. Effective rates use the same market-comparable scaling as the state average (illustrative assessed-to-market ratio for ranking); each county page still shows ADOR combined rates on the assessed benchmark. Ten rows per page; pagination stays on this URL (no extra pages for search engines).

Sorting and pagination update this table in the browser only. This state page has a single web address; there are no separate numbered pages for search engines.

Indexed counties in Arizona
Apache County0.73%$2,548$35,00064,800
Cochise County1.18%$4,141$35,000125,773
Coconino County0.87%$3,035$35,000145,161
Gila County1.27%$4,435$35,00054,073
Graham County0.80%$2,814$35,00040,242
Greenlee County0.38%$1,330$35,0009,410
La Paz County1.13%$3,938$35,00016,992
Maricopa County1.03%$3,598$35,0004,673,096
Mohave County0.94%$3,273$35,000226,479
Navajo County1.00%$3,486$35,000109,516

FAQ

Common questions

Statewide orientation for Arizona—open a county page for parcel-level rules.

Why doesn’t this Arizona hub use Census ACS county medians?

Arizona is one of six states where Rate Gazetteer builds county rows from primary sources (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida) rather than U.S. Census ACS medians. The population-weighted statewide average and sortable effective rate column apply the same market-comparable rules we document on our methodology page before averaging—e.g. Arkansas and Arizona: modeled tax ÷ $350,000 (Arizona uses ADOR $/100 on Class 3 net assessed = 10% of that LPV); Florida × 0.72 taxable-to-market; California × 0.58; Alabama and Alaska use each county’s modeled effective rate without an extra multiplier. County pages still show each place’s own benchmark.

What do these Arizona county pages show?

Each page lists the Arizona Department of Revenue’s county-average combined primary + secondary rate for the cited tax year (dollars per $100 of assessed value), a $350,000 assessed-value benchmark, and modeled tax—plus Title 42 context. Tax-area rates within a county can differ from the average.

Why is the statewide average different from one Arizona county?

This hub averages population-weighted modeled rates across 15 counties. Each county uses the ADOR county-average combined rate—not your parcel’s tax-area schedule—so read the county page before comparing to a market-price percentage.

When are property taxes due in Arizona?

Arizona property taxes are usually billed in two installments to the county treasurer—commonly due October 1 (delinquent after November 1) and March 1 (delinquent after May 1), with statutory detail in A.R.S. § 42-18052 and related sections—confirm on your county treasurer’s statement.

How should I compare Arizona to other states?

Arizona’s modeled % here is percent of assessed (LPV-style) value in the benchmark, not necessarily full cash value. Compare to national “% of home value” figures only after reconciling assessment ratios and tax area rates. See our national context note and Rate Gazetteer’s methodology page.