Nevada uses one of the most distinctive property-tax systems in the United States. Instead of taxing the full market value of your home, the state taxes the assessed value, which is set at exactly 35% of taxable market value. Clark County then applies a single combined rate expressed in dollars per $100 of assessed value — roughly $3.2782 for the City of Las Vegas in FY 2024-25. On top of that, Nevada caps how much your bill can rise each year, which is why long-held Las Vegas homes often show an effective rate near 0.59% of market value.
How it works
The estimator runs the official Nevada chain entirely in your browser:
Assessed value = Market value x 0.35 Annual tax = (Assessed value / 100) x Combined rate
For a $450,000 home at a combined rate of $3.2782 per $100:
- Assessed value:
$450,000 x 0.35 = $157,500 - Gross annual tax:
($157,500 / 100) x 3.2782 = $5,163.17
Nevada then applies an abatement cap to limit year-over-year increases. If you enter last year’s bill, the tool caps this year’s result at last year’s bill plus 3% (owner-occupied primary residence) or 8% (other property), and flags when the cap kicks in.
The 3% cap and the 0.59% effective rate
The gross math above looks high, but the abatement cap compresses real bills over time. A homeowner who has owned for years sees their bill rise by at most 3% annually even as market value climbs much faster. After a decade of appreciation, the bill paid divided by current market value commonly falls to around 0.59% — the figure local agents quote. New buyers reset closer to the unconstrained rate until they accumulate years under the cap.
Notes and example
- Nevada has no general homestead tax exemption — the homestead law only protects equity from creditors.
- The combined rate varies by tax district within Clark County. Unincorporated areas, Henderson, and North Las Vegas use different combined rates; adjust the rate field accordingly.
- This is an estimate. Your county assessor sets the official taxable value, which can differ from a sale price or appraisal. Check the Clark County Assessor at
clarkcountynv.govfor your parcel’s exact assessed value and tax-district rate.
Everything is computed locally — no values leave your browser.