The state of texas has one of the highest sales tax rates in the nation at 6.25 percent. this –

Property Taxes

Property taxes are local taxes that provide the largest source of money local governments use to pay for schools, streets, roads, police, fire protection and many other services. Texas law establishes the process followed by local officials in determining the value for property, ensuring that values are equal and uniform, setting tax rates and collecting taxes. Additional information regarding the Texas Property Tax System can be found here.

Properties in Cleburne are appraised by the Johnson County Central Appraisal District (JCAD) as of January 1 each year.  Additional information about the appraisal process can be found on the Appraisal District website.  You may also view the JCAD web site here to see the historical property tax rates for other taxing entities in our County.

Johnson County Central Appraisal District
Jim Hudspeth
Executive Director/Chief Appraiser

109 N. Main
Cleburne, TX 76033
Ph: 817-558-8100
Fax: 817-645-3105

The City of Cleburne City Council adopts the annual budget and sets the property tax rate to support that budget in September each year for the upcoming fiscal year. Information on the annual budget and tax rate setting process and schedule will be posted on the City’s website.

The tax rate is comprised of two elements, maintenance and operations, and debt service. The current tax rates for Fiscal Year 2021, for 2020 taxable values, are as follows:

Maintenance and Operations (M&O)$0.62974891.20%
Debt Service (I&S)  0.060750 8.80%
TOTAL $0.690498 100.00%

Sales Tax

Texas imposes a 6.25 percent state sales tax on all retail sales, leases and rentals of most goods, as well as taxable services.  Local taxing jurisdictions (cities, counties, special purpose districts and transit authorities) may also impose up to 2 percent sales and use tax for a maximum combined rate of 8.25 percent. 
The City of Cleburne’s sales tax rate is 2%, with 1% allocated to the City, 0.5% to the 4A Corporation and 0.5% to the 4B Corporation.

Revenue collected from the city’s 1% sales tax is used in the General Fund. The General Fund is used to account for all general revenues of the city not specifically levied or collected for other purposes and for the expenditures relating to the rendering of general services by the city, including, but not limited to police, fire, streets, parks, library, sanitation, and general government.

Revenue collected from the 4A Corporation is used to repay voter approved General Obligation bonds sold to construct the Depot at Cleburne Station, a minor league professional baseball stadium.

Revenue collected from the 4B Corporation is used for quality of life projects such as Sports Complex, Splash Station, Parks, Booker T. Washington Recreation Center, Conference Center, and museums.

Sales Taxes are collected by the State of Texas and remitted to the taxing jurisdictions the calendar month after sellers report to the state. The State Comptroller issues sales tax permits to all businesses operating in the State of Texas. Applications and complete instructions for reporting and payment of sales and use tax can be found online at https://comptroller.texas.gov/taxes/sales/.

Texas’ Republican leadership wants to raise the taxes that consumers pay when they go shopping in order to lower the taxes that homeowners and business owners pay on their properties.

How would that work?

The state sales tax would rise from 6.25% to 7.25%, generating an estimated annual $5 billion in coming years. That would take the total sales tax in most cities to 9.25% because local governments can raise the sales tax an additional 2 percentage points. Supporters say a higher sales tax rate would generate enough revenue to buy down property tax rates by 20 cents per $100 valuation at a time when Texas homeowners and businesses are feeling squeezed by rising bills.

But raising the sales tax would cause poor Texans to pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes while the richest Texans and businesses are most likely to enjoy tax relief under the proposal.

To be clear, the proposal faces long odds to becoming law. House and Senate leaders intend to make the change in a constitutional amendment, which would need votes from two-thirds of lawmakers in both chambers to advance. Ratification of the amendment would require voter approval in a statewide election. And Gov. Greg Abbott has said he won’t endorse the measure unless lawmakers also pass bills limiting local property tax increases.

The sales tax swap proposal from Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dennis Bonnen needs buy-in from conservative lawmakers opposed to the idea of raising any taxes in a year of surplus — and from Democrats wary of a proposal that would shift more tax burden onto low-income Texans.

Loading...

A regressive tax is one that takes a larger percentage of income from poorer people than richer people. Because low-earning people spend a larger share of their income on sales taxes, raising the sales tax rate causes their total tax bills to grow relatively larger. Texas’ sales tax is one of the state’s most regressive ways of earning revenue, according to the Texas Comptroller.

