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Deductly is an online property-tax savings tool for U.S. homeowners. Its core purpose is to help users determine whether a county government’s assessed value is higher than the property’s current market value, and then estimate whether there may be room to reduce property taxes. The site says users can complete an initial estimate in about 30 seconds, and it provides county-level next-step guidance for reassessment.
Based on the property address entered by the user, the product pulls the county-assessed value used for tax purposes, then combines trusted pricing sources, recent comparable sales, and third-party data to estimate market value and calculate potential annual savings. The text discloses that it uses Google Places Autocomplete API for address handling, and references public records and third-party services such as Zillow. The paid offering also includes preparing property-tax assessment documents for submission to the county government, checking for missed tax exemptions and credits, and looking for lower rates on insurance, utilities, and PMI.
Deductly offers both a free estimator and a Homeowner plan, priced at a fixed annual fee of $59/year, with no percentage-based cut of the savings. If the assessment outcome after submission does not result in a reduction, users can request a full refund. Note that Deductly only prepares the materials; it does not submit them to the county government on the user’s behalf, nor does it cover filing, appeals, or hearings.
Its strengths are a simple entry point, transparent pricing, a low fixed fee, and reduced decision risk through its “no savings, refund” policy. It also clearly explains its estimation logic and third-party data sources, avoiding presenting the tool as professional tax advice. The drawbacks are also clear: valuations, tax rates, and savings estimates are only approximate and not guaranteed to be accurate; the service is limited to U.S. residents aged 18 or older; and it lacks the team permissions, API, audit, compliance certification, and private deployment information commonly found in enterprise software.
It is best suited to U.S. homeowners and investment-property owners who want a low-cost self-check first and are willing to submit materials to the county government themselves. It is not suitable for users who need end-to-end representation by a lawyer, tax advisor, or appraiser. The text does not disclose access conditions from China, so this is unknown; payment methods are also not specified. Chinese users dealing with local property tax matters should prioritize local tax advisors, law firms, or government tax platforms, as Deductly’s rules and data are primarily designed for U.S. real estate scenarios.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on deductly.com official site.
deductly.com is an United States Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach deductly.com directly.