New Orleans, LA Property Tax Calculator

Estimate property tax for a home in New Orleans, LA. Homes in New Orleans are assessed by Orleans Parish, where the effective property tax rate runs about 0.80% of market value — so a median-priced New Orleans home of $290,000 generates roughly $2,320 in annual property tax. Enter your specific home value below for a custom estimate.

Estimated Annual Property Tax
$2,320
$193/month — Louisiana

Annual Tax

$2,320

0.80% of $290,000

Monthly Tax

$193

Typically escrowed with your mortgage

State Rank

#48 of 51

Highest rate = #1

vs. National Average

National average rate: 1.11%On a $290,000 home: $3,216/year28% lower than the national average

Highest property tax states

  • New Jersey2.49%
  • Illinois2.23%
  • New Hampshire2.18%
  • Connecticut2.15%
  • Vermont1.90%

Lowest property tax states

  • Hawaii0.32%
  • Alabama0.41%
  • Colorado0.55%
  • Louisiana0.56%
  • District of Columbia0.57%

These are state-level averages. Individual counties and cities can vary significantly — a home in Austin's urban core may have a far higher effective rate than the Texas state average, for example. For the most accurate estimate, get the exact millage rate from your county assessor and override the rate field above.

How to use it

A two-minute guide.

The Home Value field is pre-filled with New Orleans's median home value of $290,000. Override with your actual home's market value for a specific estimate — your tax bill scales linearly with home value.

The rate is pre-filled with Orleans Parish's effective rate of 0.80% — the county-level average for owner-occupied homes, which is more precise than Louisiana's statewide average of 0.56%. Individual school districts and special taxing zones within New Orleans still shift the exact figure — if you know the rate from your latest tax bill, override it for the most precise estimate.

You'll see your estimated annual property tax, the monthly amount (which is typically escrowed with your mortgage payment), and a comparison to other states.

How it works

The math behind the result.

How New Orleans's tax bill works out. Homes in New Orleans are assessed and billed through Orleans Parish. The effective rate there averages about 0.80% of market value — above Louisiana's statewide average of 0.56%. On New Orleans's median home value of $290,000, that's approximately $2,320/year, or $193/month when escrowed with your mortgage.

How assessment works in Louisiana. Parish assessors value homes at 10% of market value (the assessment ratio), with parish-wide reassessment every four years.

Exemptions worth claiming. Louisiana's homestead exemption is one of the most generous: the first $75,000 of market value is exempt from most parish taxes (Orleans Parish includes city taxes); 100% disabled veterans get double. Exemptions are the most common reason two identical New Orleans homes pay different tax bills — make sure yours are on file with Orleans Parish.

What property tax actually pays for. In New Orleans — like the rest of Louisiana — property tax funds local schools, public safety (police, fire), road maintenance, parks, libraries, and county government. Most of your bill stays in your county and school district.

Comparing to other states. Effective rates vary enormously across the US — from about 0.3% in Hawaii to nearly 2.5% in New Jersey. New Orleans's 0.80% puts it in the lower third nationally.

Questions

Frequently asked.

Homes in New Orleans are assessed through Orleans Parish, where the effective property tax rate averages about 0.80% of market value (county-level data). Your exact rate depends on your school district and any special taxing zones at your address — your latest tax bill or the Orleans Parish assessor's website has the precise figure.

Buying in New Orleans? Estimate your full mortgage payment with our New Orleans Mortgage Calculator. Or see how Louisiana property tax rates compare across the state with our Louisiana Property Tax Calculator.

Nearby & related

Property tax calculators in other cities

Related tools

Keep going.