Yakima County Property Assessor 2026: Search & Tax Records

Official Yakima County WA property records guide

Yakima County Property Assessor Search, Parcel Lookup, Tax Records and Deed Help

Find the right Yakima County property record faster with one practical guide covering assessor parcel search, property record cards, owner information, residential characteristics, sales, tax bills, online payments, deed records, maps, exemptions and official county contacts.

🏠 Assessor parcel search πŸ—ΊοΈ Parcel map tools πŸ’΅ Treasurer tax records πŸ“„ Auditor recordings

Looking for Yakima County assessor property search in 2026? This guide helps you finish the full property-record task without opening confusing tabs one by one. You will learn how to search a parcel by number or address, open property record details, check owner of record information, review residential characteristics, compare sales, understand tax due dates, pay property taxes online and find deeds, easements, plats or surveys.

Instead of giving only a list of links, this article explains which Yakima County office handles each step. Use this page to prepare your parcel number, situs address, owner name, tax year and document clues first. Then use the official Yakima County website only for final search, payment, document request or direct office contact.

βœ… Search by parcel or address
βœ… Know Assessor vs Treasurer
βœ… Avoid wrong tax payment
βœ… Find deeds and surveys
β˜… Official record finder
Choose the Correct Yakima County Property Tool Before You Search

Most users search for Yakima County assessor property search, but the correct page depends on the actual task. The Assessor helps with parcel records, owner of record information, property characteristics, sales and assessed value. The Treasurer handles tax statements, tax balances and payments. The Auditor Recording Division handles recorded documents such as deeds, liens, plats and surveys.

The safest workflow is simple: identify the parcel first, confirm the property details, then move to tax payment or recorded-document research only after you know you are looking at the correct property.

Choose your task:

🏠 Search Yakima County assessor parcel records

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Use this for: parcel number, situs address, owner of record, residential characteristics, sales and property details.

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Best official path: open Yakima County parcel search or property record card, then search by parcel number or situs address.

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Before you trust the result: confirm parcel number, property address, owner of record and property characteristics before paying, filing or requesting records.

⚠️ Important: The Assessor handles property and valuation records. The Treasurer handles property tax payment. The Auditor handles recorded documents.
At a glance

Yakima County Property Search and Tax Records Quick Facts

The Yakima County Assessor’s Office provides several data search tools for property, including hybrid parcel search/map, GIS mapping parcel search and characteristic parcel search. The county parcel information page also points users to parcel search for owner of record information, residential characteristics and sales.

The Yakima County Treasurer is separate. It handles property tax statements, tax information, balances and payment. The Auditor Recording Division is the official route for recorded documents such as deeds, judgments, liens, plats, surveys and marriage licenses.

🏠AssessorParcel RecordsOwner, characteristics and sales
πŸ’΅TreasurerTax RecordsStatements, balances and payment
πŸ“„AuditorRecordingsDeeds, liens, plats and surveys
πŸ“Assessor office128 N 2nd StRoom 112, Yakima
πŸ“žAssessor phone509-574-1100Parcel and value help
⚠️ Common mistake: Do not use an assessor parcel page as proof that taxes are paid. Use Yakima County Treasurer resources to verify tax balance, due date and payment status.
Practical shortcut: For most users, the best order is: Assessor parcel search β†’ property record card β†’ Treasurer tax information/e-payment β†’ Auditor document research only if deed or recording history matters.
Page guide

What This Yakima County Assessor Search Guide Covers

Tax records

How to Search Yakima County Property Tax Statements, Balances and Due Dates

Use Yakima County Treasurer resources when your question is about property tax statements, tax balance, payment status, due dates, payment methods, e-notices or tax customer service.

The key rule is simple: Assessor = parcel and value records. Treasurer = tax statements and payment records. If you need to know whether taxes are paid, do not stop at the assessor page.

1

Open Yakima County tax information

Start with the official Yakima County Tax Information page to understand statements, due dates, tax and special assessments, payment information and Treasurer contact details.

