House votes to direct study of personal property (car) tax, prompting floor debate

Virginia House of Delegates · January 31, 2026

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Summary

The House adopted House Joint Resolution 34 directing the Department of Taxation to study options to repeal the personal property (car) tax. Supporters framed the study as balanced; some delegates urged immediate repeal instead; the resolution passed 68‑25.

House Joint Resolution 34, introduced on Jan. 30 by Delegate Franklin, directs the Virginia Department of Taxation to study options for abolishing personal property taxation on certain qualifying vehicles and to report findings to the General Assembly.

Delegate Franklin told members the resolution is a responsible first step to examine repeal options while ensuring funding for local services such as schools and public safety. "House joint resolution 34 directs the Department of Taxation to study how to repeal the car tax, the most hated tax in the Commonwealth," Franklin said on the floor.

Several members urged faster action. Delegate Kilgore argued that a study delays needed relief and urged the majority to adopt direct budgetary action, saying, "We don't need a study...If we start at $5,000...we could start really helping citizens make their life more affordable." The resolution nevertheless passed by recorded roll call: 68 ayes, 25 noes.

What happens next: The Department of Taxation has been directed to complete the requested study and report back to the General Assembly. Any legislative repeal or change to personal property taxation would require subsequent bills and appropriations to offset local revenue effects.

Why it matters: Personal property taxes are a material revenue source for localities; proposals to change them trigger discussion about tradeoffs between taxpayer relief and funding for schools, public safety and other locally provided services.