marathon county property records in wisconsin

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In Marathon County, Wisconsin Property Records are under the control of the Marathon County Treasurer.  The Marathon County Land Records are available online.  The Marathon County Treasurer is Audrey Jensen.  The County Treasurer is responsible for receiving deposits, investing all money belonging to the county, collecting postponed and all delinquent real estate taxes, distributing taxes to municipalities and school districts, handling applications for tax deeds, taking property when taxes are unpaid, overseeing property descriptions for preparing assessment rolls, and handing real and personal property tax bills for all municipalities in the county except for the City of Wausau.

Information about Marathon County

Marathon County is located in central Wisconsin.  It had a population of 134,063 as of the 2010 census.  The county seat of Marathon County is Wausau.   Marathon County contains the cities, villages, communities, or towns of: Abbotsford, Colby, Marshfield, Mosinee, Schofield, Wausau, Athens, Birnamwood, Brokaw, Dorchester, Edgar, Elderon, Fenwood, Hatley, Kronenwetter, Maine, Marathon City, Rothschild, Spencer, Stratford, Unity, Weston, Bergen, Berlin, Bern, Bevent, Brighton, Cassel, Cleveland, Day, Easton, Eau Pleine, Elderon, Emmet, Frankfort, Franzen, Green Valley, Guenther, Halsey, Hamburg, Harrison, Hewitt, Holton, Hull, Johnson, Knowlton, Marathon, McMillan, Mosinee, Norrie, Plover, Reid, Rib Falls, Rib Mountain, Rietbrock, Ringle, Spencer, Stettin, Texas, Wausau, Weston, Wien, Ashley, Bradley, Cherokee, Corinth, Dancy, Emmerich, Evergreen, Gad, Galloway, Glandon, Granite Heights, Halder, Hamburg, Hogarty, Holt, Johnson, Kalinke, Little Chicago, Little Eau Claire, Little Rose, Mann, March Rapids, McMilan, Milan, Moon, Mount View, Naugart, Norrie, Nutterville, Pike Lake, Poniatowski, Rangeline, Ringle, Rocky Corners, Rozelville, Schnappsville, Snell, Shantytown, Sunset, Swan, Taegesville, Weber, Wien, Wuertsburg, Callon, Staadts, Stettin, Ziegler. If you believe your property is located Marathon County and do not see the name of your city, town, or township on this list, you can contact Marathon County Property Records for more information.

Role of the Marathon County Treasurer

The role of the Marathon County Property Treasurer is to handle the finances for Marathon County.  In that role, the Treasurer is responsible for establishing real property values and maintaining property records for all parcels located in the county.  The treasurer then uses real property value assessments to calculate the property tax.

The Marathon County Treasurer also makes the Marathon County Property Records online.  At this online site, you can view recent taxes, which includes a statement of delinquent taxes with interest and penalties for the current month.  You can also see a PDF tax bill with ownership information on the tax bill.  The records available describe yearly taxes, but do not include any interest and penalties.  The records also include information about assessed value, fair market value, the legal description of the property, and the property’s address.  All parcel information can be accessed in multiple ways including by pin number, site address, or partial legal description.  Owner names are not included on the record due to privacy concerns.  Parcels marked active are currently assessed and taxed.  Parcels marked pending are parcels that will be assessed and taxed for the current year, then deleted due to a change in their legal description.  Parcels marked as split means that a change in their status was recorded.  Deleted is a parcel that is no longer active, but records are kept available for archival purposes.

Assessing Property Values

In Marathon County, there are two important property values to understand: assessed value and fair market value.  The assessed value refers to the dollar value placed on property by the Assessor.  This value is computed by analyzing individual sales transactions and inspections and is the Assessor’s estimate of market value.  Estimated fair market value is calculated by dividing the property’s total assessed value by the average assessment ratio.  The ration is applied to all property, regardless of type.  This should approximate the current market value.  The value estimate is determined by the Department of Revenue and is used to apportion tax levies among municipalities and in the distribution of shared revenues.  Under Wisconsin State law, the Assessor’s must be within ten percent of the state’s equalized value ratio at least once in every four-year period.

Marathon County Treasurer

The current Marathon County Property Treasurer is Audrey Jensen.  She works with the Marathon County Assessor to collect taxes after property has been assessed.  The Marathon County Assessor is  a state certified professional whose duties are to discover, list, and place a value on all taxable real property in the county.  The Assessor does not collect property tax; that is the Treasurer’s job.  The Treasurer also maintains and publishes property record information.

Contact the Marathon County Treasurer

You can reach the Marathon County Treasurer at:

Marathon County Treasurer
Marathon County Courthouse
500 Forest St.
Wausau, WI 54403

Phone: 715-261-1150
Fax: 715-261-1166

You can make online tax payments at: https://client.pointandpay.net/web/countyofmarathonwi

You can make credit card payments by phone at 1-855-839-7006

Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:00am-4:30pm

Conclusion

Marathon County Property Records fall under the jurisdiction of the Marathon County Treasurer.  While the assessor values land in the county, the Marathon County Treasurer compiles and maintains Marathon County Land Records, which is available online.  The current Marathon County Treasurer is Audrey Jensen.  In addition to maintaining the property records, the County Treasurer receives deposits, invests all money belonging to the county, collects postponed and all delinquent real estate taxes, distributes taxes to municipalities and school districts, handles applications for tax deeds, takes property when taxes are unpaid, oversees property descriptions for preparing assessment rolls, and handles real and personal property tax bills throughout most of the county.