Search Collierville Property Records
Collierville Property Records are easiest to search when you split the town’s tax-collection pages from the Shelby County assessment system that controls the parcel file behind them. If you need to check the municipal due date, understand how the ad valorem city portion is calculated, or connect a Collierville address to the county parcel and valuation record, the search works best when each office stays in the correct role. This page brings the main Collierville Property Records routes together so the municipal tax side and county parcel side can be used in the right order.
Collierville Property Records Facts
Collierville Property Records Search
The strongest town-facing source for Collierville Property Records is the tax-collection page at colliervilletn.gov/government/departments/administrative_services/tax_collection. The research says property tax is a primary source of general-fund revenue, the municipal due date is October 1, bills are first mailed in September, and the collection period runs from October through February. It also says a 1.5 percent penalty applies after February 28. Those details matter because a Collierville property search often begins with a municipal bill rather than with a county parcel number.
The same page also explains the assessment ratios used behind the bill: 25 percent of appraisal for residential property and 40 percent for commercial property. That helps users understand why the taxable amount is different from full appraised value. Collierville Property Records therefore need both the town’s billing explanation and the Shelby County parcel support behind it to make the full record understandable.
The assessor image fits this page because Collierville Property Records depend on Shelby County parcel and assessment support once the town tax page identifies the bill and timing.
Collierville Property Records And Taxes
The town tax page is useful because it explains the municipal share of the property record. Collierville Property Records on the billing side are tied to the town’s ad valorem tax portion, city revenue structure, mailing cycle, and collection window. If the question is a due date, when bills are mailed, or when penalties begin, the town page is the right first stop.
The research also says sales tax and state formulas are part of the broader municipal revenue picture, but the real property side still turns on the ad valorem tax portion tied to assessed value. That means a Collierville tax question often needs to be checked against the county appraisal and parcel record before it is fully understood. A town bill can explain timing and collection, but the county parcel file explains the assessed property behind it.
Tennessee’s property tax relief and property tax programs pages are also useful when a tax question turns into a broader relief or program question after the parcel has been identified.
Collierville Property Records Parcel Review
Parcel review belongs with Shelby County. The research says Shelby County Assessor bases assessment on market value, makes records searchable online, and reappraises every four years. It also says municipal bodies set the tax rates even though the county controls assessment. That split is the key to a clean Collierville Property Records search. The town page explains the municipal bill. The county assessor explains the parcel and assessed value that the bill is based on.
Shelby County also operates an independent CAMA system, so Collierville Property Records should not be framed around TPAD as the working local route. The manifest marks TPAD failed here, which reinforces the same point. The dependable local path is the town tax page plus Shelby County assessor support, not a dead statewide portal.
Collierville Property Records Appeals
When a value issue develops, the appeal side of Collierville Property Records belongs with the county assessment system rather than the town tax page alone. The municipal page explains billing and penalty timing, but Shelby County controls the assessment basis behind it. That means a valuation disagreement should start with the county parcel and appraisal side rather than with town billing staff.
Tennessee’s State Board of Equalization and the value appeals guide explain the wider review path after local county action. The best approach is to keep the issue sorted: town page for due date and municipal billing context, county assessor for parcel and value context, and state appeal resources only when the issue is truly about the assessment itself.
Shelby County Property Records
Collierville Property Records depend on Shelby County for the assessment authority and broader county property file behind the town tax page. Use the county page if you need the larger county context behind a Collierville search.
Other Tennessee Cities
Use the city pages below to connect a Tennessee city to the county parcel, deed, and tax offices that actually keep its property records.