2

Check official due dates

Yakima County states that property tax statements or e-notices are sent in the first two weeks of February. First-half taxes are due April 30, and second-half taxes are due October 31.

3

Use e-payment resources for parcel and payment info

Open Yakima County E-Payments if you need to get information on your parcel and pay online.

4

Save tax-year proof

Save tax year, parcel number, balance, payment date, confirmation number and receipt. This is useful for escrow, closing, refinance, accounting and personal records.

User situation Best office/tool What to check Practical warning
β€œI need owner or parcel details.” Assessor Parcel number, owner of record, characteristics Assessor record is not payment proof.
β€œI need to pay property taxes.” Treasurer Tax balance, tax year, due date, receipt Confirm parcel before paying.
β€œI need deed or lien records.” Auditor Recording Deeds, easements, liens, plats, surveys Assessor data is not title proof.
β€œI want sales comparison.” Assessor sales search Sale details, parcel number, property type Compare similar properties only.
Tax timing note: If your tax statement has not arrived by the end of March, Yakima County Treasurer FAQ says to notify the office. Do not wait until the due date if you believe your statement is missing.
Online payment

How to Pay Yakima County Property Taxes Safely

Yakima County property taxes can be paid through official Treasurer payment resources. The safest process is to identify the correct parcel first, confirm the tax year and balance, then pay through the official county payment route.

Never pay from a random ad, email link, text message, screenshot or unofficial payment page. Always start from Yakima County Treasurer or official E-Payments pages.

1

Open payment information first

Review Yakima County Payment Information. The county says checks should be made payable to β€œYakima County Treasurer.”

2

Use official E-Payments

Open Yakima County E-Payments to get information on your parcel and pay online.

3

Review accepted payment types

Yakima County payment information lists payment by U.S. currency, check, money order, cashier’s check, electronic check, credit card or debit card. Review the current official fee and payment details before paying.

4

Avoid check problems

Yakima County payment information says two-party and postdated checks are not accepted. If mailing payment, confirm the mailing address and include the correct parcel/tax details.

5

Save payment confirmation

After payment, save the receipt, confirmation number, payment method, amount, parcel number and tax year. This helps if payment posting is delayed or questioned later.

Wrong-payment prevention: If you are paying for a family member, trust, estate, rental property, farm property or recently purchased home, compare the parcel search and tax payment screen before submitting payment.
Sales research

How to Search Yakima County Property Sales Records

Yakima County Assessor sales search can help when you want to compare recent sales, research a valuation concern, check nearby transactions or prepare for a value discussion.

Sales data is most useful when you compare similar properties: similar location, size, condition, land use, building type and sale timing. A single sale does not always prove value by itself.

1

Open sales search

Go to Yakima County Sales Searches to search for sales by basic details.

2

Search by parcel or location clues

The sales search page notes that to search a parcel number, you must search for at least three digits of the parcel number. Use accurate parcel or location clues for better results.

3

Compare only relevant sales

Look for properties with similar property type, location, year, size and condition. Save sales that support your question clearly.

Practical valuation tip: If you are reviewing assessed value, save both the property record card and sales details. Clear evidence is more useful than a general claim that taxes are too high.
Exemptions and value

Yakima County Exemptions, Value Notices and Assessment Help

If your Yakima County tax bill looks too high, do not only check the Treasurer payment page. First review Assessor parcel details, value notice information, property characteristics and possible exemption status.

Yakima County Treasurer FAQ points users with senior citizen and disabled person exemption questions toward the appropriate property tax exemption route. For valuation and property record issues, start with the Assessor.

1

Review your parcel record

Open Assessor parcel search or the property record card. Confirm parcel number, situs address, owner information, characteristics and sales.

2

Check value notice timing

The Yakima County Assessor page notes that Tax Year 2027 value notice cards were scheduled to be mailed starting May 27, 2026. Always review the current Assessor page for active notice details.

