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Luxury Real Estate, Luxury Maui Properties, BuildNetWorth, Buying Real Estate in Maui, Wailea living, Wailea Real Estate, Wailea Vacation RentalPublished June 20, 2026
Property Taxes on Maui: Classification, Rates, and What Buyers Get Wrong
Property Taxes on Maui: Classification, Rates, and What Buyers Get Wrong
Property taxes are one of the most overlooked parts of buying on Maui. The classification system is more nuanced than most mainland buyers expect, and the wrong classification can cost you thousands of dollars per year. Here's how it actually works and where buyers most often go wrong.
How Maui Classifies Property
Maui County classifies real property by use, with very different rates for each. Common classifications include:
- Owner-occupied (Homeowner)
- Non-owner occupied (residential, second homes)
- Short-term rental
- Hotel and resort
- Apartment
- Commercialized residential
- Time share
- Commercial / Industrial
- Agricultural
Each classification has its own rate, and many also have tiered rates by assessed value. The difference between, say, owner-occupied and short-term rental is significant — often several multiples on the tax bill.
Why Classification Matters So Much
- Tax bills can vary by 5–10x or more between classifications
- Classification can change after purchase, especially if usage changes
- Bad assumptions at offer time can wreck your cash-flow projections
- The Homeowner exemption is meaningful and requires you to apply on time
- Tier breakpoints can move you into a higher rate at certain value thresholds
Common Buyer Mistakes
- Assuming the listing's tax figure will carry over after closing — it often won't
- Not filing the Homeowner exemption on time after a primary-residence purchase
- Buying a 'short-term rental' without verifying that the classification matches the use
- Counting on agricultural rates for property that doesn't actually qualify
- Missing tier transitions on higher-value properties
What to Verify Before Closing
- Current classification on the county website (look up the TMK directly)
- Likely classification after your intended use
- Tier breakpoints for the rate that will apply
- Deadlines for filing exemptions or new classification claims
- How the assessor values comparable properties in the area
How Tax Bills Are Sent and Paid
- Maui's fiscal year runs July 1 – June 30
- Bills are typically issued semiannually (August and February)
- Late payments incur penalties and interest
- Payments can be made online, by mail, or in person
- Lenders often escrow taxes — verify what your loan officer is assuming
How a Buyer's Agent Helps
- Pulls the current classification and tax record before you offer
- Models the post-purchase tax bill based on intended use
- Reminds you to file Homeowner or other exemptions on time
- Connects you with CPAs and tax pros who handle Maui-specific situations
- Catches discrepancies between the listing and the county record
Final Thoughts
Property tax math should be modeled before you offer, not after you close. Smart buyers know exactly what they'll pay and why. I do this with every client — it's part of the job.
Want me to model the real after-purchase tax bill on a property? Reach out and we'll talk through your goals.
Rachel Simmons | The 808 Team — Maui Buyer's Agent
Rachel@the808team.com Rachel.the808team.com 📱 808-442-2416