Georgia Property Tax Exemptions 2026: Homestead, Senior, Veteran & Disability
Georgia (GA) homeowners have several ways to legally reduce their property tax bill — homestead reductions, senior credits, veteran exemptions, and disability programs. This page lists every Georgia property tax exemption available in 2026, who qualifies, dollar amounts, and how to apply.
Quick answer: The most common Georgia property tax exemption is the general homestead reduction for owner-occupied primary residences. Additional savings stack on top for residents who are age 65+, disabled, a disabled veteran, or a surviving spouse. Most Georgia exemptions require a one-time application with the local county assessor; some need annual income recertification.
How much can a Georgia homeowner save with the homestead exemption?
For a median Georgia home valued at $272,900 (current annual tax $2,214), the general homestead reduction alone is worth roughly:
All Georgia property tax exemptions at a glance
| Exemption | Who qualifies | Benefit | Typical savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Homestead (general) | Owner-occupied primary residence | ~$20,000 value reduction | $162/yr est. |
| Senior / Age 65+ | Owner-occupied; age 65+; often income-capped | Additional reduction or freeze | $200 – $2,000/yr |
| Disabled veteran | Service-connected disability rating | Up to 100% exemption in many states | $1,000 – full bill |
| Disability (non-veteran) | Permanent total disability | Reduction + sometimes freeze | $200 – $1,500/yr |
| Surviving spouse | Of veteran, first responder, or senior | Continuation of decedent's exemption | Same as deceased's benefit |
| Agricultural / farm | Active agricultural use | Use-value assessment instead of market | 30% – 80% lower bill |
Estimated savings use Georgia's effective property tax rate of 0.81% on the median home value of $272,900. Your actual savings depend on your county assessor's millage and how exemptions are applied to assessed (vs. market) value.
HB 581: the Floating Homestead Exemption
House Bill 581 (Amendment 1 ratified by voters in November 2024) created a statewide floating homestead exemption that took effect January 1, 2025. Key mechanics:
How the floating exemption works
For qualifying homestead properties, the increase in the taxable portion of assessed value is limited to the rate of inflation (Consumer Price Index) over the prior year. If fair market value rises faster than CPI, the homestead exemption automatically "floats" upward to absorb the excess — preventing the taxable value from growing faster than inflation.
This effectively caps annual tax growth at the CPI rate for qualifying homesteads, until the property is sold or transferred (at which point it resets to current market value).
Opt-out provisions
Local taxing authorities — counties, school districts, cities — could opt out of HB 581 for each tax year from 2026 through 2029, with an annual renewal of the opt-out required. Most major metropolitan counties, school districts, and cities opted out, including:
- Fulton County (county + Fulton County Schools + most cities)
- Gwinnett County (county + Gwinnett County Schools)
- Cobb County (county + Cobb County Schools + Marietta, Kennesaw, Acworth)
- DeKalb County (school district opted out; county levy may differ)
- Chatham County (Savannah)
- Most Atlanta-metro municipalities (Atlanta, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Johns Creek, Milton, etc.)
What this means practically
In opted-in counties (mostly rural and smaller counties), HB 581 operates as advertised: your homestead taxable value cannot grow faster than CPI year over year.
In opted-out counties (most urban/suburban areas), HB 581 does not apply — assessed value can rise with market appreciation, and homeowners rely on the traditional $2,000 standard homestead and any local senior or floating homestead (Stephens-Day) exemptions.
HB 92 companion legislation
HB 92, passed alongside HB 581, allows homeowners to file for the homestead exemption during the 45-day appeal window after the assessment notice is received. This gives late-arriving homeowners one last chance to claim the exemption for the current tax year.
Standard and Senior Homestead Exemptions
Independent of HB 581, Georgia has a stack of standard and special homestead exemptions. These remain essential for homeowners in opted-out counties.
Standard Homestead Exemption
$2,000 off assessed value for county, school, and state tax. This is the statewide minimum. File with the county tax assessor by April 1 of the year for which the exemption is claimed (or during the 45-day appeal window per HB 92).
Stephens-Day Homestead Exemption (Floating)
Pre-dating HB 581, the Stephens-Day exemption is offered locally by certain counties to freeze the taxable value at the year the homestead was established. Savannah/Chatham County has one of the longest-running Stephens-Day programs. Where Stephens-Day is in effect, it generally survives the HB 581 opt-out and may be stacked with other exemptions.
Senior Homestead (Age-Based Local Exemptions)
Most Georgia counties and school districts have enacted local senior homestead exemptions beyond the state's $2,000 standard. These vary dramatically:
- Fulton County (age 65+): exemption on the first $50,000 of assessed value for county tax, with income limits
- Gwinnett County (age 65+): $20,000-$40,000 exemption range plus school district exemptions
- Cobb County (age 62+): school tax exemption increases based on age and income
- Columbus-Muscogee (age 65+): substantial school tax exemption
Check with your county tax commissioner's office for the specific local senior exemption stack — they are often the single largest tax reduction available to age 65+ homeowners.
Disabled Veterans Exemption
Exemption equal to the federal maximum under 38 U.S.C. § 2102, typically exceeding $100,000 of assessed value for 100% service-connected disabled veterans. Surviving spouses of veterans killed in action qualify for the same exemption.
Blind or Totally Disabled Exemption
$2,000 additional exemption beyond the standard homestead.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is HB 581 in Georgia?
House Bill 581 (the "Save Our Homes Act") created a statewide floating homestead exemption effective January 1, 2025, that caps annual taxable value growth for qualifying homesteads at the rate of inflation (CPI). However, local taxing authorities could opt out for tax years 2026-2029. Most major metropolitan counties — Fulton, Gwinnett, Cobb, DeKalb, Chatham — and their school districts opted out, so HB 581 is only in effect in opted-in (mostly rural) counties.
What is Georgia's property tax assessment ratio?
40% of fair market value, set by the Georgia Constitution. Unless specified otherwise by law, all real property is assessed at 40%, with the millage rate applied to that assessed value after exemptions. For homestead properties in opted-in HB 581 counties, the taxable portion of assessed value is capped at CPI growth rate year over year.
How do I claim the Georgia senior homestead exemption?
Senior exemptions are locally administered by each county and school district. Typical eligibility is age 62 or 65+, with income limits varying by jurisdiction. File with your county tax commissioner's office. Common deadlines: April 1 for the current tax year, or during the 45-day appeal window under HB 92. Senior exemptions vary from $2,000 (state standard) to full school tax exemption in some counties.
Does Georgia have a floating homestead exemption?
Yes, in two forms. HB 581 (effective 2025) created a statewide floating exemption that caps taxable value growth at CPI, but local jurisdictions can opt out and most metropolitan areas did for 2026. Separately, the pre-existing Stephens-Day floating homestead exemption operates in certain counties (notably Savannah/Chatham County) and typically survives HB 581 opt-outs.
Now check your county's actual rate
Exemptions reduce the taxable amount — but the millage your county charges is what determines the bill. See the 2026 effective rate for every Georgia county.
Browse Georgia Counties → Read the full Georgia guideGeorgia Department of Revenue — Property Tax Homestead Exemptions · Georgia Department of Revenue — Appeal of Assessment · House Bill 581 (2024, the Save Our Homes Act) · Georgia Municipal Association — HB 581 and HB 92 Guidance · O.C.G.A. Title 48 (Revenue and Taxation) · Tax Foundation analysis — Georgia's Property Tax Reform. Exemption amounts and filing deadlines verified against the 2025-2026 legislative sessions and official state publications. Always verify with your local assessor before filing — programs change annually. This page is informational and is not tax or legal advice.