3

Contact the right office

Contact the Assessor for property value, parcel details or characteristic issues. Contact the Treasurer for tax balance, statement and payment questions.

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Value Issue

Start with Assessor if the parcel, value, sales or property characteristics look wrong.

Assessor issue
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Tax Bill Issue

Start with Treasurer if the balance, due date, statement or payment status looks wrong.

Treasurer issue
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Deed Issue

Start with Auditor Recording if deed, easement, lien, plat or survey history matters.

Auditor issue
Recorded documents

Yakima County Deed Records, Easements, Liens, Plats and Surveys

Assessor records are not the same as recorded documents. If you need deeds, easements, liens, plats, surveys, judgments or recorded-document images, use Yakima County Auditor Recording resources.

The Recording Division is the custodian of recorded documents, including deeds, judgments, liens, marriage licenses, plats and surveys. Recorded documents give public notice of the subject matter of the document.

1

Open the Recording Division

Start with Yakima County Recording for the overview of recorded documents and recording resources.

2

Use document research resources

Open Yakima County Researching Documents. The county says it provides multiple methods for accessing land record information.

3

Search deed and easement images where available

Yakima County document research says indexes and images for a deed or easement go back to 1985. Older or special records may require different county or archival resources.

4

Do not treat assessor data as title proof

Assessor records help identify property and value information. They are not legal title reports, boundary surveys or ownership guarantees.

Real research tip: If document search is difficult, collect parcel number, owner name, situs address and legal-description clues from the Assessor record first. Then use those details in Auditor document research.
Practical search tips

Yakima County Property Search Tips That Save Time

Yakima County property systems are useful, but search formatting matters. If your first search fails, simplify the search and try a different official tool before assuming the record is missing.

Parcel number

Best move: use the parcel number when you have it. Follow the official format shown by the search system.

Address search

Best move: use a simplified address first. Add city or ZIP only if the official search needs it.

Wildcard search

Best move: use wildcard formatting only when the official search page supports it. The Ascend search mentions using % as a wildcard.

Tax year

Best move: check the exact tax year. Paid prior-year taxes do not always mean current-year taxes are paid.

Sales research

Best move: compare similar properties only. Save parcel details and sale details together.

Recorded documents

Best move: gather parcel and owner clues before opening Auditor document research.

Best research order for most Yakima County users

  1. Open Yakima County Assessor parcel search or property record card.
  2. Confirm parcel number, situs address, owner and property characteristics.
  3. Use sales search if value comparison or valuation research matters.
  4. Open Treasurer tax information or e-payments for tax balance and payment.
  5. Use Auditor Recording only when deed, lien, easement, plat or survey history matters.
  6. Save screenshots, tax year, receipt and parcel details for future reference.
Avoid mistakes

Common Yakima County Property Record Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Many users lose time because they use the right website for the wrong task. Here are the common Yakima County property search mistakes and the cleanest fix.

Mistake Why it happens Correct fix
Using Assessor records to prove taxes are paid Assessor records show parcel and valuation data. Use Treasurer tax information or e-payment records.
Paying without checking parcel details Similar addresses or owner names can confuse users. Confirm parcel number, address and tax year before payment.
Treating Assessor data as title proof Assessment data is not a legal deed record. Use Auditor recorded document resources.
Searching with the wrong parcel format Official systems may require specific parcel-number formatting. Follow the official search page example exactly.
Waiting until the due date to ask about missing statements Mail delays or e-notice issues can happen. Contact the Treasurer if you have not received your statement by the end of March.
Contact details

Yakima County Assessor, Treasurer and Auditor Contact Help

Before contacting any office, prepare parcel number, situs address, owner name, tax year, payment confirmation and a short explanation of your issue. This helps the correct office answer faster.

Assessor’s Office

Best for: parcel records, owner of record, characteristics, sales, assessed value and property data questions.

Address: 128 N 2nd Street, Room 112, Yakima, WA 98901

Phone: 509-574-1100

Toll free: 800-572-7354

Treasurer’s Office

Best for: tax statements, property tax balance, due dates, payments, e-notices and tax customer service.

