Deadline
File Your Protest on or Before June 30, 2026
In Nebraska, a property valuation protest must be filed with the county Board of Equalization on or before June 30, 2026 (Neb. Rev. Stat. 77-1502). The window opens June 1, 2026. If you want help preparing evidence and filing in time, the address lookup is the fastest first step.
Start With the Parcel
The county parcel record is where the assessed value, owner details, and property facts usually begin. Homespring uses the address step to orient the case before asking for more homeowner effort.
Evidence Matters More Than Frustration
A strong protest usually depends on comparable sales, parcel detail accuracy, and any specific condition issues that affect value.
County Rules Still Control
Homespring can help homeowners organize the process, but the county record, the board’s filing steps, and the property’s facts still drive the outcome.
Nebraska Guides Currently Live on Homespring
Use these pages for Nebraska-specific filing context. They sit alongside the broader blog library so homeowners can move from general research into local process details when jurisdiction starts to matter.
Public Sources Homeowners Can Compare Against
- Nebraska Tax Equalization and Review Commission (TERC) for state-level appeal information beyond the initial county stage.
- Douglas County, Nebraska for a live county example of filing and process detail.
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