An average Texan in the poorest 20% of households might expect to pay around $1,200 per year in sales taxes, while an average Texan in the richest 20% of households might expect to pay $4,900, according to an analysis of comptroller estimates for 2021 tax collections.

By comparison, an average Texan in the poorest 20% of households might expect to pay around $1,000 per year in school district property taxes, while an average Texan in the richest 20% of households might expect to pay $5,800.

A Texas Tribune analysis of state tax data found that increasing the sales tax to buy down property tax rates would likely raise the percentage of income that the bottom 80% of Texans spend on taxes. Only the top 20% of Texans — those in households earning more than about $150,000 — would probably see a reduction in the percentage of their income that they pay in taxes. The analysis assumes that raising the sales tax rate would not significantly change Texans’ consumption patterns.

Still, many conservatives consider regressive taxes like the sales tax to be equitable because everyone, regardless of income level, pays the same tax rate.

“I'm trying to shift from a property tax system to a consumption tax system so you control what you pay,” Abbott recently wrote on Twitter.

Another feature of the sales tax versus property tax debate is whether consumers or businesses should pay more. The sales tax burden is mostly borne by everyday consumers, whereas businesses shoulder more of the state’s overall property tax bill.

Loading...

With two-thirds of each legislative chamber needed to pass the sales tax swap resolution, Republican leaders need to get Democrats on board. And Democrats oppose hiking a regressive tax on the grounds that it would unnecessarily burden low-income Texans while benefiting the highest-income Texans, especially if the proposal does not yield any additional revenue for public programs.

“When your ‘property tax relief’ bill ends up raising taxes on the majority of Texans, it isn’t relief, it’s just bad policy,” state Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio, tweeted last week after Republican leadership unveiled the policy proposal as a new priority.

Some fiscal conservatives have joined Democrats in opposition to a higher sales tax because they don’t want the state to raise any taxes, concerned it could dissuade business owners from relocating to Texas. “The proposed sales tax hike would take the state in the wrong and opposite direction by imposing an overall increase in the state tax burden,” said Grover Norquist, president of conservative anti-tax advocacy group Americans for Tax Reform, in a letter to House lawmakers.

On Tuesday, state Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, said there was not “a tremendous appetite over here in the Senate for that proposal.”

“Whether it’s income tax, property tax, sales tax or whatever tax, I’m not voting for an increase,” he told Lubbock radio host Chad Hasty. Later Tuesday, Bettencourt walked back his comments, saying that in the absence of a specific, final measure, he hasn’t taken a position.

Republicans have also floated ideas for more modest property tax cuts that would affect Texans’ tax bills in different ways, depending on where they live and how much their homes are worth. The House passed a school finance bill, House Bill 3, that would lower tax rates statewide by 4 cents per $100 valuation and limit school districts with higher rates from increasing them.

In addition, Democrats and some Senate Republicans are backing an increase to the mandatory homestead exemption for school district taxes, which would offer similar tax relief for Texans regardless of their home values. But Abbott is opposed to the idea, and he took his criticisms to Twitter on Monday.

“We raised the homestead exemption 2 sessions ago & no one feels the benefit of that tax relief because it was eroded by rising appraisals & rates,” he wrote. “Raising the homestead exemption won’t lead to lasting property tax relief.”

Emma Platoff contributed reporting.

Is Texas sales tax higher?

Texas Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens Texas has a 6.25 percent state sales tax rate, a max local sales tax rate of 2.00 percent, and an average combined state and local sales tax rate of 8.20 percent. Texas's tax system ranks 14th overall on our 2022 State Business Tax Climate Index.

What is the highest tax rate in Texas?

Local taxing jurisdictions (cities, counties, special purpose districts and transit authorities) can also impose up to 2 percent sales and use tax for a maximum combined rate of 8.25 percent.

Where does the Texas sales tax rate rank in the nation?

One state, Connecticut, is exactly average with a combine sales tax of 6.35%. Four states—Oregon, New Hampshire, Montana, and Delaware—have a combined sales tax of 0%. Here are the 10 states with the highest sales tax rates: California - 7.25% ... Sales Tax by State 2022..

Which state has the highest sales tax rate?

2021 Combined State and Local Sales Tax Rates The five states with the highest average combined state and local sales tax rates are Louisiana (9.55 percent), Tennessee (9.547 percent), Arkansas (9.48 percent), Washington (9.29 percent), and Alabama (9.22 percent).