Office Hours: Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 9-3
Friday by appointment only
Email: Assessor [at] doververmont.com (Assessor[at]doververmont[dot]com)
On March 1, 2016, the Town of Dover voted to dissolve the Board of Listers and appoint an Assessor. The Assessor has the same powers, discharges the same duties, proceeds in the discharge thereof in the same manner, and be subject to the same liabilities as are prescribed for Listers or the Board of Listers under the provision of Title 32.
Responsibilities of the Assessor
The Assessor is responsible for the preparation and overall maintenance of the Grand List, a comprehensive list of every property in Dover, ensuring it is as accurate and equitable as possible.
The valuation year is from April 1st to March 31st of any given year. Thus, the owner and condition of the property is effective as of April 1st.
The Assessor is responsible for appraising all real property in Dover in compliance with applicable Vermont State Statues. The duties also include updating changes to property cards resulting from building permits, address changes, work with tax maps and maintaining the State’s Current Use program. The Assessor’s Office typically perform exterior inspections of new and existing structures. Whenever possible, an interior inspection is done to keep records up to date, and values current.
Market Fluctuations
It is important to understand that one or two low or high sales are not enough to justify changes to an entire property class or neighborhood. Assessments typically are on “median” values for any group of properties, or that value which falls in the middle, over a three-year period. This lessens the influence of extreme high and low sale prices. There must be a clear and consistent trend to make market adjustments up or down.
Education Property Tax
In 1997 Vermont’s Supreme Court ruled that education is the state’s responsibility. It said the state has a responsibility under the constitution to provide “substantially equal access” to a quality basic education to all Vermont students, regardless of where in Vermont they may live. This led to the passage of Vermont’s Equal Education Opportunity Act providing for a statewide education property tax. This act now includes a property tax adjustment provision relating to primary residents.
Common Level of Appraisal/Equalized Education Property Value
The Common Level of Appraisal has become a very important component since the passage of the education funding Acts 60/68 in calculating and equalizing education taxes statewide. The purpose: to ensure that properties of equal value pay equal taxes. There are over 250 taxing jurisdictions in the state, so there is some divergence in the assessment levels of the various jurisdictions. Property Valuation and Review (PV & R), a division of the Vermont Department of Taxes, perform equalization studies to eliminate the divergence prior to determining education tax rates.
PV & R (Property Valuation and Review) take the following steps to estimate the towns equalized value:
- Review sales data for a three-year period. 2024 was based on sales between 4/1/2021- 3/31/2024.
- Eliminate sales that do not represent fair market value.
- Stratifies the remaining sales by grand list categories.
- Calculates listed to value to sales price ratios for all market sales.
- Determines equalization ratios that represent reliable estimates of the divergence from 100% fair market value, applies the resulting ratios to the grand list value for appropriate categories and sums resulting values.
The total, with adjustments for local agreements and current use appraisal, is the equalized education property value for the town.
This process generates the CLA (Common Level of Appraisal) which is used to determine the education tax rate.
The COD (coefficient of dispersion): 21.32%
For the Year 2024 the CLA is 61.71%
In July of 2023, Legislation passed a bill which will now use the COD as the determining factor in mandating a town wide reappraisal. The CLA will continue to be used to set the education tax rate for towns.
Appeals and Grievances
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Anyone owning property in Dover has the right to appeal or grieve the assessment.
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If you plan on filing an appeal, please follow the steps to allow for an accurate and thorough appeal.
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You must be the owner of record as of April 1st.
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If you were not the owner of record, you must obtain, in writing permission from the former owner.
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The appeal must be in writing.
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Please use the form provided for your convenience below. (see attached)
Grievance hearings are held in June. You will be notified as to the dates and times. As a property owner , it’s important to know how the town has assessed your property. To obtain a property card, call the office or use the online mapping program: Once you have a had a hearing, you will receive a notice of decision of grievance within 7 days. It will give information as to the next step beyond the grievance process.
A Note from the Assessor on the 2026 Reappraisal: February 26, 2026:
An update from the Assessor on the 2026 Reappraisal:
It is safe to say we are close to the home stretch of this reappraisal!
Data collection will be stopped as of February 28, 2026.
If your property did not have an interior inspection, the company, NEMC will use the data on file. Because of the contracted time limit, they need to move on to the review portion of the reappraisal.
You will receive your preliminary value in May. You will be given directions on how to look up your property online.
If you discover incorrect information, there will be informal meeting times in May to have those corrections made. Please note, this is not to appeal the value. Grievances will be held in June as they typically do. I want to thank all of you for allowing inspections to be conducted. It is not an easy decision, but in the long- run will be better for you and the town.
Please call my office if you have questions.802-464-5100 x 5
Linda
Town of Dover, VT Mapping Site