The short answer on Canton CT property taxes
Canton's mill rate of approximately 27.87 mills is the second lowest among the five Valley towns, behind only Granby. On a 500,000 dollar home assessed at 70 percent of fair market value, the annual tax bill is approximately 9,755 dollars — roughly 4,500 dollars less per year than the equivalent home in Avon. Combined with Canton's lower median price, the total carrying cost advantage versus the Valley's top-priced towns is significant and often underweighted by buyers who are not running the full numbers.
How Connecticut Property Taxes Work
Connecticut municipalities assess property at a fixed percentage of fair market value. In Canton, that ratio is 70 percent. The assessed value is multiplied by the mill rate and divided by 1,000 to produce the annual tax. One mill equals one dollar per 1,000 dollars of assessed value. Formula: Sale Price × 0.70 = Assessed Value. Assessed Value × 27.87 ÷ 1,000 = Annual Tax. A 550,000 dollar home in Canton has an assessed value of 385,000 dollars. At 27.87 mills that produces an annual tax of approximately 10,730 dollars.
Estimated Annual Property Taxes in Canton
Canton vs. Every Valley Town on Tax Rate
The Ten-Year Picture
A Canton buyer purchasing a 500,000 dollar home versus an equivalent Avon purchase saves approximately 1,606 dollars per year in property tax. Over ten years that is 16,060 dollars. Combined with Canton's lower median price — approximately 150,000 dollars below Avon at the median — the total ten-year cost-of-ownership advantage for a Canton buyer is substantial. Buyers who are genuinely weighing Canton against Avon or Simsbury should run the full numbers before deciding the school prestige gap justifies the financial difference.