Chester County Property Taxes, Explained
Chester County has some of the highest-looking property-tax millage in Pennsylvania, and that scares off buyers who don’t realize the number is mostly an artifact of how the county assesses homes. Here’s what you’ll actually pay, why the rates look the way they do, and how the bill breaks down across every school district we cover.
County and municipal millage: 2025. School millage: 2025-26 adopted budgets (districts adopt the next year's budgets by June 30; we update when PDE certifies the statewide file in the fall). Common Level Ratio: STEB 2025 (30.58%). A new CLR takes effect each July 1, and we update then.
Looking for a home in Chester County?
Search homes for sale in Chester CountyWhy the millage looks so high
Chester County still assesses homes on 1998 values. A house worth $450,000 today might be assessed at a small fraction of that, so the county and its school districts levy high millage on small assessments just to fund their budgets. Raw millage tells you almost nothing about what you will actually pay.
The honest number is the effective rate: millage multiplied by the county's Common Level Ratio (30.58%), expressed as a percentage of a home's real market value. That is the figure NookLocal uses everywhere, so you can compare Chester County to anywhere else.
- 1998
- Assessment base year
- 30.58%
- Common Level Ratio
- 5.164
- County millage
- 0.16%
- County levy, effective
Effective property-tax rate by school district
Typical total rate (county plus median municipality plus school) as a share of market value, and the annual bill on a $450,000 home. Cheapest first. Rates vary by municipality within a district, so open a district for its full range.
| School district | School rate | Total rate | ~Tax / $450,000 |
|---|---|---|---|
| West Chester Area | 0.72% | 0.93% | $4,204 |
| Great Valley | 0.77% | 0.95% | $4,294 |
| Downingtown Area | 0.98% | 1.17% | $5,259 |
| Tredyffrin-Easttown | 0.91% | 1.21% | $5,450 |
| Unionville-Chadds Ford | 1.04% | 1.26% | $5,659 |
| Phoenixville Area | 1.07% | 1.32% | $5,951 |
| Owen J Roberts | 1.11% | 1.33% | $5,989 |
| Avon Grove | 1.10% | 1.34% | $6,008 |
| Oxford Area | 1.18% | 1.34% | $6,052 |
| Kennett Consolidated | 1.07% | 1.34% | $6,022 |
| Octorara Area | 1.33% | 1.62% | $7,297 |
| Coatesville Area | 1.36% | 1.67% | $7,504 |
What a buyer should expect
Pennsylvania does not reassess a home just because it sells, so the millage and assessment usually carry over to you. The exception: buy well above a home’s implied market value and the school district can file an assessment appeal that raises your bill. For a specific home, the property tax calculator and every listing page do the exact math, including an appeal-risk check. The Common Level Ratio table explains the conversion, and the School District Value Matrix weighs these rates against school quality.
Common questions
Why do Chester County property tax millage rates look so high?
Assessment base year. Chester County still assesses homes on 1998 values, so a home's assessed value is a small fraction of what it's worth today. Districts and the county levy high millage on those small assessments to fund their budgets. The number that actually matters is the effective rate, which is millage multiplied by the county's Common Level Ratio (currently 30.58%), the share of a home's real market value you pay each year.
How are Chester County property taxes calculated?
Your bill is the sum of three millage rates, county (5.164), your municipality, and your school district, applied to your home's assessed value. Because Chester County assesses on 1998 values, NookLocal converts every rate to an effective percentage of market value using the 2025 Common Level Ratio (30.58%), so you can compare what you'll really pay across towns and districts.
Will my property taxes change when I buy a home in Chester County?
Pennsylvania does not reassess a property simply because it sells, so your millage and assessment usually carry over. But if you buy well above the home's implied market value, the school district can file an assessment appeal that raises your bill. Every NookLocal listing shows the recomputed tax at the current rate, plus an appeal-risk check.
Which Chester County school district has the lowest property taxes?
Among Chester County districts we cover that operate public schools, West Chester Area carries the lowest typical total rate (about 0.93% of market value, roughly $4,204 per year on a $450,000 home) and Coatesville Area the highest (about 1.67%, roughly $7,504 per year). Rates also vary by municipality within a district, and the table above lists each one.
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Tax data: Chester County assessment office, adopted school budgets, and the Pennsylvania State Tax Equalization Board (Common Level Ratio). Effective rates assume an assessment at the current CLR, the right baseline for a purchase. Figures do not subtract homestead or farmstead exclusions, which lower the school portion for many owner-occupants; apply for those after you buy. Deemed reliable but not guaranteed; verify with the county and district before transacting.