Hunt County CAD property search, appraisal value, exemptions and protest guide
Hunt County property owners usually visit Hunt CAD when they need to confirm a 2026 appraised value, search a property record, check a homestead exemption, file a protest, review a parcel map, or understand where property tax payments are handled. This guide explains how to use the official Hunt County Appraisal District search, what to verify on your record, how to separate appraisal value from tax payment, and how to prepare a stronger protest using practical local evidence.
Quick navigation for Hunt County property owners
How to use Hunt County CAD property search correctly
The official Hunt Tax property search supports owner, address, ID and advanced search tabs. Users can search by owner name, street number, property ID, property type, doing-business-as name, street name, subdivision, owner ID, geographic ID, tax year, neighborhood, hearing date, board members, formal date and legal description. This makes it useful for homeowners, land buyers, agents, investors, business owners and mineral/personal-property searches.
Hunt County CAD official website screenshot guide
The screenshot below helps readers recognise the Hunt County CAD search context before using live records. Use it as a visual guide only. Current appraisal values, exemptions, protest status, deadlines and tax-payment information must be checked on official Hunt CAD and Hunt County Tax Office websites.
What each Hunt CAD property record field means
A Hunt CAD record is more than a simple value lookup. It helps identify the property, owner, legal description, appraisal value, property type, exemption status, protest route and tax-office account. Read the full record before filing a protest or contacting the tax office.
| Record field | What it means | What to verify before acting |
|---|---|---|
| Property ID | Unique identifier used in Hunt property search | Use it for property search, e-protest, tax office lookup and appraisal district questions. |
| Owner name | Owner shown in appraisal records | Recent sales or ownership changes may not appear immediately. Compare with deeds and closing documents when needed. |
| Property address | Physical situs location used for appraisal purposes | Check street name, city, rural route, subdivision, mobile home park or other location details. |
| Legal description | Abstract, subdivision, lot, block, tract or other legal appraisal description | Important for rural acreage, splits, deeds, surveys, maps and parcel comparisons. |
| Geographic ID | Location-based appraisal identifier | Helpful when matching map, tax office and appraisal account details. |
| Market value | Appraisal district’s estimate of market value for the tax year | Compare with recent comparable sales, condition, acreage, structures and location. |
| Appraised value | Value after applicable appraisal limits may apply | For homestead property, appraised value can differ from market value because of Texas homestead cap rules. |
| Property type | Real, personal, mineral, auto or mobile home property category | Choose and verify the correct property type before searching or protesting. |
| Exemption status | Homestead, over-65, disability, disabled veteran or other exemption details where applicable | A missing exemption can matter more than a small value protest. Check this early. |
Official Hunt CAD tools and when to use each one
Hunt CAD and the Hunt Tax system provide separate tools because users have different goals. Use property search for appraisal records, taxpayer portal for electronic communication, interactive map for parcel context, forms for exemptions/applications, protest procedure pages for appeals, and the Tax Office for payment matters.
| Official tool | Best use | Helpful practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Property Search | Owner, address, ID and advanced search for appraisal records | Use Advanced Search when owner/address search returns too many results. |
| Taxpayer Portal | Enroll for property details and electronic communication with the tax office | The portal explains that electronic communication can be elected under Texas Tax Code Section 1.085. |
| Interactive Map | Parcel location, nearby properties, rural tracts, subdivisions and map context | Use maps to verify parcel location, but use evidence and property details for protest support. |
| Forms | Exemption, rendition, protest and appraisal-related PDF forms | Download current PDFs from Hunt CAD rather than older third-party copies. |
| Protest and appeal procedures | Understand formal protest, ARB hearing and appeal steps | Read the procedure before filing so your reason and evidence match the issue. |
| Hunt County Tax Office | Search and pay taxes, receipts, pay-by-phone, payment locations and tax office help | Use this for payments and receipts, not appraisal-value changes. |
How to use Hunt CAD map and parcel tools
The interactive map helps you check parcel location, nearby properties, rural land, mobile home areas, subdivisions and road access. This is especially useful in Hunt County because many properties are acreage, rural, outside city limits, or near changing development corridors.
