Chesterfield County VA Real Estate Tax Calculator

 


If you own property in Chesterfield County, Virginia, your annual real estate tax bill is calculated using a straightforward formula — but it has several moving parts that can be easy to miss. This guide walks you through every component: the base tax rate, special service district add-ons, the stormwater utility fee, and the exemptions that can sharply reduce what you owe. Two worked examples accompany each step so you can follow along with your own property.

All figures in this guide reflect the rates adopted for Tax Year 2026 by the Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors. The legal authority for real estate taxation in Virginia is found primarily in Title 58.1, Chapter 32 of the Code of Virginia, which requires every county to assess real property at 100% of fair market value and limits the ways local governments can deviate from that baseline.[1]

Step 1 — Find Your Assessed Value

Chesterfield County performs a full reassessment every year, with values taking effect on January 1. Assessment notices are mailed to property owners by February 1. Under Va. Code §58.1-3251 and §58.1-3368, the assessed value must equal 100% of fair market value — meaning the county’s number should reflect what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller on the open market on that date.[2]

You can look up your parcel’s current assessed value any time through the Chesterfield County Real Estate Assessment Data portal, available on the county’s official website. This is the number you will plug into every formula below.

Example A — Single-Family Home

The county’s portal shows an assessed value of $350,000 for a detached home in the Midlothian area. That figure was set as of January 1, 2026 and is the starting point for all calculations.

Example B — Townhouse

A townhouse unit in Chester shows an assessed value of $275,000 on the same portal. Same process, same starting point.

Step 2 — Apply the Base Real Estate Tax Rate

The Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors set the 2026 general real estate tax rate at $0.89 per $100 of assessed value. This rate applies equally to residential and commercial property throughout the county.[3]

The formula is simple:

Base Tax Formula Base Tax = (Assessed Value ÷ 100) × $0.89

Example A — Single-Family Home ($350,000)

$350,000 ÷ 100 = $3,500

$3,500 × $0.89 = $3,115.00 per year

Example B — Townhouse ($275,000)

$275,000 ÷ 100 = $2,750

$2,750 × $0.89 = $2,447.50 per year

Step 3 — Check for Special Service District Taxes

Some parcels in Chesterfield fall inside one of three special service districts, which carry a small additional rate on top of the base $0.89. These districts were created to fund specific infrastructure or landscaping improvements in those corridors. You pay only the district rate that applies to your parcel’s location.[4]

Special Service DistrictExtra Rate (per $100)Purpose
Towne Center – Southport+ $0.02Landscaping & median maintenance in the Towne Center area
Eastern Midlothian Turnpike Corridor+ $0.03Landscaping along Midlothian Turnpike
Powhite Parkway – Charter Colony+ $0.05Financing the Powhite/Charter Colony interchange project

If your property lies inside one of these districts, simply add that extra rate to the $0.89 base rate before multiplying. Your real estate assessment notice or the county’s GIS parcel viewer will confirm which district, if any, your address falls within.

Example A — Home in Powhite Parkway District ($350,000)

Combined rate: $0.89 + $0.05 = $0.94 per $100

$350,000 ÷ 100 × $0.94 = $3,290.00 per year (vs. $3,115 without the district)

Example B — Townhouse Outside Any Special District ($275,000)

No district applies, so the rate stays at $0.89.

$275,000 ÷ 100 × $0.89 = $2,447.50 per year — unchanged from Step 2.

Step 4 — Add the Stormwater Utility Fee

Every developed property in Chesterfield pays a separate Stormwater Utility Fee, which appears as its own line item on your real estate tax bill. This fee is based on the amount of impervious surface (rooftops, driveways, parking lots) on your parcel, measured in Equivalent Residential Units (ERUs). One ERU equals approximately 2,800 square feet of impervious surface.[5]

The county uses these flat rates for 2026:

Property TypeStormwater FeeERU Assumption
Single-family detached home$25.00 per year1 ERU per household
Townhome or condo unit$7.50 per year0.3 ERU per unit
Commercial / industrial$25.00 per ERU per yearCalculated from actual impervious area
Undeveloped parcel (< 250 sq ft impervious)$0 — exempt

Example A — Single-Family Home ($350,000)

The home is a single-family detached property, so it falls automatically in the 1 ERU category.

