Chatham County Property Assessor 2026: Search & Tax Records

Official Chatham County GA property records guide

Chatham County GA Parcel Lookup, Assessment Records, Property Taxes and Appeal Help

Use official Chatham County, Georgia resources to search tax assessor property records, check parcel details, view Property Record Cards, review assessment notices, verify value history, find exemptions, understand property tax bills and take the correct appeal path.

🏠 Property records search πŸ’΅ Tax bill and payment help πŸ“„ PRC and assessment notice βš–οΈ Appeal and exemption help
β˜… Official property record finder
Find the Correct Chatham County Property Record Path

If you are searching for Chatham County tax assessor property search, your first step should be the official ChathamTax property records system. It connects users with assessment records, property record cards, annual assessment notices, value history, exemptions, sales and tax-related information.

The important thing is to understand the difference between the Board of Assessors and the Tax Commissioner. The Board of Assessors handles appraisal and assessment records. The Tax Commissioner handles tax bills, payments, receipts and tax collection services.

Choose your task:

🏠 Search property assessment records

πŸ”Ž

Use this for: Property ID, address, owner name, Property Record Card, value history, land, residential, commercial, sales and exemption details.

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Best official path: open ChathamTax and use Property Records Search. Start with Property ID if available, otherwise use address or owner search.

βœ…

Search tip: when address search fails, remove extra words and search only street number plus street name.

⚠️ Do not mix offices: assessment value and tax bill are not the same thing. Confirm assessment records with the Board of Assessors and tax payment information with the Tax Commissioner.
πŸ‘‰ This guide helps users choose the correct official Chatham County GA record source. It does not replace the county database, tax bill, appeal notice or professional advice.
At a glance

Chatham County Tax Assessor Property Search Quick Facts

The Chatham County Board of Assessors is the right office for property appraisal, assessment records, annual assessment notices, value history, exemptions and appeal-related questions. The Chatham County Tax Commissioner is the right office for property tax bills, online payments, receipts and collection questions.

For most users, the best workflow is simple: search the property record first, confirm the Property Record Card and value details, then check the tax bill or payment page if money is owed or a receipt is needed.

🏠Search systemChathamTaxProperty records
πŸ“„Assessor recordPRCProperty Record Card
πŸ’΅Tax officeTax CommissionerBills and payments
βš–οΈAppeal windowCheck noticeDeadline matters
πŸ“žAssessor phone912-652-7271Main BOA contact
⚠️ Important: A Chatham County property record may show appraised value, assessed value, exemptions, sales and tax information in separate tabs. Open the full property result instead of relying only on the first search result line.
Editorial trust note: This guide uses official Chatham County GA resources including the Board of Assessors, ChathamTax property records system, Tax Commissioner, exemption resources and assessor forms. Replace {{site_url}} and {{site_name}} before publishing.
Page guide

What This Chatham County Property Records Guide Covers

Tax records

How to View, Print or Pay Chatham County Property Taxes

Use the Chatham County Tax Commissioner when your goal is tax bill lookup, payment, receipts or collection-related questions. The Tax Commissioner is different from the Board of Assessors, even though both offices are connected through the property records system.

If you are preparing for closing, refinance, escrow review, tax filing or payment confirmation, do not rely only on appraised value. You need the tax bill, payment history or receipt details from the tax side.

1

Open the Tax Commissioner website

Go to the official Chatham County Tax Commissioner website for property tax services, payment guidance and office contact information.

2

Use official tax resources

Open the official Tax Commissioner resources page to find property tax, payment, e-billing, tax sale and other useful online resources.

3

Match property before paying

Before submitting payment, compare property ID, owner name, property address and tax year. This step is especially important if you manage multiple properties or are paying for a family member.

4

Print or save confirmation

After payment or lookup, save the bill or receipt copy. Keep it with your mortgage, escrow, closing, accounting or rental-property file.

Payment safety note: Only pay through official Chatham County tax resources. Do not enter payment information on random search-result pages that copy county data.
Assessment notice

How to Find Your Chatham County Annual Assessment Notice

The Annual Assessment Notice is important because it tells you the value placed on the property and gives appeal-related timing. If you disagree with the value, this notice is usually the document you must review first.

The Board of Assessors guidance points users to ChathamTax, where you can retrieve your property record and open the Annual Assessment Notice tab. Available notice PDFs can be viewed, printed or downloaded from the property record.

