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Cook County · North & Northwest suburbs

Schaumburg Township Property Tax Appeal — 2026 Deadlines & Filing Windows

Everything a Schaumburg homeowner needs to appeal an over-assessment this year: the current filing window, where you sit in the reassessment cycle, how over-assessed Schaumburg homes are, and a plain walkthrough to file your own appeal — free, keeping every dollar you save.

Schaumburg Township’s 2026 Assessor appeal window opens later this year — Schaumburg was last reassessed in 2025 and is next up in 2028. By ChonkHub’s read of the public roll, about 6.3% of Schaumburg’s 25,456 assessable homes and condos are assessed above comparable local properties, a median of $2,027 a year in likely over-assessment. Historically, 18.2% of Schaumburg residential appeals to the Assessor have won a reduction, and the Board of Review is a free second chance after that.

Opens later in 2026
Window opens later in 2026
Confirm the exact date with the Cook County Assessor
TBAAssessor deadline
Opens later in 2026Filing status
2025Last reassessed
2028Next reassessment

When is the property tax appeal deadline in Schaumburg Township?

Schaumburg Township’s 2026 appeal window with the Cook County Assessor has not been published yet. Cook opens each township on a rolling schedule through the year; the exact deadline appears on your Reassessment Notice and on the Assessor’s calendar. Check back or confirm directly with the Assessor.

TownshipReassessment groupWindow opensDeadlineStatus
Schaumburg TownshipNorth & Northwest suburbsTo be announcedOpens later in 2026

Source: Cook County Assessor Assessment & Appeal Calendar, as of 25 June 2026. Confirm on cookcountyassessoril.gov →

Is Schaumburg Township being reassessed in 2026?

Schaumburg Township is in the Assessor’s North & Northwest suburbs reassessment group, which Cook County reassesses once every three years. Its most recent reassessment was 2025; the next is 2028. You can still appeal in 2026 even though it is not a reassessment year.

What towns are in Schaumburg Township?

Schaumburg Township covers Schaumburg, Hoffman Estates, Elk Grove Village, Hanover Park, Roselle in Cook County — Schaumburg is the largest share, about 56% of its homes. Your township is determined by where the property sits, not your mailing address, and it sets your filing deadline: homeowners across these towns file on the same 2026 Schaumburg schedule.

How over-assessed are homes in Schaumburg Township?

By ChonkHub’s read of the public roll, about 6.3% of 25,456 assessable dwellings in Schaumburg Township are assessed materially higher than comparable local properties, a median of $2,027 a year in likely over-assessment. It is a population estimate — whether your specific home is over-assessed is a per-parcel question the address check answers directly.

6.3%Strongly over-assessed
1,593Homes, strong tier
$2,027Median annual saving

Across Cook County, roughly 124,411 dwellings are strongly over-assessed. See the full over-assessment report and method →

What are the odds of a successful Schaumburg Township appeal?

In Schaumburg Township, about 18.2% of residential appeals to the Assessor have historically won a reduction — and the Board of Review, a separate second stage, reduces assessments again for many who get little from the Assessor.

Schaumburg Township — appeal outcomes at the Assessor

Appeal typeAppealsReducedMedian cut
residential16,30418.2%6.7%
condo/coop15,37922.1%6.0%
commercial1,30043.2%8.8%
incentive8744.8%14.3%
land8158.0%99.6%

Countywide, the Assessor reduces about 25.0% of appeals and the Board of Review about 31.9%. Full outcome data by year →

How do I appeal my property taxes in Schaumburg Township?

You appeal in up to two free stages — first the Cook County Assessor, then, if needed, the Board of Review — filing as the property owner with comparable properties as your evidence. In Schaumburg Township, start before your window opens: confirm you are over-assessed, gather comparables, and file on the county’s free portal.

Read the full step-by-step guide → · Common questions →

Check your address — freeSee your own assessment math before you file. You keep 100%.
Entity-owned property: if this home is held by an LLC, corporation, or trust, the Board of Review generally requires a licensed attorney — those owners should consult counsel rather than self-file. More on when you need a lawyer →