What is a

Revaluation?

Rebalancing

A revaluation rebalances the values of property to bring it to fair market value

Recognition of your investment

You purchased your home to set yourself up for success long term, this is a recognition of that hard work.

Growth

Your home’s recognized value has grown, independent of whether your tax bill grows by the same amount.

BY THE NUMBERS

Lewiston’s FY2026 → FY2027 Revaluation

The citywide shift behind every number on this page.

TOTAL ASSESSED VALUE

$2.31B → $4.40B

Citywide, all property types

HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION

$11,500 → $25,000

Shields more of your home’s value

YEARS SINCE LAST REVALUATION

~30 years

Why the jump feels large now

MIL RATE

Recalculated annually

levy ÷ assessed value × 1,000

NOW, LET’S MAKE IT REAL

See What This Means for Your Home

Enter your assessed value before and after the revaluation below.

Your equity, in plain numbers
$0
Money that is yours, whether or not you ever sell.

A higher assessed value does not automatically mean a proportionally higher tax bill. The mil rate is recalculated citywide each year.

mil rate = total property tax levy ÷ total citywide assessed value × 1,000

Most homeowners also qualify for the Homestead Exemption: $25,000 for FY2027, up from $11,500 in FY2026.

How a Revaluation Impacts You

Your Equity

Your home’s assessed value now reflects what it’s actually worth. For long-time owners, this gap is often the single largest source of household wealth, built through decades of payments, upkeep, and a market that moved without you doing anything.

House keys handed over, warm light, symbolizing home equity

Your Tax Bill

The mil rate is recalculated using the city’s total levy and total assessed value. When citywide assessed value nearly doubles, the rate drops to compensate. The Homestead Exemption also grew, from $11,500 to $25,000 for FY2027.

Your Community

The same assessed values fund every city department and the school district. A revaluation redistributes who pays what share of the same pool: it’s rebalancing, not a citywide tax hike on its own.

RESIDENT STORIES

Stories From
Neighbors Like You

Margaret

Homeowner since 1986

I did the only math I knew how to do: a bigger number on the assessment must mean a bigger bill. I was wrong. My equity grew by $220,000.

Jess

New homeowner, FY2027

I just closed on my first home. I want to know what this means before next year’s payment, not after. My assessment already reflects current value.

Marcus

Renter, downtown Lewiston

I don’t own anything here, but I notice when rent changes. The mil rate dropped even as values rose, so it’s worth asking what’s really behind any increase.

Linda

Small business owner, Lisbon Street

My storefront was reassessed too. Commercial property doesn’t get the Homestead Exemption, so my share of the adjustment landed differently than it did for homeowners on my block.

RESOURCES

Where to Go Next

Whether you’re staying, downsizing, or just want clarity, start here.

City Assessor's Office building exterior

ASK

City Assessor’s Office

Questions about your specific assessment, abatement requests, or how your property was valued go here first. Bring your assessment notice and recent comparable sales if you plan to dispute a value.

PLAN

Homestead Exemption

If this is your primary residence and you’ve owned it for at least 12 months, you likely qualify for the $25,000 exemption. Apply once; it renews automatically each year.

Hands offering support, community assistance

SUPPORT

If You’re Worried About Affording Your Bill

Property tax assistance and deferral programs exist for seniors, veterans, and residents with limited income. Ask the Assessor’s Office which programs you may qualify for before deciding to sell or move.

LEARN

Revaluation 101

The full mechanics, for anyone who wants to go deeper.

What is a revaluation?

A revaluation is when a city re-assesses the market value of every property within it, so assessed values reflect what properties are actually worth. Lewiston’s previous citywide revaluation was completed roughly 30 years ago.

Why does assessed value matter?

Assessed value is the basis the city uses to divide the total property tax levy across all property owners. It isn’t the same as what a home would sell for, though after a revaluation the two numbers are much closer.

How is the mil rate calculated?

The mil rate is the dollar amount of tax charged per $1,000 of assessed value, recalculated every year: mil rate = total property tax levy ÷ total citywide assessed value × 1,000. Because Lewiston’s total assessed value nearly doubled after the revaluation, the mil rate dropped substantially, even as the total levy went up.

What does the Homestead Exemption do?

It reduces the taxable portion of a primary residence’s assessed value. For FY2027, the exemption increased to $25,000, up from $11,500 in FY2026.

What this does and doesn’t mean for you

It does mean your home’s recognized value, your equity, has likely increased, often substantially. It doesn’t automatically mean your tax bill increased by the same percentage; the mil rate adjustment and homestead exemption both affect the final number.

What if I disagree with my new assessment?

You can request an abatement, a formal review of your assessed value, through the Assessor’s Office, typically within a set window after assessment notices go out. Bring evidence: recent comparable sales nearby, condition issues not reflected in city records, or a documented appraisal.

Will this happen again soon?

Maine law doesn’t require annual revaluations, which is exactly how Lewiston went 30 years between them. Many municipalities now aim for more frequent, smaller adjustments to avoid this kind of sudden jump in the future.

Does this affect commercial and rental properties too?

Yes, every property type was reassessed, not just owner-occupied homes. Rental and commercial property owners don’t qualify for the Homestead Exemption, so their share of the adjustment can land differently than it does for primary residences.

Partners

Made Possible With Support From