Hunt County homestead exemption check before filing a protest
Before filing a value protest, check whether your exemptions are correct. A missing residence homestead exemption, over-65 exemption, disability exemption or disabled veteran exemption can have a larger tax impact than a small market-value change.
How to file a Hunt County CAD appraisal protest in 2026
A useful protest focuses on market value, unequal appraisal, incorrect property details, denied exemption, ownership issue or wrong property classification. It should not only say “my taxes are high.” Hunt CAD appraises the property; the Tax Office handles the tax bill and payment.
Evidence that actually helps in a Hunt CAD protest
The strongest evidence is specific to your property and local market. A random online estimate is weaker than proof tied to condition, acreage, improvements, sales comparison, property type or record error.
- Recent comparable sales from similar nearby properties
- Photos of roof, foundation, drainage, structural or interior damage
- Contractor estimates for major repairs
- Recent closing statement if purchase was recent
- Survey, deed or map evidence for acreage/location issues
- Wrong square footage
- Incorrect year built
- Wrong mobile home, garage, shed, barn or extra structure
- Incorrect property type or land use
- Wrong acreage, road frontage or improvement detail
- Only saying “my tax bill is too high”
- Generic online estimates without explanation
- Comps from a different city or property type
- Old sales from a different market period
- Photos with no date, address or explanation
Hunt CAD appraisal record vs Hunt County property tax bill
This is the biggest user-confusion point. Hunt CAD maintains appraisal records and property values. Hunt County Tax Office handles tax statements, payment options, receipts, pay-by-phone, office locations and payment processing.
| User need | Correct official source | What to do there |
|---|---|---|
| Find appraised value | Hunt County Appraisal District / property search | Search market value, appraised value, account details, ownership, maps and exemptions. |
| File protest | Hunt CAD e-protest / protest procedures | Submit protest, opinion of value and evidence before the deadline. |
| Apply for homestead | Hunt CAD forms / exemption resources | Use official forms and verify that the exemption appears on your property record. |
| Pay property tax | Hunt County Tax Office | Search account, pay online, print statement or receipt, or use pay-by-phone. |
| Use electronic communication | Taxpayer Portal | Enroll to access property details and opt into electronic communication when appropriate. |
Buyer, homeowner, investor and agent tips for Hunt County records
Hunt CAD data is useful, but it should not replace a title search, survey, inspection, tax-office receipt, deed record or professional advice. Use it with county records, closing documents, surveys and tax-office records.
- Check value and exemption status every year
- Save property ID and legal description
- Review land and improvement values separately
- File protest before the deadline if value looks wrong
- Keep proof of exemption applications
- Compare Hunt CAD value with contract price
- Check whether homestead status changes after purchase
- Verify tax balance through Hunt County Tax Office
- Compare square footage and acreage with survey/inspection
- Ask title company about prorations and exemptions
- Use property ID in client notes
- Compare Hunt CAD, MLS, deed and survey facts
- Check city, school district and tax-rate context
- Use map tools for rural tracts and development areas
- Never rely only on third-party property estimates
Common Hunt County CAD mistakes to avoid
Most property-owner problems come from using the wrong office, choosing the wrong search type, missing the protest deadline, ignoring exemptions or submitting weak evidence.
| Mistake | Why it hurts | Better action |
|---|---|---|
| Trying to pay taxes through CAD pages only | The appraisal district handles value; the tax office handles payment. | Use Hunt County Tax Office search/pay resources for tax payment and receipts. |
| Searching by full owner name only | Spelling differences or common names can hide the correct record. | Try property ID, address, simple street name or advanced search. |
| Ignoring property type | Real, personal, mineral, auto and mobile home records are different. | Confirm property type before relying on a value or filing protest. |
| Ignoring homestead status | A missing exemption can increase taxable value and future tax impact. | Check exemption status before focusing only on market value. |
| Using weak comparable properties | Wrong city, acreage, utility access or property type can weaken your protest. | Use truly similar properties and explain why they compare to yours. |
Hunt County Appraisal District contact details
Use Hunt CAD contact details for appraisal, exemption, ownership, property search, map and protest-related questions. Use Hunt County Tax Office for tax bills, payments, receipts and tax collection questions.
