Scots will save more than £100 a year on average under Labour’s plans to scrap the council tax, leader Kezia Dugdale said.
The average household will be £111 a year better off, she said, adding that in Glasgow that would rise to £135.
Labour has already put forward plans to abolish the council tax and replace it with a new property tax, claiming this would see four out of five households paying less, although bills for those in the most expensive properties would rise by up to a fifth.
Ms Dugdale raised the issue as she campaigned in the city with her deputy leader Alex Rowley and Glasgow City Council leader Frank McAveety.
The Labour leader also hit out at the SNP after it went back on a previous commitment to abolish the council tax, with Nicola Sturgeon announcing higher charges are to be brought in for those in high-value properties.
The First Minister also revealed the council-tax freeze, which was brought in after the SNP came to power in 2007, will be brought to an end in April 2017, with local authorities able to increase the levy by up to 3%.
Ms Dugdale said: “Nicola Sturgeon stood on manifestos in 2007 and 2011 to scrap the council tax – now all she’ll promise to scrap is the council-tax freeze.
“People deserve bold proposals from the next Scottish Government, not broken promises. Labour’s fair plans will see 80% of households pay less. That means the average household will be better-off by £111.
“We will make good on the SNP’s broken promise to scrap the council tax and fix local government finance for good, rather than carry on the SNP’s cuts to councils.
“After a decade in office won on the promise to scrap the council tax the SNP bottled it. That’s not fair to those who should be paying less.”
SNP local government minister Marco Biagi said Labour had not mentioned its plans for a property re-evaluation, saying this meant the savings it claimed households will make are “essentially meaningless”.
Mr Biagi said: “The last time a re-evaluation was carried out in Labour-run Wales, four times as many households ended up paying more than paying less – this could just be the tip of the iceberg.
“Under Labour’s plans people in small family homes in Edinburgh Eastern could end up paying almost double what they are paying right now.
“Not for the first time in this election, Labour’s tax plans are falling apart under the slightest scrutiny – and people on modest incomes are set to bear the brunt.”