According to the WSJ, New York City is budgeting to collect $30.8 billion in property taxes for fiscal year 2021. These tax bills will go out on June 1 and payments will start becoming due on July 1, which is the start of the city's fiscal year. Here's how the collections break down across houses, apartments, and commercial properties:
Overall -- and despite the fact that values have softened in the wake of COVID-19 -- this year's property tax budget represents a 5.7% increase over FY2020. The reason for this is that each year the city completes its annual assessments on January 5. And so according to the city's January numbers, everything is just fine.
Supposedly this January 5 date is usually non-negotiable. A lawyer is quoted in the Journal article saying that under normal circumstances, if your house were to burn down on January 6, you would still have to pay all of your taxes for the upcoming fiscal year.
Time will tell if this time is different. But it is interesting, though not surprising, to note just how significant property taxes are to New York City's overall tax collections. They represent a little more half of all taxes collected.