Hopkins CAD Property Search 2026

⚠️ This is an independent informational guide. For official property values, exemption applications, and protest filings, always use the official Hopkins CAD website at hopkinscad.com. Third-party sites may show outdated data.

Property taxes in Hopkins County land in the mailbox every October and they almost never feel right. A lot of people in Sulphur Springs — and out in the smaller towns like Cumby, Como, Pickton, Saltillo — look at that notice of appraised value in April and have no idea what to do with it. Either accept the number and pay, or start pushing back. Most accept. Most shouldn’t.

Here’s what this guide actually does. It walks you through every real option the Hopkins County Appraisal District puts on the table — the five different ways to search the property roll, the homestead rules that changed in 2023, how to protest without hiring anyone, when to hire someone, what the Tax Office does versus what the CAD does (people mix these up constantly), and a handful of small things locals know that nobody writes about.

🎯 Fast Track

Official site: hopkinscad.com. Search by owner name, address, or property ID — free, no account needed. Office at 109 College St, Sulphur Springs TX 75482. Phone (903) 885-2173. Chief appraiser Cathy N. Singleton. Protest deadline May 15 or 30 days after notice, whichever is later.

13Cities Served
$0Search Cost
May 15Protest Deadline
5yrHomestead Renew
10%BPP Late Penalty
Jul 25Roll Certified

What Hopkins CAD Actually Does — And Doesn’t

The single biggest source of confusion with every county appraisal district in Texas, and Hopkins is no exception, is the split between the CAD and the Tax Office. These are two separate agencies. Different addresses, different phone numbers, different jobs.

Task
Hopkins CAD
Tax Assessor-Collector
Set property value
✓ Yes
✗ No
File homestead exemption
✓ Yes
✗ No
File protest / appeal value
✓ Yes
✗ No
Change ownership on roll
✓ Yes
✗ No
Calculate tax bill
✗ No
✓ Yes
Collect tax payment
✗ No
✓ Yes
Handle delinquent taxes
✗ No
✓ Yes
Vehicle registration
✗ No
✓ Yes

If you got a value notice and want to dispute the number, that’s Hopkins CAD at 109 College St. If you got a tax bill and want to pay it or set up a payment plan, that’s the Tax Assessor-Collector at 128 Jefferson St. Calling the wrong one wastes your afternoon.

Searching Hopkins County Property Records — Every Method That Works

Hopkins CAD runs its public search through a Southwest Data Solutions platform — the same backend used by dozens of rural Texas appraisal districts. Once you know the layout, the five search types become muscle memory. No account needed. Nothing to pay. Everything loads on desktop and mobile.

Search by Owner Name

The most common search. Useful when you know who owns a property but not the address. The only trick here is the name format Hopkins CAD expects — last name first, at least two characters, no spaces.

Micro Step-by-Step — Owner Name Search

  1. Open hopkinscad.com in any browser. The home page loads the search box directly — you don’t click through another menu.
  2. In the SEARCH BY OWNER NAME box, type the last name first. For “John Smith” you’d type Smith J or just Smith. At least two characters, no leading spaces.
  3. Press Enter or click the search arrow. The system returns every matching owner in the county roll.
  4. Click any owner name or property ID in the results. The property detail page opens with appraised value, land value, improvement value, legal description, exemptions, taxing units, and 5 years of value history.
  5. To print the record, use your browser’s print function. Hopkins CAD doesn’t have a built-in PDF export for public users — but the print preview is clean.
Quiet tip most people miss: If someone owns multiple properties in Hopkins County under slightly different name spellings (“Smith John A” vs “Smith John Alan”), each comes up as a separate result. Check all of them. Estate records and trusts split this way all the time.

Search by Property Address

Best when you’re looking at a specific house and don’t know who owns it. Direct link: address search.

  1. Click the Property Address link on the Hopkins CAD home page.
  2. Enter just the street number and street name. Do not include “Street,” “Road,” “Lane” — the system matches partial strings. 120 College finds 120 College St. Too much detail excludes results.
  3. If you get no hits, drop the number and search only by street name. Then scroll to find your target.
  4. Open the property detail. Every address record ties to a geographic ID and a property ID — both useful for cross-referencing on deed records and GIS maps.

