Kansas has TWO different homestead exemptions: one for property taxes and a separate one that protects equity from creditors.
Published May 6, 2026
## Homestead exemptions in Kansas
"Homestead exemption" actually refers to TWO different things — and people regularly confuse them:
1. **Property tax homestead** — reduces the taxable value of your primary residence (saving you money on your property-tax bill)
2. **Creditor-protection homestead** — protects equity in your primary residence from being seized by most creditors (in bankruptcy or judgment-collection scenarios)
Both protect your primary home, but they serve completely different purposes — and qualify under different rules.
### Kansas property-tax homestead
Limited senior/disabled homestead refund.
### Kansas creditor-protection homestead
Unlimited value, capped at 1 acre urban / 160 acres rural.
## How property-tax homesteads work
Most states reduce the **assessed value** (or sometimes the actual tax) on your primary residence in one of these ways:
- **Flat dollar reduction** — knock $25,000-$100,000 off the assessed value
- **Percentage reduction** — exempt 25-50% of assessed value
- **Frozen valuation** — cap how fast assessed value can rise per year (CA's Prop 13, FL's Save Our Homes, MD's 10% cap)
- **Senior / disabled / veteran enhancements** — additional reductions for qualifying owners
**To qualify:**
- The property must be your primary residence (not a vacation home or rental)
- You typically must own it (not rent)
- You must apply, often once with re-application required if circumstances change
- Some states have income or age limits for full benefits
Application deadlines vary — March 1 (FL), April 1 (TX), and other state-specific dates. Late filing usually waits until next year.
## How creditor-protection homesteads work
When a creditor wins a judgment, gets a tax lien, or pursues bankruptcy, the homestead exemption protects up to a state-defined amount of your home equity. The creditor cannot force a sale that would touch protected equity.
**Example.** Your home is worth $400,000 with a $250,000 mortgage. Your equity is $150,000. If your state's homestead exemption is $100,000, a judgment creditor can force a sale to recover the $50,000 of unprotected equity. If the exemption is $200,000, you're entirely protected.
**Three categories of protection:**
- **Unlimited** — FL, TX, IA, KS, OK, SD, AR (within acreage limits)
- **High dollar caps** — CA, MA, NV, RI, MN, AZ, MT, MI, OH
- **Low dollar caps** — KY ($5K), NJ (no state exemption), PA (no state exemption), TN ($5-7.5K)
**To qualify:**
- Primary residence (most states)
- Some states require recording a Declaration of Homestead (notably MA and NV)
- Bankruptcy filers must satisfy a 730-day residency rule before claiming the local exemption
## What homestead protection DOES NOT cover
Even unlimited-homestead states have exceptions:
- **Mortgages** — secured creditors come first, regardless of homestead
- **Mechanic's and tax liens** — typically prime over homestead
- **Child support and alimony** — most states allow these to pierce homestead
- **Federal tax liens** — IRS isn't bound by state homestead
- **Criminal restitution and fines**
- **Pre-existing judgments** — homestead exemption usually doesn't apply retroactively to debts incurred before the homestead claim was perfected
- **Bankruptcy 'forum shopping' limits** — federal bankruptcy law caps homestead at $189,050 (2024) for property acquired in the prior 1,215 days
## How to claim each
**Property tax homestead:** file the application form with your county tax assessor. One-time filing in most states; refile if you move.
**Creditor-protection homestead:** automatic in most states once the property is your primary residence. Some (notably Massachusetts and Nevada) require you to record a Declaration of Homestead in the county land records.
## Common mistakes
- **Forgetting to file the property-tax homestead** — states don't always automatically apply it
- **Not refiling after a move** — when you sell and buy, you often need to re-apply
- **Renting out the homestead** — converting to rental property typically forfeits both exemptions
- **Multiple homesteads** — you can't have homestead protection on more than one property
- **Not recording a homestead declaration where required** — particularly costly in MA where the difference is $375K of protection
## What you should do
If you've recently bought a home in Kansas, file the property-tax homestead application at your county tax assessor's office NOW. If you're concerned about creditors (because of a judgment, business risk, divorce, or bankruptcy), talk to a Kansas real-estate or asset-protection attorney about how the creditor homestead applies to your situation. Most Kansas attorneys offer paid initial consultations on these issues.
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*This guide is general information about Kansas law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Homestead law has many edge cases (tenancy-by-the-entirety, joint ownership, change-in-residence rules, federal bankruptcy preemption) that change the analysis. Talk to a licensed Kansas attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.