Arlington Dangles $5K Remodel Rebates, but Homeowners Have to Play by the Rules

Thinking about giving your kitchen or bathroom a serious upgrade? Arlington homeowners can get up to $5,000 back from the city after a qualifying remodel, a rebate aimed at projects big enough to trigger a bump in city property taxes. The program targets single-family residences inside Arlington, but it comes with rules, paperwork, and timing requirements you will want to nail down before you sign anything with a contractor.

How the rebate works

The city calculates the incentive as a one-time rebate equal to 10 times the increase in City property taxes after the improvements, capped at $5,000. In simple terms, if your annual city property tax bill goes up by $200 because of the remodel, you would be in line for roughly $2,000 back. Projects must cost at least $20,000, improvements must be finished within 24 months, and work cannot begin until a Chapter 380 incentive agreement is signed, according to the City of Arlington.

The city’s formal incentive agreement also spells out when and how the money gets paid. The document states that the incentive is payable on or before April 1 of the second full calendar year after the project is completed, per the agreement provided by the City of Arlington.

Who qualifies and how to apply

All single-family residential properties inside Arlington are eligible on paper. In practice, homeowners have to clear a few hurdles. Applicants must be current on Tarrant County property taxes and city fees, and when it is time to claim the rebate, they need to provide documentation such as contracts, receipts, and photos of the completed work. The post-improvement taxable value that drives the rebate amount is determined by the Tarrant Appraisal District, so the numbers do not lock in until the appraisal cycle catches up with your finished project.

The city promoted the program again in a MyArlingtonTV Facebook reel yesterday. Homeowners can email [email protected] or call 817-459-6254 for application details and forms, or watch the short explainer in the city’s reel on Facebook…

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