Tax Credits and Property Tax Relief
Browse tax credits, rebates, exemptions, and property tax relief programs — money claimed through tax systems that many eligible households miss.
Tax credits are benefits delivered through the tax system instead of an application office, and that delivery mechanism is exactly why they go unclaimed: if you do not file, or file without claiming, the money simply never appears. The critical distinction is refundable versus nonrefundable. A refundable credit pays out even if it exceeds what you owe, which means households with little or no tax liability — often the households that qualify for the largest credits — can receive real cash, but only by filing a return. If your income is below the filing threshold, filing anyway is frequently worth hundreds or thousands.
Property tax relief works differently: it is local, application-based, and calendar-driven. Exemptions for seniors, veterans, people with disabilities, and primary residences, plus circuit-breaker programs that cap taxes relative to income, are typically claimed through the county assessor by a fixed deadline each year. Because these programs are administered by thousands of local offices, no national list is reliable — your own county’s official site is the source of truth. Some jurisdictions apply exemptions automatically once granted; others require annual renewal, and letting a renewal lapse is a common and expensive mistake.
Rebates round out the category: state and utility programs that return money for specific purchases, often energy-efficiency upgrades, and one-off state relief payments that appear in some budget years. Rebates usually require receipts and pre- or post-purchase applications with their own windows.
Before counting on any credit, verify the current-year rules, since credit amounts, income phase-outs, and program existence change with legislation. Browse the programs below, then confirm details with the tax authority or local assessor, and use free official filing assistance rather than paid services that take a cut of your refund.
Current matching opportunities
These listings are limited to open, rolling, or upcoming opportunities that match this guide. Check the official source before applying.
Senior Citizens Real Estate Tax Deferral Program (PIO-64)
Illinois property-tax deferral loan for qualifying seniors, with annual county filing and repayment at sale/transfer or estate settlement.
Colorado Home Energy Rebate Program (HEAR/HER)
Colorado IRA home-energy rebate program supporting electrification and efficiency upgrades through participating contractors.
New Zealand Working for Families Tax Credits
Working for Families (WfF) is New Zealand's primary family income support package, providing a suite of tax credits — including the Family Tax Credit, In-Work Tax Credit, Minimum Family Tax Credit, and Best Start — to help families with dependent children meet the costs of raising children. Jointly administered by Inland Revenue and the Ministry of Social Development, WfF supports approximately 300,000 families across New Zealand.
Application guidance
Use the listings above as a shortlist, then build your application from the official instructions. Save the source page, deadline, eligibility rules, required documents, contact details, and any program-specific scoring criteria. If the deadline is rolling, apply early enough for review queues and budget limits. If the deadline is fixed, work backward from the closing date and leave time for recommendations, institutional approvals, financial documents, and portal errors.
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Tax Credits and Property Tax Relief FAQ
What is the difference between a tax credit and a deduction?
A credit reduces your tax bill directly, dollar for dollar, while a deduction only reduces the income you are taxed on. Refundable credits can even pay you money beyond what you owe.
Do I have to file a tax return to get tax credits?
Usually yes — many valuable credits are only delivered through a filed return, which is why people with income below the filing requirement often miss money they are owed. Free official filing help exists for eligible households.
How do I apply for property tax relief?
Typically through your county assessor or local tax office, often with an application deadline tied to the assessment calendar. Check your local government's official website for the forms and dates.