Address: 128 N 2nd St, Room 115, Yakima, WA 98901

Tax Division Phone: 509-574-2800

Email: cntytreasurer@co.yakima.wa.us

Public hours: Monday-Friday, 9 AM-4 PM

Auditor / Recording

Best for: deeds, easements, liens, plats, surveys, recorded documents and document research.

Address: 128 N 2nd Street, Room 117, Yakima, WA 98901

Phone: 509-574-1400

Toll free: 800-572-7354

Call preparation checklist

Have ready: parcel number, situs address, owner name, tax year, receipt number if paid, document type, recording clues and screenshots of the issue.

Map and location

Map to Yakima County Assessor, Treasurer and Auditor Offices

Many Yakima County property services are located at or near 128 N 2nd Street in Yakima. Confirm current hours, holidays and service availability before visiting, especially near property tax due dates.

Yakima County Assessor / Treasurer / Auditor Area

128 N 2nd Street, Yakima, WA 98901

FAQs

Yakima County Assessor Property Search FAQs

How do I search Yakima County assessor property records?

Use Yakima County Parcel Search or the Property Record Card. Search by parcel number or situs address, then confirm owner of record, property address, characteristics and sales details.

Is Yakima County Assessor the same as the Treasurer?

No. The Assessor handles parcel and value records. The Treasurer handles tax statements, tax balances, tax due dates and payment.

Where can I pay Yakima County property taxes online?

Use Yakima County E-Payments. Search your parcel and confirm the tax year, balance and amount before completing payment.

When are Yakima County property taxes due?

Yakima County tax information states first-half taxes are due April 30 and second-half taxes are due October 31. Always confirm current-year information on the official Treasurer page.

Where can I find Yakima County deed records?

Use Yakima County Auditor Recording and Researching Documents resources for deeds, easements, liens, plat maps, surveys and recorded documents.

What is the Yakima County Assessor phone number?

The Yakima County Assessor’s Office phone number is 509-574-1100. The office is located at 128 N 2nd Street, Room 112, Yakima, WA 98901.

What is the Yakima County Treasurer phone number?

Yakima County Treasurer Tax Division phone number is 509-574-2800. The Treasurer’s Office is located at 128 N 2nd St, Room 115, Yakima, WA 98901.

Can I search Yakima County property by address?

Yes. Yakima County parcel search allows situs address searching. Use a simplified address or wildcard formatting if the official search tool recommends it.

How do I search Yakima County property sales?

Use Yakima County Assessor Sales Searches. You can research sale details and compare similar properties for valuation review.

What should I do if my tax statement did not arrive?

Yakima County Treasurer FAQ says if you have not received your property tax statement by the end of March, notify the Treasurer’s Office at 509-574-2800.

Should I use third-party Yakima County property record websites?

Use official Yakima County Assessor, Treasurer and Auditor resources first. Third-party websites may show outdated data, ads, lead forms or incomplete records.

What is the safest order to research a Yakima County property?

Start with Assessor parcel search, confirm the property record, use Treasurer resources for tax balance and payment, then use Auditor Recording resources if you need deeds or recorded documents.

Final takeaway

Best Way to Use Yakima County Property, Tax and Recorded Document Records

The smartest Yakima County property research workflow is simple: use the Assessor to identify the parcel and property details, use the Treasurer to verify tax statements and payment status, and use Auditor Recording resources when you need deeds, easements, liens, plats, surveys or document images.

This process helps you avoid wrong-property payments, outdated ownership assumptions, missed tax years, incomplete document research and confusion between assessor parcel data and actual tax balance.

Editorial disclaimer: This guide is informational and points users to official Yakima County, Washington property, tax and recorded-document resources. It is not legal, tax, appraisal, title, survey or financial advice. For binding answers, contact the correct county office, licensed attorney, tax professional, title company, appraiser or surveyor.

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