1

Search your property on ChathamTax

Open ChathamTax property records search and locate your property using Property ID, address or owner name.

2

Open the Annual Assessment Notice tab

After selecting the property, look for the Annual Assessment Notice tab. This is where available assessment notice PDFs are commonly shown.

3

Download the notice before appeal research

Save the notice as a PDF or print it. You will need the notice date, value, property details and appeal deadline if you decide to challenge the assessment.

4

Compare notice with Property Record Card

Open the Property Record Card and Value History sections. Check whether the property details, building information, land data and value history make sense.

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Do Not Ignore the Notice

The notice is often the starting point for review and appeal timing. Save it before contacting the office.

Appeal prep
🧠

Compare Tabs Together

Value History, PRC, Sales and Exemptions can explain why a number changed.

Better research
Appeals

What to Do If Your Chatham County Property Assessment Looks Wrong

If the appraised value looks incorrect, start by checking the data before filing anything. Look for wrong square footage, incorrect property class, missing exemption, condition issues, wrong land details, outdated sales comparison or recent changes that may not be reflected clearly.

The Chatham County Board of Assessors provides forms and valuation guidance for assessment-related issues. Appeals are time-sensitive, so do not wait until the tax bill arrives if the annual assessment notice already opened a deadline.

1

Download the assessment notice

Use ChathamTax property search, open your property record and save the Annual Assessment Notice PDF.

2

Review the property data

Check the Property Record Card, land, residential, commercial, value history, sales and exemption tabs. A factual error can sometimes explain the value issue.

3

Collect evidence before filing

Useful evidence may include comparable sales, photos, repair estimates, appraisal reports, closing statements, incorrect property details or documentation showing why the value is wrong.

4

Open the official appeal form

Go to the official Chatham County Board of Assessors forms page and review the Appeal of Assessment Form and instructions.

5

Check the 45-day notice rule

Review the official valuation FAQs because appeal timing is tied to the assessment notice. File using the official method and deadline shown for your property.

Insider appeal tip: Do not write only β€œtaxes are too high.” A stronger appeal focuses on value evidence, factual errors, comparable sales, condition problems or exemption issues.
Exemptions

Chatham County Property Exemptions and Homestead Help

Property exemptions can affect the taxable amount and should be checked carefully. If you recently purchased a home, moved into a primary residence, had a life change or believe an exemption is missing, the Board of Assessors exemption page is the right place to begin.

Do not assume an exemption automatically appears just because you live in the property. Search your property record, check the Exemptions tab, then review official exemption guidance from the Board of Assessors.

1

Open the property exemptions page

Use the official Chatham County Board of Assessors property exemptions page for exemption information and application-related guidance.

2

Search your property record

Open ChathamTax property records, find your parcel and check whether the Exemptions tab shows the exemption you expected.

3

Keep proof ready

Depending on the exemption, keep identity, residence, ownership, age, disability, veteran or other supporting documents ready before contacting the office.

4

Appeal if an exemption is denied

If an exemption application is denied, use the official Board of Assessors guidance and deadline shown in the notification. Do not wait until after the appeal window passes.

Practical tip: If a tax bill looks higher than expected, check both the appraised value and the exemption status. Many users only look at value and miss the exemption tab.
Practical tips

Chatham County Property Search Tips That Save Time

Property record systems can be strict. A small spelling difference, extra punctuation or wrong abbreviation may hide the correct parcel. Start simple, then narrow the result after you find the right record.

Address search

Best move: enter only the street number and street name first. Add direction, suffix or unit only if the first search returns too many results.

Owner search

Best move: search the last name first. For businesses, try the company name without punctuation such as LLC commas or periods.

Property ID

Best move: copy the Property ID from the record and use it for repeat searches. It reduces wrong-property mistakes.

Value history

Best move: check Value History before assuming a mistake. Recent sales, reassessment activity or appeal decisions can explain changes.

Assessment notice

Best move: download the notice PDF before filing an appeal. The notice date and deadline matter.

Payment status

Best move: do not rely on appraisal records for payment confirmation. Use the Tax Commissioner side for bills, payments and receipts.