Search by Legal Description

This is the path for rural land, tracts, and subdivisions. Hopkins County has a lot of farmland with legal descriptions like “A-123 J Smith Survey Tract 4” rather than a street address. Use legal description search.

Enter the subdivision name or the abstract number. Broad input works better than narrow — type just the subdivision name and let the results load, then filter visually.

Search by Geographic ID or Property ID

Fastest and most precise search. If you already have either ID from a previous record, a deed, or a tax bill, use it. Direct link: property ID search.

Useful to know: The Property ID (sometimes called “Parcel ID” or “Account Number”) stays the same for the life of the property, even through ownership changes. The Geographic ID traces the physical location. Two different properties that were combined or split will have separate histories under their own IDs.

Reading the Hopkins CAD Property Detail Page — What Every Field Means

Once you click into a property, you see a dense page of numbers that most people skim past. Here’s what’s actually worth paying attention to, in the order the page lays it out.

  • Legal Description — the formal identifier used on deeds and in court. Must match exactly on any legal document related to the property.
  • Situs Address — the physical street address. In rural Hopkins County, this field sometimes shows “NO SITUS” for unimproved land — that’s normal, not a data error.
  • Geographic ID / Property ID — the two identifiers for the parcel.
  • Owner Name and Mailing Address — where the tax notices go. If this is wrong, the tax bill goes missing. Call Hopkins CAD to update it.
  • Land Value — the CAD’s estimate of the raw land with no buildings.
  • Improvement Value — the CAD’s estimate of the buildings, fences, and other structures.
  • Market Value — land + improvements. This is the number everyone argues over.
  • Assessed Value — market value minus any cap adjustments. For homestead properties, this is capped at 10% annual increase under the “homestead cap” rule.
  • Exemption Amount — what gets subtracted before tax is calculated (homestead, over-65, disabled, disabled veteran, etc.).
  • Taxable Value — assessed value minus exemptions. This is what the tax rate actually multiplies against.
  • Taxing Units — which jurisdictions tax this property (Hopkins County, Sulphur Springs ISD, City of Sulphur Springs, ESDs, etc.).
  • Value History — five years of prior market values. Use this to spot jump increases worth protesting.

Hopkins County Homestead Exemption — The Rules That Changed

Homestead exemption is the single most valuable exemption for most homeowners in Hopkins County. It knocks a flat amount off the taxable value on every taxing unit that offers it, and it caps annual increases at 10%. But the rules around it tightened significantly in recent years and a lot of Hopkins County residents are not caught up.

The 2014 ID Rule

To file homestead, you must provide a Texas driver’s license or state ID card. The address on the ID must match the property address exactly. Different house number, different street, different city — the application gets rejected. If your ID is out of date or still shows your old address, update it at DPS before filing.

The 2023 SB 1801 Five-Year Audit Rule

Senate Bill 1801, effective September 1, 2023, requires every Texas appraisal district to review each homestead exemption at least once every 5 tax years. Hopkins CAD has split its entire homestead roll into 5 audit groups. Audit 1 was completed recently. Audit 2 is underway. If you get a letter from Hopkins CAD asking you to verify your homestead — this is not a scam. Respond on time. Missing the response window means automatic removal of your exemption.

If you lose your homestead, the assessed value jumps to full market value overnight. On a home that’s been homesteaded for 5+ years in a rising market, that can mean a 30–50% tax bill increase for one year. Respond to every audit letter immediately, even if it looks like junk mail.

