Olney property tax rate exceeds US average in Q4 2025

Olney property tax rate exceeds US average in Q4 2025
-
0Comments

Homeowners in Olney paid property taxes equal to 1% of their property’s value during the fourth quarter of 2025, which is more than 1.1 times the national average, according to BlockShopper.com.

Data show the median sales price for homes in Olney during this period was $677,450, based on 68 properties sold. For 2025, the median property tax bill in Olney was $6,767—equivalent to 1% of the median assessed home value.

The average effective property tax rate in the U.S. was 0.888% in 2024.

Takoma Park recorded the highest effective property tax rate in Montgomery County.

The estimated effective property tax rate for 2025 in this article factors in projected inflation values and 2020 county tax data. Actual rates may differ slightly in certain cases.

Nationwide, home prices continued to climb in 2025. The national median reached around $447,000 in June, an increase of 1.13% compared with the previous year, according to Redfin. Their findings also highlight a wide gap between supply and demand: there were 36% more sellers than buyers, amounting to a difference of 508,715 homes. Redfin defines a balanced market as one in which the number of buyers and sellers is within 10% of each other.

The table below provides a comparison of Takoma Park and other Montgomery County cities by their median effective property tax rates, calculated from fourth-quarter 2025 sales and property tax data.

City Q4 2025 Sales Q4 2025 Median Price Median tax 2025 Effective tax rate
Takoma Park 17 $695,000 $10,215 1.5%
Rockville 144 $637,500 $7,910 1.2%
Washington Grove 4 $532,500 $6,508 1.2%
Travilah 29 $1,325,000 $15,271 1.2%
Boyds 5 $577,500 $6,156 1.1%
Rossmoor 56 $250,000 $2,629 1.1%
Forest Glen 26 $525,000 $5,991 1.1%
North Potomac 27 $860,000 $9,448 1.1%
Silver Spring 138 $602,500 $6,390 1.1%
Garrett Park 6 $797,500 $8,752 1.1%
Laytonsville 4 $782,000 $8,441 1.1%
Gaithersburg 162 $537,444 $5,827 1.1%
Derwood 40 $660,000 $6,314 1%
Calverton 13 $480,000 $4,983 1%
South Kensington 29 $1,014,000 $9,966 1%
Ashton-Sandy Spring 11 $800,000 $7,731 1%
Poolesville 13 $560,000 $5,700 1%
Fairland 41 $400,000 $4,142 1%
Colesville 60 $667,500 $6,434 1%
Cloverly 22 $612,500 $6,023 1%
Kemp Mill 16 $600,550 $5,833 1%
Hillandale 2 $614,500 $6,311 1%
Clarksburg 28 $640,000 $6,458 1%
Damascus 49 $555,000 $5,359 1%
White Oak 19 $585,000 $5,723 1%
Bethesda 226 $1,200,000 $11,567 1%
Montgomery Village 177 $400,000 $3,935 1%
Burtonsville 14 $535,000 $5,127 1%
Aspen Hill 108 $545,000 $5,608 1%
Olney 68 $677,450 $6,767 1%
Cabin John 7 $1,150,000 $11,252 1%
Wheaton-Glenmont 107 $525,000 $5,089 1%
Germantown 229 $414,000 $4,295 1%
Potomac 128 $1,195,000 $11,167 0.9%
North Kensington 37 $661,000 $6,104 0.9%
Chevy Chase 50 $1,474,500 $13,929 0.9%
North Bethesda 121 $649,900 $5,964 0.9%
Brookeville 9 $1,090,000 $9,267 0.9%
Friendship Village 15 $395,000 $3,538 0.9%
Darnestown 13 $1,200,000 $9,860 0.8%

Information in this story comes from BlockShopper.com. To view the source data, click here.



Related

How did home valuation prices perform in Montgomery County during 2025?

How did home valuation prices perform in Montgomery County during 2025?

The median sale price of a home sold in 2025 in Montgomery County rose by $25,000, while total sales increased by 11.1%.

What happened to the median home valuation price in Montgomery County during Q4 2025?

What happened to the median home valuation price in Montgomery County during Q4 2025?

The median sale price of a home sold in the fourth quarter of 2025 in Montgomery County rose by $30,000, while total sales decreased by 3%.

Germantown property tax rate exceeds US average in Q4 2025

Germantown property tax rate exceeds US average in Q4 2025

Homeowners in Germantown paid property taxes equal to 1% of their home’s value during the fourth quarter of 2025, surpassing the national average by more than 1.2 times, BlockShopper.com reports.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Montgomery News.