Davidson County appeal deadline (June 26, 4 p.m.) is past—what it means
Davidson County property owners missed the June 26, 2026, 4:00 PM deadline to schedule a formal MBOE appeal of assessed value/classification.
Davidson County property owners had until Friday, June 26, 2026 at 4:00 PM to schedule a formal appeal of their 2026 property assessment—specifically the assessed value and/or property classification with the independent Metropolitan Board of Equalization (MBOE) (or its hearing officers). With that cutoff passed, the formal scheduling window is closed.
Bottom line for right now
If you missed the June 26, 4:00 PM deadline, the Nashville Assessor of Property says your next step depends on which notice you received. The Assessor’s guidance indicates the last written notice for your property may become the final assessment with an effective date of January 1, 2026.
What the formal appeal was for (and what it wasn’t)
This process is aimed at your assessment valuation and classification—not how your tax bill is timed or how the tax rate is set.
- Appeal covered: assessed value and/or property classification
- Not the goal of this appeal: challenging tax rates set by the Mayor and Metro Council, or disputing tax-payment mechanics
Who decides
The formal appeal scheduling process is tied to the independent MBOE and its hearing officers. Earlier review steps are separate from the formal scheduling window.
Timeline recap: informal period ended before the formal window
According to the Assessor’s 2026 assessment-year guidance:
- The informal review/request period had already closed before the formal scheduling window began.
- The formal appeal scheduling window ran May 26 through June 26, with the specific deadline at 4:00 PM on Friday, June 26.
If you missed the deadline: practical next steps
Before assuming the assessed value/classification is locked in, the Assessor’s guidance makes the paperwork you received the key. For your situation, consider:
- Check your latest Assessor notice and identify which notice you received last (the Assessor points to the last written notice as potentially becoming final).
- Confirm your status with the Assessor’s office so you understand what stage your property is in now that scheduling is closed.
- Ask whether any other procedures apply to your specific circumstances—without assuming the formal MBOE scheduling window can still be used.
Keeping questions focused on assessment status (value/classification), rather than tax rates or tax payment timing, helps you get clearer answers faster.
Sources
- Nashville Assessor of Property: 2026 assessment-year review/appeal timeline (informal closed; formal scheduling opens May 26 through June 26)
- NewsChannel 5 (WTVF): Davidson County property assessment appeal period opens (plain-language scheduling how-to)
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