Stormwater fee = $25.00

Running total (base tax + stormwater, no special district): $3,115.00 + $25.00 = $3,140.00 per year

Example B — Townhouse ($275,000)

Townhomes are assessed at 0.3 ERU per unit.

Stormwater fee = $7.50

Running total: $2,447.50 + $7.50 = $2,455.00 per year

Step 5 — Apply Any Exemptions or Relief Programs

Chesterfield offers several programs that can significantly reduce — or completely eliminate — your real estate tax. These are authorized under Virginia law and administered by the county’s Commissioner of the Revenue.[6]

Senior and Disabled “Circuit Breaker” Relief

Low-to-moderate income homeowners who are age 65 or older, or who are totally and permanently disabled, may qualify for partial or full tax relief on their primary residence. For 2026, the eligibility thresholds are:[7]

Combined Household IncomeRelief Percentage
Up to $39,600100% — no tax owed
$39,601 – $49,10060% reduction
$49,101 – $65,40035% reduction
Above $65,400No relief

Net worth (excluding the home and one vehicle) must not exceed $514,000 ($484,000 if co-owned with a non-qualifying person). Applications are due by April 1 each year.

Example A — Senior Homeowner, $35,000 Income

A 68-year-old owns and occupies the $350,000 home from our earlier examples. Household income is $35,000 and net worth (outside the home) is under the limit.

Income falls in the “up to $39,600” bracket → 100% relief.

Tax owed after relief: $0.00 (stormwater fee may still apply separately — confirm with the Treasurer’s office).

Example B — Disabled Homeowner, $45,000 Income

A totally and permanently disabled owner occupies the $275,000 townhouse. Household income is $45,000.

Income falls in the “$39,601–$49,100” bracket → 60% relief.

Base tax before relief: $2,447.50. Relief amount: $2,447.50 × 60% = $1,468.50.

Tax owed after relief: $2,447.50 − $1,468.50 = $979.00 (plus stormwater).

Disabled Veteran Exemption

Any veteran with a 100% service-connected, permanent and total disability rating from the VA is fully exempt from real estate tax on their primary residence. The surviving spouse of a qualifying veteran also qualifies, provided they remain unmarried and continue to occupy the property. This exemption is established by the Virginia Constitution (Art. X, §6-B) and requires only a one-time application through the Commissioner of the Revenue — no annual renewal is needed.[8]

Surviving Spouses of Fallen First Responders and Service Members

Chesterfield grants a full real estate tax exemption to the surviving spouses of law-enforcement officers, firefighters, search-and-rescue personnel, and EMS workers killed in the line of duty, as well as surviving spouses of Armed Forces members killed in action or who died of wounds received in action. The property must have been the deceased’s primary residence and must remain occupied by the spouse.[9]

Step 6 — Understand Your Bill, Due Dates, and Late Penalties

Chesterfield splits its real estate tax bill into two equal installments each year:[10]

InstallmentDue DateCovers
First halfJune 5January – June period
Second halfDecember 5July – December period

If a due date falls on a weekend or holiday, payment moves to the next business day. Non-receipt of a bill does not waive your obligation or the penalties.

Late penalties are steep. A 10% penalty is added to any unpaid balance the day after the due date, and 10% annual interest (roughly 0.83% per month) begins accruing starting the following month. An administrative fee of $30 may also be applied 30 days after a delinquency notice. Taxes unpaid by December 31 of the second year following their due date become liens eligible for judicial sale, and Chesterfield can also trigger a DMV registration hold on your vehicle.[11]

Example A — Home with $3,140 Annual Bill, Paid on Time

Each installment is $3,140 ÷ 2 = $1,570 (stormwater may be added to first-half bill).

Pay $1,570 by June 5 and $1,570 by December 5. No penalties apply.

