For owners who miss May 15 and receive a default VUT bill in June, the program does provide a formal appeal pathway. It is not, however, a substitute for filing on time. The appeal period for the 2025 taxation year opens June 15, 2026 and runs for 120 days from the date the VUT bill is issued. Appeals are submitted using the same roll number and access code printed on the bill, with channels mirroring the original declaration process — online, phone, email, mail, or in person.
The case an appeal needs to make is not complicated, but it does require evidence. Owners typically need to demonstrate that the property was occupied as a principal residence, occupied by a permitted occupant such as a tenant or family member, or vacant for a qualifying reason such as the owner being in long-term care. Documentation might include a driver's licence and utility bills tied to the address, a tenancy agreement, payroll records showing the address as primary, or medical documentation. Homeowner.ca's overview of property tax assessment appeals in Canada provides general context on how appeal processes work, though Hamilton's VUT appeal is administered separately from MPAC assessment appeals.
There is also a $500 late appeal fee for owners who miss the standard appeal deadline. Combined with the $250 non-declaration fee folded into the bill and the underlying 1% tax, the late path through the program can run to several thousand dollars before the underlying question — whether the property was actually vacant — has even been adjudicated.