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Should You Pay Property Taxes With Your Mortgage?

Updated

When you set up your mortgage, your lender will ask whether you want to include property taxes in your mortgage payment. It sounds like a simple question, but it has meaningful financial implications.

Here’s what you need to know to make the right choice.


How property tax holdback works

When you opt to pay property taxes through your mortgage:

  1. Your lender estimates your annual property tax
  2. They divide it by the number of payments per year
  3. That amount is added to each mortgage payment
  4. The tax portion is held in a separate account (not applied to your mortgage)
  5. The lender pays your municipality directly when taxes come due

Example:

ComponentAmount
Mortgage payment (P+I)$2,400/month
Property tax portion$400/month
Total monthly payment$2,800/month

Your mortgage statement will show the tax portion separately from your principal and interest payment.


When it’s required vs optional

Mortgage TypeTax Holdback
Insured (less than 20% down)Usually required by the lender
Conventional (20%+ down)Usually optional — your choice
Renewal or refinanceCan sometimes be removed at renewal

If you have a high-ratio/insured mortgage, you likely don’t have a choice — most lenders mandate tax holdback to protect the insurer’s interest in the property.


Pros of paying taxes through your mortgage

AdvantageDetails
ConvenienceOne payment covers everything; no separate tax bills to track
No missed paymentsLender pays on time, avoiding late fees or tax liens
Forced budgetingSpreads the annual tax bill into manageable monthly amounts
Lender peace of mindEnsures the property isn’t at risk of a tax sale (protects their collateral)
Simpler budgetingYou know your exact monthly housing cost

This option is ideal if you prefer a set-it-and-forget-it approach to housing costs.


Cons of paying taxes through your mortgage

DisadvantageDetails
Lost interestThe funds sit in the lender’s account earning little or no interest instead of yours
Overpayment riskLenders may overestimate your taxes, collecting more than needed
Less controlYou can’t time your tax payments strategically
Adjustment hasslesIf taxes increase, your payment changes mid-term (can be a surprise)
Harder to switch lendersTax account balance must be transferred or refunded at renewal

The opportunity cost

If your annual property tax is $5,000, the lender collects this throughout the year and holds it. If you paid taxes yourself, you could hold that money in a high-interest savings account earning 3–4% until the tax bill comes due.

ScenarioAnnual Interest Earned
$5,000 in lender tax account~$0–$25
$5,000 in HISA at 4% (average balance)~$100–$125

The savings are modest but real — roughly $75–$125 per year on an average tax bill.


Pros of paying taxes separately

AdvantageDetails
Earn interestKeep funds in a HISA until taxes are due
Full controlYou decide when and how to pay
No payment surprisesYour mortgage payment stays fixed
Easier at renewalNo tax account to transfer
Prepayment flexibilitySome municipalities offer early payment discounts

Cons of paying taxes separately

DisadvantageDetails
Discipline requiredYou must save consistently and pay on time
Risk of missed paymentLate property taxes incur penalties (typically 1.25%/month)
Large lump-sum billsAnnual or semi-annual tax bills can be $3,000–$10,000+
Tax lien riskChronic non-payment can result in a tax sale of your property

What happens if the lender gets your taxes wrong?

Lenders estimate your property taxes based on the most recent tax bill. But taxes can change:

SituationWhat Happens
Taxes increaseLender adjusts your monthly payment upward (short notice)
Taxes decreaseLender may reduce your payment or build a surplus credit
ReassessmentNew construction or significant renovations trigger reassessment
OverpaymentSurplus is typically refunded or credited to your account annually
UnderpaymentLender may increase future payments to cover the shortfall

Most lenders review tax accounts annually and adjust as needed.


How to decide

If You…Then…
Have a high-ratio mortgageYou likely must include taxes (lender requirement)
Prefer simplicityInclude taxes in your mortgage payment
Struggle to save for large billsInclude taxes — it acts as forced savings
Are disciplined with moneyPay separately and earn interest
Want maximum controlPay separately
Have a conventional mortgage at renewalAsk to remove the tax holdback if you prefer

Can you switch?

SituationCan You Change?
At renewalYes — request removal or addition of tax holdback
Mid-term (insured mortgage)Usually no
Mid-term (conventional mortgage)Some lenders allow it with a request
Switching lendersTax account balance is refunded; you set up new arrangement

If you currently have taxes included and want to switch, your renewal is the easiest time to make the change.


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