Micro Step-by-Step — Filing a Hopkins County Homestead Exemption

  1. Download Form 50-114 from the Texas Comptroller at comptroller.texas.gov/forms/50-114.pdf. Do not use a third-party copy — the form updates periodically and an outdated version can get rejected.
  2. Complete the form. Use the property address exactly as it appears on Hopkins CAD. Include your Texas driver’s license or state ID number.
  3. Attach a copy of your Texas DL or ID. The address on the ID must match the property. If it doesn’t, update your ID at DPS first — you can do this online for most license types.
  4. Submit the completed form to Hopkins CAD either in person at 109 College St, Sulphur Springs TX 75482, or by mail to P.O. Box 753, Sulphur Springs TX 75483-0753.
  5. You can file any time, but the deadline for that tax year is April 30. File between January 1 and April 30 for full benefit on the current tax year.
  6. If you missed the deadline, late applications are still accepted for up to 2 years with a written showing of good cause. Do not assume it’s too late.
Local tip worth knowing: Hopkins County veterans with a 100% service-connected disability rating get a complete property tax exemption on their homestead under Tax Code §11.131. The form is Texas Comptroller Form 50-135. Bring a copy of your VA letter showing the rating. Hopkins CAD has processed these quickly for Sulphur Springs area veterans — usually under 30 days.

Protesting Your Hopkins CAD Property Value — The Protest Database

Every year a percentage of Hopkins County homeowners successfully reduce their appraised value by protesting. You don’t need a lawyer. You don’t need a tax consultant. The protest process is designed for self-represented property owners, and for most residential cases, that’s exactly how it’s meant to work.

When to Protest

  • Your market value increased substantially and comparable sales don’t support it
  • The CAD’s improvement data is wrong (incorrect square footage, missing damage, outdated condition)
  • Your property has significant deferred maintenance or functional issues the CAD hasn’t accounted for
  • Similar properties in your neighborhood are assessed much lower
  • Major events that hurt value — flood damage, foundation issues, roof damage — that the CAD didn’t note

Hopkins CAD Online Protest — Who Qualifies

Hopkins CAD accepts online protests, but only for:

  • Residential single-family property only
  • Property with an active homestead exemption
  • Owner is not using a designated agent

Everything else — commercial, rental, vacant land, property without homestead, agent-represented cases — must be filed on paper using Form 50-132.

Micro Step-by-Step — Filing a Protest

  1. Find your property on hopkinscad.com. Note the Property ID.
  2. Look at your Notice of Appraised Value. The online protest link and deadline are printed on the notice itself. Deadline is May 15 or 30 days after the notice was mailed, whichever is later.
  3. If you qualify for online protest (see above), click the link on the notice or find it under the Protest Database menu on the CAD site.
  4. Enter your Property ID and the unique PIN printed on your notice. The system walks you through submitting evidence: comparable sales, photos of damage, contractor estimates, recent appraisals.
  5. Hopkins CAD first tries to settle through an informal meeting with an appraiser. Most residential protests end here. If you can’t agree, the case goes to the Appraisal Review Board (ARB).
  6. The ARB hearing is a formal proceeding — you present evidence, the CAD presents evidence, the board makes a decision. Bring printed copies of everything. Arrive 15 minutes early. You can do this without an attorney.
  7. If you disagree with the ARB decision, you have 60 days to file in district court or request binding arbitration through the Texas Comptroller for qualifying residential properties.
Evidence that actually works: Closed sales of similar homes within 1 mile sold within the last 12 months, adjusted for size and condition. Zillow and Redfin estimates don’t carry weight. Pull comps from the MLS if you have a Realtor friend, or order a private appraisal ($400–$600) if the disputed value is large enough to justify it.

Business Personal Property (BPP) — Don’t Miss the Filing Deadline

Every business operating in Hopkins County that owns over $500 in tangible personal property (equipment, fixtures, inventory, tools) has to file a rendition annually. Miss it and there’s an automatic 10% penalty on the tax bill. Intentionally fail to file and the penalty jumps to 50% under Texas Property Tax Code §22.28.

Hopkins CAD accepts online BPP renditions at myswdata.com/hopkins for accounts that already exist in the system. New businesses file on paper using Form 50-144 from the Texas Comptroller.

The filing window opens January 1 and the deadline is April 15. A 30-day extension is available if you request it in writing before the original deadline.

