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Time Is Running Out To Ask The City For A Break On Your Property Taxes

By Heather Cherone | November 28, 2016 5:25am
 Northwest Side residents have until Feb. 2 to appeal their property taxes, officials said.
Northwest Side residents have until Feb. 2 to appeal their property taxes, officials said.
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DNAinfo/Patty Wetli

CITY HALL — Chicagoans eligible for a property tax rebate designed to ease the burden of last year's massive tax hike have until Wednesday to apply in person to get money back.

More than five weeks into the two-month program, only 5 percent of eligible Chicago homeowners had applied for the rebate, officials said.

The program offers rebates of $25-$200 to homeowners based on the increase in the city's portion of their most recent property tax bill and their household income. Senior citizens who are longtime homeowners could qualify for an additional rebate.

When the effort was launched Oct. 1, city officials expected the rebate program would return $20 million to 155,000 households earning less than $75,000. The average rebate was expected to be $150, officials said.

Chicagoans have until Wednesday to apply — in person — for a rebate on their property taxes at one of 26 locations, including City Hall, officials said. Applicants must appear in person for the rebate because of sensitive nature of the documents required, officials said.

The rebate is designed to help residents cope with a $589 million property tax hike — the largest tax increase in Chicago history — touted by Mayor Rahm Emanuel as the only way to fill the city's massive deficit and shore up pensions for police officers and firefighters.

To check whether you are eligible for the program, review the list of requirements.

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