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  • Ag Land Cap Rate
    2001 Open-Space Land Cap Rate Set at 10.85 Percent
    In 2001, county appraisal districts (CADs) must use a capitalization rate of 10.85 percent when appraising open-space land. This "cap rate" is slightly lower than the 2000 cap rate of 10.9 percent.

    Cap Rates in Recent History
    Year Percent
    1982 13.5
    1983 14
    1984 13.5
    1985 14
    1986 14
    1987 13.25
    1988 12.75
    1989 12.45
    1990 12.75
    1991 12.45
    1992 12
    1993 11
    1994 10
    1995 10.75
    1996 10.75
    1997 10.35
    1998 10.6
    1999 10
    2000 10.9
    2001 10.85

    Section 23.53, Property Tax Code, requires CADs to use a cap rate that is the greater of either 10 percent or the interest rate charged on the previous December 31 by the Farm Credit Bank of Texas plus 2.5 percent. The bank's interest rate on December 31, 2000, was 8.35 percent. With the 2.5 percent added, that rate became 10.85 percent.

    The chart shows that in recent years, the cap rate has ranged from a low of 10 percent in 1994 and 1999 to a high of 14 percent during the 1980s.

    Qualified agricultural land is taxed on its productivity value. To determine that value, CADs first must calculate the typical property owner's income that is generated by the land after certain expenses have been paid–commonly known as net-to-land. The Property Tax Code then requires the CADs to divide the average net-to-land for a five-year period by the annual cap rate to arrive at the land's productivity value.

    The cap rate may change annually. When the net-to-land remains the same but the cap rate decreases, the result is a higher productivity value on the land. If the local tax rates remain the same or increase, property owners will pay higher taxes.

    When the net-to-land remains the same, but the cap rate increases, property owners will witness a decline in their land's productivity value and pay lower taxes if the tax rates stay the same.

    The cap rate is just one of many factors used to appraise agricultural land in Texas. Other factors also can affect the final productivity values.

    Timberland Cap Rate
    The 2001 capitalization rate for timberland appraisal also is 10.85 percent, down from 10.9 percent in 2000.

    Property Tax Code Section 23.74 sets out the requirement for the timberland cap rate and does not include a 10-percent floor like the agricultural land rate.