| Contact item | Official detail | Best use |
|---|---|---|
| Office name | Hunt County Appraisal District | Use for appraisal, exemption, protest and property-record matters. |
| Chief Appraiser | Brent South | Official Texas Comptroller directory listing for Hunt CAD leadership. |
| Taxpayer Liaison | Ashley Stevenson | Use for taxpayer liaison routing where appropriate. |
| Street address | 4801 King St., Greenville, TX 75401-5520 | Use for office visit planning and official map directions. |
| Mailing address | P.O. Box 1339, Greenville, TX 75403-1339 | Use for mailed forms and written appraisal-district correspondence when official instructions allow. |
| Phone | 903-454-3510 | Use for general Hunt CAD appraisal, exemption, search and protest questions. |
| Fax | 903-454-4160 | Use only when official instructions require faxed documents. |
| huntcad@hunt-cad.org | Use for non-urgent written appraisal-district questions. |
Hunt CAD office map and visit planning
Hunt County Appraisal District is located on King Street in Greenville. If your issue is deadline-sensitive, check whether e-protest, forms, email, mail or phone support is better before driving to the office.
Official Hunt County CAD resources used in this guide
Use these official resources for final confirmation before searching, filing, protesting, applying for exemptions, paying taxes or visiting an office.
Hunt County Appraisal District official website Official Hunt property search Hunt Taxpayer Portal Official Hunt CAD interactive map Official Hunt CAD forms Official Hunt CAD protest and appeal procedures Official Hunt CAD homestead cap explanation Hunt CAD e-protest portal Texas Comptroller Hunt appraisal district directory Hunt County Tax Office official website Hunt County property tax system basicsHunt County CAD property search FAQs
What is the official Hunt County CAD property search website?
The official Hunt County property search is available at esearch.hctax.info. Users can search by owner, address, property ID or advanced fields such as property type, geographic ID, subdivision and legal description.
Is Hunt County CAD the same as Hunt County Appraisal District?
Yes. Hunt County CAD is the common search phrase, while the official office name is Hunt County Appraisal District. It is also commonly searched as Hunt CAD or HCAD.
What is the Hunt County Appraisal District phone number?
The official Hunt County Appraisal District phone number listed by the Texas Comptroller is 903-454-3510. The official email listed is huntcad@hunt-cad.org.
Where is Hunt County Appraisal District located?
Hunt County Appraisal District is located at 4801 King St., Greenville, Texas 75401-5520. The mailing address is P.O. Box 1339, Greenville, Texas 75403-1339.
How do I search Hunt County property by address?
Open the official Hunt property search, use the Address tab, and enter the street number or street name. If the full address does not work, use a simpler search such as the street name and confirm the result by legal description and property ID.
Can I search Hunt CAD records by owner name?
Yes. The property search includes an Owner tab. If owner search is difficult, the official search help suggests using just the first or last name alone and then confirming the property by address, property ID and legal description.
Can I file a Hunt County CAD protest online?
Hunt CAD has an e-protest portal at eprotest.hunt-cad.org. Use your Notice of Appraised Value and official Hunt CAD instructions to confirm whether your account is eligible and what deadline applies.
Does Hunt CAD collect property tax payments?
No. Hunt CAD handles appraisal records, property values, exemptions and protest-related appraisal matters. Hunt County Tax Office handles tax statements, payments, receipts and payment locations.
How do I apply for a Hunt County homestead exemption?
Use Hunt CAD’s official forms page and current exemption application resources. After filing, search your property record and verify that the exemption appears correctly.
What evidence helps in a Hunt County appraisal protest?
Useful evidence includes recent comparable sales, property-condition photos, repair estimates, surveys, closing statements, independent appraisal reports and proof of incorrect details such as square footage, acreage, improvements, mobile home status or property class.
Last editorial check: June 2026. Official information can change without notice. Verify your exact property account, protest deadline, exemption status and payment details through official Hunt County resources before acting.