Hopkins CAD Office — Location, Hours, Direct Contacts

📌 Official Contact Details

Hopkins County Appraisal District Physical: 109 College St, Sulphur Springs TX 75482
Mailing: P.O. Box 753, Sulphur Springs TX 75483-0753
Phone: (903) 885-2173
Fax: (903) 885-2175
Email: help@hopkinscad.com
Website: hopkinscad.com
Chief Appraiser: Cathy N. Singleton
Hopkins County Tax Assessor-Collector 128 Jefferson St, Ste D, Sulphur Springs TX 75482
Phone: (903) 438-4063
Tax Assessor: Chasity Campbell
Website: hopkinscountytx.org
Sulphur Springs ISD (Tax Questions) Phone: (903) 885-2153
SSISD collects its own property taxes separately from the county.
Office Hours Monday – Friday
Typical: 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM
Closed on county holidays
Call before driving in during protest season (April–June) — wait times can be long.

Cities and Communities Served by Hopkins CAD

Hopkins CAD covers all property within Hopkins County. That includes 13 named cities, towns, and unincorporated communities:

  • Sulphur Springs — county seat, largest city, most property records
  • Cumby — western Hopkins County near I-30
  • Como — eastern part of the county
  • Pickton — rural north
  • Saltillo — northeast near Franklin County line
  • Sulphur Bluff — northeast corner
  • Dike — central-north
  • Brashear — south-central
  • Campbell — shared with Rains County
  • Lone Oak — shared with Rains County
  • Point — southern border
  • Winnsboro — shared with Wood and Franklin Counties
  • Yantis — southeastern corner

If your property sits near a county line, the appraisal responsibility follows the county the land is physically located in — not where you live or where you mail from. Example: A home in Winnsboro that sits on the Hopkins side of the line goes through Hopkins CAD, not Wood CAD.

Third-Party Property Search Sites — Which Ones Are Legit

Hopkins CAD (Official)

The only source that is the appraisal district itself. Free search, live data. This is the one you want.

hopkinscad.com →

TaxNetUSA

Paid subscription service with advanced search tools — year built, square footage, deed date, value range. Useful for real estate pros.

taxnetusa.com →

NETR Online

Free directory linking to multiple Hopkins County record sources including historical aerials and GIS.

netronline.com →

HAR.com

Real estate listings with Hopkins County appraisal data overlay. Good for market-context browsing, not for official records.

har.com →
Watch out for look-alike sites: A few private sites use domain names that sound similar to Hopkins CAD and charge for access to data that the official site provides free. Before paying anyone, confirm you’re on hopkinscad.com (the real site) versus a scraper. The real site has no paywall, no account registration, and no subscription.

