Fulton County, Georgia – Fulton County District 5 residents will have several opportunities this July to get a clearer picture of how their property tax assessments are handled, as Commissioner Marvin S. Arrington, Jr. prepares to host the 2026 Summer District Dialogues.
The series, centered on the county’s tax assessment process, is designed to bring residents face to face with the information many homeowners look for when assessment notices arrive. Rather than leaving constituents to sort through numbers, notices and deadlines on their own, the meetings will give them a chance to hear directly from Commissioner Arrington and members of the Fulton County Tax office.
The summer schedule includes three meetings, giving residents both virtual and in-person options. The first session will be held online on Monday, July 6, 2026, from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Residents may take part through Zoom or YouTube, with registration available through the county’s July 6 town hall registration link.
Two in-person meetings will follow later that week. On Wednesday, July 8, 2026, residents can attend a town hall from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Chattahoochee Hills City Hall, located at 6505 Rico Road in Palmetto. Registration is available through the July 8 town hall registration link.
The final meeting is scheduled for Friday, July 10, 2026, from 11 a.m. to noon at Camp Truitt in College Park, located at 4320 Herschel Drive. Residents planning to attend that session can use the July 10 town hall registration link.
During the town halls, participants are expected to receive updates related to 2026 property tax assessments. The meetings will also offer a setting for residents to better understand how the assessment process works and what role county tax officials play in it.
For many property owners, tax assessments can feel complicated, especially when values change or notices raise questions. These July meetings are meant to make the process easier to follow by putting county officials in the room, or on the screen, with the people most affected by the information.
Commissioner Arrington’s 2026 Tax Talks give District 5 residents three chances to ask, listen and leave with a stronger grasp of the county’s property tax assessment process before the summer moves on.