Senate expands senior property-tax relief; lawmakers note $200 million annual shift

Washington State Senate · February 16, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Senate passed Substitute S.B. 6,162 to expand and simplify the senior-citizen property tax relief program; sponsor said the bill would add about 30,000 eligible fixed-income residents and standardize a $7,500 deduction, while opponents warned it represents an approximate $200 million per year tax shift.

The Senate passed Substitute S.B. 6,162 after floor debate over program design and fiscal trade-offs. Sponsor Sen. Krishna Dawson described the bill as expanding and streamlining property-tax relief for low-income seniors, people with disabilities and disabled veterans; she said the bill updates eligibility thresholds to reflect today's economy, would allow more than 30,000 additional fixed-income individuals to qualify, and establishes a standard $7,500 deduction when calculating income.

Supporters argued the changes simplify application and expand access, particularly in rural counties where the county median-income calculation will increase eligibility ranges. Opponents, including Sen. Gildan, noted that the expansion would shift roughly $200,000,000 per year onto other taxpayers and warned about the fiscal consequences. Senator Schuessler raised questions about county-by-county median income calculations and how that interacts with tax shifts.

The bill was advanced and placed on final passage and the secretary announced the result as 41 yea, 8 nay; the sponsor urged support on grounds of preserving housing stability for vulnerable residents.