Moore, Oklahoma Property Tax Records

Moore property tax records are managed through Cleveland County, which handles all property assessment and tax collection for parcels within city limits. The Cleveland County Assessor covers roughly 115,000 parcels across the county's population of 295,528 people, and Moore's properties are included in that database. You can search assessed values, owner information, and tax payment status online without going to the county office. This page explains who handles Moore property taxes and where to find the records you need.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Moore Property Tax Overview

ClevelandCounty
Dec 31First Half Due
11%Assessment Rate
$1,000Homestead Exemption

Cleveland County Assessor - Moore Property Tax Records

Moore property tax records flow through the Cleveland County Assessor's office in Norman. Assessor David Tinsley leads the office at 201 S. Jones Avenue, Suite 120, Norman, OK 73069. Phone is (405) 366-0230. The office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Though the office sits in Norman, it handles all assessments for the entire county, including every parcel within Moore's city limits.

The assessor determines fair market value for Moore properties as of January 1 each year. Under Oklahoma Statutes Section 68-2817, all taxable real property must be assessed at fair cash value each January 1. For Moore residential properties, the state constitutional rate of 11% of fair cash value applies to arrive at the assessed value. So a home worth $180,000 in the market would carry an assessed value of $19,800 before any exemptions are applied. The assessor uses recent sale prices in the area to keep values aligned with actual market conditions.

The assessor's online tool at clevelandcountyok.com lets you search Moore properties by owner name, physical address, or through the interactive parcel map. The database has all 115,000 parcels in the county. Search results return ownership data, the property's physical characteristics, current assessed values, and any exemptions on file. The parcel map overlays property boundaries on aerial imagery, which is useful for checking lot lines and neighbors.

AssessorDavid Tinsley, Cleveland County Assessor
Address201 S. Jones Ave, Suite 120, Norman, OK 73069
Phone(405) 366-0230
HoursMonday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Websiteclevelandcountyok.com/129/County-Assessor

Cleveland County Clerk and Tax Roll Resources

The Cleveland County Clerk serves as official record keeper for all land instruments in the county. The clerk records deeds, mortgages, mineral interests, plats, liens, and judgments. All of these are open to the public under Oklahoma's Open Records Act. The Clerk's office is at 200 S Peters Avenue, Suite 120, Norman, OK 73069, and can be reached at (405) 366-0240. If you need to check the chain of title on a Moore property or look for recorded liens, the county clerk is the right office.

You can search Cleveland County land records through the OKCountyRecords portal. It indexes instruments by name, document type, and date range. This is the tool to use when researching Moore ownership history before a purchase or refinance, or when you want to confirm whether any liens have been filed against a specific property or owner.

For the tax roll, OKTaxRolls.com covers Cleveland County. Search by owner last name with wildcard support, filter by tax year, and view any unpaid amounts. Results update daily after close of business. The DataCrosspoint platform covers Moore parcels alongside all Cleveland County properties from a single search interface, combining ownership records and assessment history in one place.

Searching Moore Property Tax Records Online

There are three main ways to search Moore property tax records online. First, the Cleveland County Assessor's site at clevelandcountyok.com is the primary source for parcel data and assessed values. Second, the statewide OkAssessor.com portal links to Cleveland County Assessor data and gives you round-the-clock access from a single state-level directory. Third, OKTaxRolls.com covers the Cleveland County tax roll and lets you check whether taxes on a Moore property are paid or overdue.

Each resource serves a slightly different need. The assessor's site gives you full valuation detail. OKTaxRolls shows payment status and unpaid balances. OKCountyRecords covers deeds and lien instruments. Together they cover the main types of records you might need for a Moore property search. In-person visits are also welcome at both the assessor and clerk offices in Norman during regular business hours.

Note: Moore properties file all property tax paperwork with Cleveland County offices in Norman, not with any city of Moore office. The city itself does not handle property tax assessment or collection.

Exemptions and Value Caps for Moore Property Owners

Moore homeowners who use their property as their primary residence can apply for the homestead exemption. The exemption cuts the taxable assessed value by $1,000. You must be the record owner living in the home as of January 1. File the application with the Cleveland County Assessor between January 1 and March 15. After the first year, the exemption stays on the account as long as you remain the owner-occupant. You don't have to refile each year.

Oklahoma law caps annual value increases on homestead and agricultural properties at 3% per year. Other property types are capped at 5% per year. The cap resets when ownership changes hands. Senior homeowners in Moore who are 65 or older may qualify for the Senior Valuation Freeze. This locks the taxable value of the home after the year of application, as long as gross household income does not exceed the HUD median income limit for Cleveland County. Income limits are published annually by the Oklahoma Tax Commission. Applications are due by March 15.

Business personal property owners in Moore must file Form 901 with the assessor by March 15 each year. If you believe your Moore property has been assessed too high, start with an informal review request to the assessor's office by phone at (405) 366-0230. If that doesn't resolve it, file a formal protest with the Cleveland County Board of Equalization within the deadline on your assessment notice. The appeal process and ad valorem tax rules are in Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes.

The Cleveland County Assessor's site at clevelandcountyok.com is the main portal for Moore property tax records. The county's 115,000 parcels, including all Moore properties, are searchable from the same database.

Cleveland County Assessor property tax records covering Moore Oklahoma

The Cleveland County Assessor manages tax records for both Moore and Norman along with all other communities in Cleveland County's 115,000-parcel database.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Cities

These cities are near Moore. Norman is also in Cleveland County. Oklahoma City, Edmond, and Midwest City are in Oklahoma County with a separate assessor.