Insider Tips Locals Actually Use

  • Walk in during protest season instead of mailing. Hopkins CAD’s informal meetings in May and June move faster in person than by phone or mail. Staff can often adjust a clearly wrong value on the spot if you bring photos and comps.
  • Check your mailing address every October. Tax notices mail out in early October. If the address on file is wrong, the notice goes missing and delinquent interest starts accruing February 1. Call (903) 885-2173 to update — it takes two minutes.
  • Request the CAD’s own evidence packet before your ARB hearing. Under Texas Property Tax Code §41.461, you can request the CAD’s evidence 14 days before the hearing. Many CADs drop the value before the hearing once they know you’ve requested it — they’d rather settle than go through the hearing.
  • Rural land? Look at Ag use valuation. If you have 5+ acres in Hopkins County used primarily for agriculture (hay, cattle, forage), you may qualify for Ag valuation under Tax Code §23.51 — which values the land based on agricultural productivity rather than market value. Can cut taxable value by 90% or more.
  • Over 65? Freeze it. The Over-65 exemption in Texas doesn’t just exempt some value — it freezes the school district portion of your tax bill at the level when you first qualified. Your school taxes never go up again (until the home sells). File Form 50-114 with the Over-65 section completed in the year you turn 65.
  • Disabled homeowner? Same kind of freeze applies. Form 50-114 again, disabled box checked. Requires a physician’s statement or qualifying federal disability determination.
  • Don’t skip the Truth In Taxation hearings. Hopkins County and Sulphur Springs hold public rate-setting hearings every August. That’s where your tax rate actually gets set. Attendance is low, which means a handful of engaged taxpayers can shift the conversation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the official Hopkins CAD website?
The official website of the Hopkins County Appraisal District is hopkinscad.com. A few third-party sites use similar names but are not affiliated with the CAD. Always verify you’re on the real domain before paying for any data — the real site is free.
How do I search Hopkins CAD property records online?
Go to hopkinscad.com. The home page has five search types: Owner Name, Property Address, Legal Description, Geographic ID, and Property ID. For owner search, enter the last name first — at least two characters, no spaces. Results are free and unlimited.
How do I file a homestead exemption in Hopkins County?
Download Form 50-114 from the Texas Comptroller website. Complete it with the property address exactly as shown on the CAD. Attach a copy of your Texas driver’s license or state ID where the address matches. File by mail to P.O. Box 753, Sulphur Springs TX 75483-0753 or in person at 109 College St. Deadline is April 30 of the tax year.
When is the Hopkins County property protest deadline?
The standard Texas deadline applies: May 15 or 30 days after the Notice of Appraised Value was mailed, whichever is later. The exact deadline appears on the notice itself. Hopkins CAD accepts online protests only for residential single-family properties with an active homestead exemption and no designated agent.
What is the Hopkins County property tax rate?
The total rate is a combination of county, city, school district, ESD, and other special district rates — each set separately by that taxing unit every August. Current adopted rates are published under the Truth In Tax section of hopkinscad.com. For most homeowners in Sulphur Springs, the school district (SSISD) is the single largest component.
How do I pay Hopkins County property taxes?
Property taxes are paid to the Hopkins County Tax Assessor-Collector, not the appraisal district. The office is located at 128 Jefferson St, Ste D, Sulphur Springs TX 75482. Phone (903) 438-4063. They accept payment in person, by mail, and online through the county portal. Sulphur Springs ISD collects its own taxes separately — call (903) 885-2153 for SSISD questions.
Is Hopkins CAD the same as the Hopkins County Tax Office?
No. Hopkins CAD sets values and administers exemptions. The Hopkins County Tax Assessor-Collector collects the actual tax payments and handles delinquencies. Two different offices at two different addresses. Value disputes go to the CAD. Bill and payment questions go to the Tax Office.
How often does Hopkins CAD reappraise property?
Every year. The appraisal district reviews and updates values annually. Notices of Appraised Value mail out in mid to late April. The appraisal roll gets certified to taxing units by July 25 each year. Sales data from the prior calendar year drives most residential adjustments.
How do I submit a Business Personal Property rendition?
If you have an existing BPP account, submit online at myswdata.com/hopkins. New businesses use Form 50-144 from the Texas Comptroller. Filing deadline is April 15. Late filing triggers an automatic 10% penalty under Tax Code §22.28.
Do I have to renew my homestead exemption in Hopkins County?
Yes. Under Senate Bill 1801 effective September 1, 2023, Texas CADs must audit every homestead exemption at least once every 5 tax years. Hopkins CAD has split its homestead roll into 5 audit groups. If you receive a verification request letter, respond by the deadline — failure to respond removes the exemption and your taxable value jumps to full market value.
Can I search Hopkins County property records for free?
Yes — the official hopkinscad.com search is free and unlimited, no account required. Third-party sites like TaxNetUSA offer paid subscriptions with advanced search tools, but for simple lookups the free official site covers everything most people need.
What happens if I miss the Hopkins County property tax payment deadline?
Property tax bills are due January 31 every year. Miss that, and 7% penalty and interest start accruing February 1. The penalty grows monthly — by July it reaches 18% plus attorney fees if the account gets referred for collection. Set up a payment plan with the Tax Office before the deadline if cash flow is the problem — they work with people who call.
Disclaimer: This guide is for general informational purposes only and is not affiliated with the Hopkins County Appraisal District, the Hopkins County Tax Assessor-Collector, or any government agency. While every effort is made to keep the information accurate and current, policies, forms, deadlines, and rates change — always verify anything important on the official hopkinscad.com website or by calling the CAD at (903) 885-2173. Nothing on this page constitutes legal, tax, or financial advice. For complex property tax situations, consult a licensed Texas property tax consultant or attorney. Last verified: April 2026.
Editorial & Verification Notice This guide was manually written and researched by humans, not AI. We personally verify every link to ensure it leads directly to official government databases, keeping you safe from spam and third-party redirects. All screenshots and instructions are based on our actual manual testing of these systems. We frequently update this page to ensure accuracy.

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