Ramsey County property values have "remained resilient" despite a year of pandemic lockdowns and civil unrest, according to a new assessor's report — an early signal that homeowners may see heftier property tax bills in 2022.
Home sales in the county were more tepid than usual at the start of the pandemic but, as in the rest of metro, they gained strength through the end of 2020. The median home value in Ramsey County has risen from $245,600 in 2020 to $254,200 this year.
The total assessed estimated market value of all Ramsey County properties for 2021 is $62.2 billion — the largest in history — up from last year's $60.2 billion. That includes residential, commercial, industrial and agricultural land.
New residential property values, calculated using sales data, were mailed out to property owners in March and used to levy property taxes due in 2022.
In St. Paul, which makes up the bulk of Ramsey County, the median home value is $227,000, compared to $278,700 in suburban communities. All of St. Paul's neighborhoods saw an increase in median residential property values, with the most dramatic increases concentrated in two neighborhoods on the capital city's East Side.
Values rose 14.3% in Dayton's Bluff and 9% in Payne-Phalen — though the median property values in those neighborhoods remain some of the lowest in the county at less than $200,000.
"The good news is they are gaining equity in their homes," said Ramsey County Assessor Luis Rosario. "The bad news is ... these marginalized communities are seeing their values go up the most."
Rosario said property values in those areas plummeted during the Great Recession and values still are recovering.