With property taxes you don't have that coupling between changes in income and changes in the tax. That can make a property tax way more painful.
That's exactly what should happen in a productive economy: big cash payments to give up underutilized land to somebody who can make better use of it.
People talk about taxing granny out of her house, but they conveniently forget to mention that granny is keeping half a dozen people homeless by hoarding an underutilized property.
Where are you getting that from?
In most cases when granny sells her house and moves due to high taxes the buyer will be a single family that will live in the house. In the vast majority of cases that family will have less than half a dozen people, and in the vast majority of cases they will not have been homeless before.
That’s a distasteful and predatory way to speak of someone who rightfully bought her property, possibly a widow, and just wants to live in peace versus having someone (business or gov) try to break the rules to take her property.
It's far more distasteful to ignore the needs of everyone to give a very minor convenience to somebody with a lot of wealth.
Winston Churchill on this sort of old and wrong political argument about widows:
https://savingcommunities.org/docs/churchill.winston/budgetr...