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Report: Texas Law Helps America’s Richest Pastor Avoid Taxes on his $7 Million Mansion

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The richest pastor in America pays no property taxes on his 18,000-square-foot Texas mansion thanks to a loophole in the state tax code, The Houston Chronicle reported.

Televangelist and prosperity Gospel preacher Kenneth Copeland, who is the leader of Eagle Mountain International Church in Tarrant County, Texas, has a reported net worth of $750 million. But because his mansion is considered a “parsonage” for the church under Texas Tax Code Sec. 11.20, the property is tax-exempt.

Classifying his home as a parsonage saves Copeland $150,000 a year in taxes on the $7 million home, Insider reported.

In a series of articles, The Chronicle also called out high-profile pastor I.V. Hilliard, Bishop of New Life Christian Church, and area churches Nueva Iglesia Pureta del Cielo, Strong Tower Ministries (aka Proverbs 18:10 Ministries), and Champions Community Church for their high-value yet tax-free clergy residences.

The tax code states that an organization that qualifies as religious is entitled to an exemption from taxation of “real property that is owned by the religious organization and is reasonably necessary for use as a residence” and is “used exclusively as a residence for those individuals whose principal occupation is to serve in the clergy of the religious organization” as long as it produces no revenue for the religious organization. It also restricts exempt property to less than an acre.

While Copeland’s house itself sits on an acre, he also owns 24 acres of surrounding lakefront property, and pays just $3,000 in property taxes on that land.

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Tarrant County Appraiser Jeff Law told the Chronicle that while Copeland’s house technically qualifies as a parsonage under the law “just like the little house next to the church,” it “definitely looks out of place and unusual compared to other parsonages we have.”

Law said that in response to the Chronicle’s investigation he plans to ask Eagle Mountain to reapply for the parsonage exemption, a common procedure with churches.

Copeland built the six-bedroom home in 1999 and said in a 2015 sermon that God told him to build the house for his wife, telling him, “It is part of your prosperity.”

In a 2019 interview with Inside Edition, Copeland admitted to reporter Lisa Guerrero, “I’m a very wealthy man,” saying that some of his money came from natural gas reserves on his property.

He said because of its wealth, his ministry has been able to bring “over 122 million people to the Lord Jesus Christ.”

In a later interview, Copeland justified owning three private jets by saying, “If I flew commercial I’d have to stop 65 percent of what I’m doing.”

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Anne Stych

Anne Stych is a writer in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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