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The Berks Beat

Berks County government, in plain English

Guide

How your Berks County property tax bill is split

Your Berks County property tax bill has three parts: county, municipal, and school. What each funds, why school is biggest, and how to find your rate.

By The Berks Beat staff · Published July 7, 2026 · Updated July 7, 2026 · Facts last verified July 7, 2026

A Berks County property tax bill comes from three separate taxing bodies: the county, your municipality (your city, borough, or township), and your school district. Each one sets its own rate and applies it to the same assessed value, and the three add up to what you owe. The county’s 2026 rate is 9.013 mills and is the same for every property owner in Berks. Your municipal and school rates depend on where you live, and the school district is almost always the largest of the three.

What a mill is

Tax rates are quoted in mills. One mill is $1 of tax for every $1,000 of assessed value. A rate of 9.013 mills means $9.01 per $1,000, so a property assessed at $100,000 owes about $901 in county tax. The math for any of the three is the same: multiply the assessed value by the rate and divide by 1,000.

The three parts

County. Every property in Berks pays the same county rate, 9.013 mills for 2026. County taxes fund the courts, the jail, human services, the Berks Heim nursing home, elections, and the 911 system. County real estate taxes cover only about a quarter of the county budget; the rest comes mostly from state and federal grants. See where the county’s money goes.

Municipal. Your city, borough, or township sets its own rate to pay for local services such as police, road maintenance, and trash where the municipality provides them. This is the part that varies most from place to place, from zero in a few townships to about 19 mills in the city of Reading.

School. Your public school district sets the largest rate of the three, because K-12 schools are the most expensive local service. Across Berks districts the school rate runs from roughly 18 mills to about 51 mills for 2026.

A worked example

Take a home in Muhlenberg Township assessed at $100,000. The 2026 rates are 9.013 mills county, 4.8 mills municipal, and 38.406 mills school (Muhlenberg School District):

  • County: $901
  • Municipal: $480
  • School: $3,841
  • Total: about $5,222

In that example the school district is roughly three-quarters of the bill and the county is under a fifth. The exact split changes with your municipality and district, but the pattern holds across the county: schools dominate, the county is a small slice, and the municipal share is usually smallest.

It starts with your assessed value

The rate is only half of the calculation. The other half is your assessed value, and in Berks that number is not the price your home would sell for. The county has not run a countywide reassessment in decades, so assessments trace to a 1994 base year. A house worth $250,000 today might be assessed near $100,000. That is expected, not an error, and you can look up your assessment on the free parcel search.

If you think your assessed value is too high relative to what your home would sell for, that is the one number you can challenge. You cannot appeal the tax rates, but you can appeal your assessment by August 1, which lowers the value all three taxes are calculated from.

How to find your own numbers

  1. Look up your assessed value on the county parcel search. Our parcel search guide walks through the fields.
  2. Find your three rates on the county’s 2026 tax-rate table (PDF). Every municipality has a row showing its municipal rate, its school rate, and the combined total; the county’s 9.013 mills is the same everywhere. The table lists rates as decimals, where 0.0090130 is the same as 9.013 mills.
  3. Do the math. Multiply your assessed value by each decimal rate to get each tax, then add the three. The county’s total column already includes all three rates combined.

Three bills, three due dates

The three taxes are billed separately and can fall due at different times. County and municipal taxes run on the calendar year and take effect January 1. School taxes run on the school year and take effect the prior July 1. Each bill comes with its own discount period and penalty deadline, and paying one does not pay the others. Confirm the dates on each bill or with your local tax collector.

Why the county is the small slice

The county holding its rate flat at 9.013 mills for 2026, after increases in 2024 and 2025, has a limited effect on your total bill, because the county is the smallest of the three rates for most property owners. Changes to your school tax move the total far more. That is worth remembering when a rate change makes the news: a one-mill increase from your school district costs more than a one-mill increase from the county. The commissioners set only the county rate, and here is how to raise a concern with them.

FAQ

What is the Berks County property tax rate for 2026?

9.013 mills, the same for every property in the county. The commissioners held it flat for 2026 after raising it in 2024 and 2025. A property assessed at $100,000 pays about $901 in county tax, before municipal and school taxes.

Why is my school tax so much higher than my county tax?

School districts fund K-12 education, the most expensive service local government provides, so their rates are the largest of the three. The county rate is uniform and comparatively small. In most of Berks the school district accounts for well over half of a property tax bill.

How can I lower my Berks County property taxes?

You cannot change the tax rates, but you can challenge your assessed value, which is what all three taxes are calculated from. Annual assessment appeals are due August 1. See how to appeal.

Are property taxes the same everywhere in Berks County?

The county portion is, at 9.013 mills. The municipal and school portions vary by location, so two homes with the same assessed value in different municipalities or school districts can have very different total bills.

When are Berks County property taxes due?

County and municipal taxes run on the calendar year; school taxes run on the school year starting the prior July 1. Each of the three bills lists its own discount period and due date. Check your bill or ask your local tax collector for the exact dates.