Best research order for most users

  • Open ChathamTax and search by Property ID, address or owner.
  • Confirm the property address and owner before opening details.
  • Review the Property Record Card and Value History.
  • Open Annual Assessment Notice if you need appeal information.
  • Check Exemptions if you are expecting homestead or other relief.
  • Use the Tax Commissioner website for bills, payments and receipts.
  • Save PDFs or screenshots before calling the office.
Contact details

Chatham County Property Records Offices: Phone, Address and Best Use

Call the correct office based on your issue. If the value, property details or exemption is wrong, contact the Board of Assessors. If the tax bill, payment or receipt is the problem, contact the Tax Commissioner.

Board of Assessors

Best for: property appraisal, assessment records, PRC, annual assessment notices, value history, exemptions and appeals.

Address: 222 West Oglethorpe Ave., Suite 113, Savannah, GA 31401

Phone: 912-652-7271

Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Tax Commissioner

Best for: property tax bills, view/pay taxes, printed bills, receipts, collection questions and payment services.

Address: 222 W. Oglethorpe Avenue, Suite 107, Savannah, GA 31401

Phone: 912-652-7100

Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM

Before calling

Keep the Property ID, owner name, property address and tax year ready. This helps staff find your record faster and avoids wrong-property confusion.

Before visiting

Check the official website first. Bring ID, notice copies, tax bill copies, exemption documents, appeal evidence or payment records depending on your purpose.

Map and location

Map to Chatham County Board of Assessors and Tax Commissioner Offices

Both the Board of Assessors and Tax Commissioner list downtown Savannah office addresses at 222 W. Oglethorpe Avenue. Suite numbers are different, so check the correct office before visiting.

Chatham County Board of Assessors

222 West Oglethorpe Ave., Suite 113, Savannah, GA 31401

Chatham County Tax Commissioner

222 W. Oglethorpe Avenue, Suite 107, Savannah, GA 31401

FAQs

Chatham County Tax Assessor Property Search FAQs

How do I search Chatham County tax assessor property records?

Open the official ChathamTax property records search and choose Property ID, Address, Owner, Personal Property or Advanced Search. For best results, start with the cleanest identifier you have.

Is Chatham County tax assessor search official?

The official property record route is provided through ChathamTax and connected with the Chatham County Board of Assessors and Tax Commissioner. Use official county links first instead of third-party copies.

Can I search Chatham County property records by address?

Yes. Use the Address Search option. If the search does not work, try only the street number and street name, then narrow the result after the property appears.

Can I search Chatham County property records by owner name?

Yes. Use the Owner Search option. Try last name first for individuals and simplified business names for companies, trusts or LLCs.

Where do I find the Chatham County Property Record Card?

Search the property in ChathamTax and open the Property Record Card tab or section. It is one of the most useful pages for reviewing assessment and property details.

Where do I find my Chatham County annual assessment notice?

Search your property in ChathamTax, open the property result and check the Annual Assessment Notice tab. Available notices may be viewed, printed or downloaded.

How do I pay Chatham County property taxes online?

Use the official Chatham County Tax Commissioner website. Confirm property ID, owner name, property address and tax year before submitting any payment.

How do I appeal my Chatham County property assessment?

Download your annual assessment notice, review your Property Record Card, collect evidence and use the official Board of Assessors appeal form and valuation guidance. Pay attention to the deadline shown on your notice.

Where can I check Chatham County homestead exemption information?

Use the Chatham County Board of Assessors property exemptions page. Also check the Exemptions tab inside your property record to see what is currently listed.

Why does my assessed value differ from my tax bill?

Assessment value comes from the appraisal side, while the final tax bill depends on tax rates, exemptions, credits, penalties, payments and collection records. Check both the Board of Assessors and Tax Commissioner resources.

Final takeaway

Best Way to Use Chatham County Property Assessor Records

The best Chatham County GA property search process is to start with the official property records search, open the Property Record Card, review the Annual Assessment Notice and Value History, then use the Tax Commissioner resources if you need bills, payments or receipts.

If you are checking value, exemption or appeal issues, work from the Board of Assessors side. If you are checking tax payment, due amount or receipts, work from the Tax Commissioner side. This small difference saves time and helps users avoid wrong-office confusion.

Editorial disclaimer: This guide is informational and points users to official Chatham County, Georgia resources. It is not legal, tax, appraisal, title or financial advice. For binding answers, contact the correct county office, a licensed attorney, CPA, appraiser, surveyor or title professional.

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