Example B — Townhouse $2,455 Annual Bill, Second-Half Payment Missed

Second-half installment: $2,455 ÷ 2 = $1,227.50. Owner misses December 5.

10% penalty on December 6: $1,227.50 × 10% = $122.75 → new balance $1,350.25.

Interest then accrues at ~0.83% per month on the unpaid amount until paid in full.

How to Appeal Your Assessment

If you believe your assessed value is too high, Chesterfield offers a two-stage formal appeal process. Evidence you can submit includes up to three comparable sales, a licensed appraisal, photographs of the property’s condition, or (for income-producing property) three years of income and expense statements plus a certified rent roll.[12]

StageDeadlineWho Decides
Informal review with the County AssessorMarch 15County Real Estate Assessments Office
Board of Equalization appealApril 15 (postmark)Independent Board of Equalization (judge-appointed)

Beyond the Board of Equalization, relief is only available through circuit court. Missing the April 15 postmark deadline for the Board means waiting until the next assessment year.

Putting It All Together — Full Calculation Summary

Full Annual Tax Formula Annual Tax = (Assessed Value ÷ 100) × (Base Rate + Any District Rate)
               + Stormwater Fee
               − Relief Credit (if applicable)

The base rate is $0.89. District rates are $0.02 (Towne Center), $0.03 (Eastern Midlothian), or $0.05 (Powhite Parkway) — added only if your parcel sits inside that district. Stormwater is $25 for a detached home, $7.50 for a townhome/condo, or $25 per ERU for commercial property. Relief credits apply only if you have been approved under the senior/disabled, disabled veteran, or surviving spouse programs.

Disclaimer: This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Tax rates, exemption thresholds, and deadlines are subject to change by the Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors or the Virginia General Assembly. Always verify current figures with the Chesterfield County Real Estate Assessments Office or the County Treasurer’s Office before making financial decisions. If in doubt, consult a licensed Virginia CPA or real estate attorney.

References & Sources

  1. Code of Virginia, Title 58.1, Chapter 32 — Real Property Tax. Virginia Legislative Information System. law.lis.virginia.gov
  2. Va. Code §58.1-3251 (Assessment at 100% fair market value) and §58.1-3368 (Annual assessment requirement). Virginia Legislative Information System.
  3. Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors — FY 2026 Adopted Budget and Tax Rate Resolution. Chesterfield County official website. chesterfield.gov
  4. Chesterfield County — Special Service Districts (Towne Center–Southport, Eastern Midlothian Turnpike Corridor, Powhite Parkway–Charter Colony). Chesterfield County Real Estate Assessments Office. chesterfield.gov/assessments
  5. Chesterfield County Stormwater Utility Fee Program — Rate Schedule and ERU Methodology. Chesterfield County Utilities Department. chesterfield.gov/utilities
  6. Chesterfield County Commissioner of the Revenue — Tax Relief and Exemption Programs. chesterfield.gov/commissioner
  7. Chesterfield County Senior and Disabled Tax Relief Program — Income and Net Worth Thresholds (Tax Year 2026). Chesterfield County Commissioner of the Revenue. Application deadline April 1.
  8. Virginia Constitution, Article X, §6-B — Exemption for Disabled Veterans. Code of Virginia §58.1-3219.5. Virginia Legislative Information System.
  9. Code of Virginia §58.1-3219.9 (surviving spouses of first responders killed in line of duty) and Virginia Constitution Art. X §6-B (surviving spouses of Armed Forces members killed in action). Virginia Legislative Information System.
  10. Chesterfield County Treasurer’s Office — Real Estate Tax Billing Schedule and Payment Information. Due dates: June 5 (first half) and December 5 (second half). chesterfield.gov/treasurer
  11. Chesterfield County Treasurer’s Office — Delinquency Policy: 10% penalty, 10% per annum interest, $30 administrative fee, DMV Stop program. chesterfield.gov/treasurer
  12. Chesterfield County Real Estate Assessments Office — Assessment Appeal Procedures. Informal review deadline March 15; Board of Equalization appeal deadline April 15. chesterfield.gov/assessments

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