PADS Property Appeal Data Services
Check your home
ISSAQUAH · FREE FAIR-VALUE CHECK

1,100 Issaquah homes are appraised at values recent comparable sales don't support. Is yours one of them?

11.9%
of Issaquah's 9,241 single-family homes carry an assessed value above what recent comparable arms-length sales support.

These homes pay about $833 a year more in property tax than the comparable sales support, year after year until the next county-wide revaluation. Maybe yours, maybe not. Free to find out, thirty seconds, no login.

FREE · no login
Free fair-value estimate Based on every arms-length sale near you No account required
Issaquah at a glance

Issaquah property tax, by the numbers

Homes analyzed
9,241
single-family homes in Issaquah
Median over-appraisal
$83,339
across recommended homes
Est. annual savings
$833
from a successful appeal
Hotspots

Most over-appraised neighborhoods in Issaquah

1
Issaquah Highlands Div 72, 73 And
53 homes
47.2%
$633,002
median over-appraisal
2
Cougar Ridge
34 homes
47.1%
$236,142
median over-appraisal
3
Mc Closkeys Addition To Issaquah
70 homes
17.1%
$221,629
median over-appraisal
4
Englewood Addition
48 homes
14.6%
$164,103
median over-appraisal
5
Mirrormont Div No.
41 homes
12.2%
$231,093
median over-appraisal

Plat boundaries from King County's recorded subdivision maps. Limited to plats with at least 30 homes, ranked by the share of homes appraised at least 10% above what recent comparable sales support. Bar length is shown relative to the most over-appraised plat in Issaquah.

Housing stock

What Issaquah homes look like on the County's records

Year built

Built before 19701,647 (17.8%)
Built 1970 to 19994,115 (44.5%)
Built 2000 or later3,479 (37.6%)

Building grade

Grade 6 or below (basic)409 (4.4%)
Grade 7 (average)1,394 (15.1%)
Grade 8 (above-average)3,502 (37.9%)
Grade 9 (good)2,472 (26.8%)
Grade 10+ (luxury)1,464 (15.8%)

Median finished area: 2,620 square feet.

FAQ

What Issaquah homeowners ask

When does King County mail valuation notices for Issaquah?

Notices go out in waves between June and November each year, neighborhood by neighborhood. The deadline to file an appeal is July 1, or 60 days after the mailing date printed on your notice, whichever is later. Earlier filers tend to get earlier hearing dates.

How is my Issaquah home's assessed value set?

King County values every parcel using mass appraisal: a model that estimates each home's value from recent sales of similar homes nearby. The model works at the population level; most homes land within a reasonable range. It works less well at the individual level, because it can't see the specific things that make your home different from the average. Individual valuations miss the mark in both directions, and a meaningful share are off enough to make appealing worthwhile.

What's the typical reduction when a Issaquah appeal wins?

Successful appeals typically knock 5% to 15% off the assessed value. On a typical Issaquah home (median assessed value $1,370,000), a 10% reduction works out to roughly $1,450 per year in lower property taxes. The reduction stays on the books until the next county-wide revaluation, so the savings stack up year over year.

Where does the data on this page come from?

Every number on this page comes from King County's own public records: parcel attributes, every arms-length sale the County has logged, and recorded building characteristics. It's the same source data the County itself uses to set the values it's defending.

Run yours.

Free thirty-second check against every recent comparable sale near your address. The typical recommended Issaquah home is paying $833 a year more than it should. Yours could be more, could be less, could be zero.

Check your home