Search Taylor County Property Tax Records

Taylor County Property Tax Records are easiest to work with when you start with the county treasurer and then move through land information and deed records as needed. Taylor County keeps the tax bill lookup, tax payment path, parcel maintenance, and recorded real estate records within the county's own office structure, which makes the search process more direct. If you have an address, parcel number, or owner name, the official county pages can carry you from a bill question to the parcel trail that supports it. That makes the records useful for tax checks, ownership review, and confirming how a parcel is described in county systems.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Taylor County Property Tax Records Portal

The official Taylor County Treasurer page is the main county entry point for Taylor County Property Tax Records. The page identifies a county-hosted path for Tax Bill Lookup and a county-hosted path for Tax Payments. That matters because the treasurer page ties searching and paying to the office that actually settles the tax roll and supervises the county's real property description work. You are not being sent to a general records directory first. You are being sent to the county office responsible for the tax side of the record.

The same page explains that local treasurers make a preliminary settlement with the county treasurer and turn over their tax roll, after which the county treasurer makes final settlement with the state and local treasurers. That gives the Taylor County record trail a clear structure. A tax bill is not only a bill. It is part of the county's settlement process, and the treasurer page helps explain where the county record sits inside that process. That is useful when a parcel search turns into a question about status, timing, or why a bill looks different than expected.

The image below comes from Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 70 at https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/70.

Taylor County Property Tax Records reference image

It serves as a statewide reference for Taylor County Property Tax Records because the county's tax, parcel, and deed workflow operates inside Wisconsin's broader property tax system.

Taylor County Property Tax Records and Treasurer

Taylor County lists Sarah Holtz as treasurer. The office is at 224 South Second Street, Medford, WI 54451, in the courthouse on the second floor, with phone 715-748-1466 and fax 715-748-1415. Those details matter because the treasurer page describes a broad county role. The office receives county money, deposits and invests county funds, cosigns and disburses county checks, and oversees the tax roll settlement process. For Taylor County Property Tax Records, that means the treasurer is not just a payment contact. The office is part of how the tax record is built, settled, and carried forward.

The treasurer page also says the county treasurer is responsible for the tax deed process and the consequent sale of tax deed properties. That adds an important layer to the county record trail. A parcel can begin as a routine tax search and later move into delinquent status and tax deed handling, all within the same office. The page further states that the treasurer is the designated supervisor of the Real Property Description Department. That creates a direct link between tax work and parcel description work, which helps explain why Taylor County Property Tax Records should be read together with the county's land information offices instead of in isolation.

The county phone directory supports that workflow by separately listing the Treasurer at 715-748-1466 and the Real Property Lister at 715-748-1465. That office pairing matters in practice. One side handles the tax settlement and payment record. The other side handles parcel and description maintenance. Together they make the county record easier to trace.

Note: Taylor County's treasurer page ties tax bill lookup, payment, tax deed work, and real property description supervision into one county office path.

Taylor County Property Tax Records and Land Information

The county's Land Information page explains how parcel data supports Taylor County Property Tax Records. It states that this office maintains county tax roll information, processes tax rolls and tax bills, and maintains parcel mapping. The page also says the office furnishes updates for the county website, GIS mapping, and assists taxpayers with parcel questions while coordinating with assessors, local clerks, treasurers, and other departments. That is the parcel-maintenance side of the county record, and it is essential when a tax question turns out to be a parcel question.

Taylor County's Surveyor page adds another piece. It states that the county surveyor is also Taylor County's Land Information Officer and guides the development and maintenance of the land information system. The page says much of that information is available to the public through the county's geographic web server. That matters because Taylor County Property Tax Records often become easier to interpret once the parcel can be seen in a mapping context rather than as a line on a bill.

The county's land information plan at https://co.taylor.wi.us/pdf/linfoplan.pdf confirms the office structure behind that work. The plan lists Jaymi Kohn as Register of Deeds, Sarah Holtz as Treasurer, and Heather Dums as Real Property Lister. It also describes the land information council that includes the treasurer, register of deeds, real property lister, and surveyor. That is useful because it shows the county's property record work is coordinated by design, not by accident.

Taylor County Property Tax Records and Deeds

The official Register of Deeds page is the deed side of Taylor County Property Tax Records. The page highlights recorded real estate records and a land-notification service that lets a person monitor a name or specific parcel for real estate activity recorded with the county. That service matters because a tax record can lag behind a recent deed or ownership change, and the county is giving property owners a way to watch for recorded activity that may affect the parcel trail.

The register page also makes clear that Taylor County keeps real estate records available through county systems. It lists online access to Taylor County real estate records and the county land notification system. That combination is useful for Taylor County Property Tax Records because it lets a user move from the tax side of the file to the recorded side of the file without relying on an outside records site. When a tax bill changes because of a deed, land contract, mortgage, or tax deed, the Register of Deeds is where the recorded explanation lives.

The Taylor County county officers page lists Jaymi S. Kohn as Register of Deeds. The county phone directory lists the Register of Deeds at 715-748-1483. The land information plan also names Jaymi Kohn in that role. Those county sources line up, which helps confirm the deed office that supports the parcel and tax trail.

Delinquent Taylor County Property Tax Records

Delinquent Taylor County Property Tax Records remain a treasurer matter because the county page expressly links the treasurer to the tax deed process and the sale of tax deed properties. That is narrower than inventing portal features the county does not describe, but it still says something important. Once a parcel moves beyond ordinary billing, the treasurer remains part of the county office path that handles the resulting record and status.

Taylor County's land information structure also supports that reading. The land information plan and land information page show a county system where the treasurer, real property lister, surveyor, and register of deeds all contribute to the parcel record. If an unpaid tax issue affects a parcel description, ownership record, or later property sale, those offices are already linked inside the county's land records framework. That makes the record trail easier to follow than if the offices were presented separately.

In practice, the rule is simple. Start with the treasurer for the bill, payment path, or tax deed question. Move to land information when the parcel map, description, or tax roll data needs review. Use the Register of Deeds when the record points toward a deed or other recorded instrument. Taylor County Property Tax Records make the most sense when those steps are treated as a single county workflow.

Wisconsin Guidance for Taylor County

When Taylor County Property Tax Records raise a broader question about valuation, classification, or tax procedure, Wisconsin guidance fills in the background. The core framework is in Wis. Stat. Chapter 70. The Wisconsin Department of Revenue also provides property tax administration resources and the Wisconsin Property Assessment Manual. Those sources explain the statewide rules behind the county record without replacing the county offices that maintain the actual parcel and tax files.

For most users, the local record should still come first. Search the Taylor County pages, confirm the parcel, and then use the Wisconsin sources only when the county record needs extra context about the way property tax administration works in the state.

If you need another lookup, use the search widget below and start again with the parcel number, address, or owner clue you have. Taylor County's official record trail works best when you move from treasurer to land information to deed records, because each office explains a different part of the same property file.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results