Senate expands senior property tax relief; bill consolidates exemptions and raises eligibility
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
SubscribeSummary
Substitute Senate Bill 6,162 passed after floor amendments, expanding and simplifying the senior citizen property tax relief program with new income thresholds and a $7,500 standard deduction; sponsors estimate the change will add about 30,000 eligible fixed‑income residents.
The Washington State Senate passed Substitute Senate Bill 6,162, which updates and expands the senior citizen property tax relief program. Sponsors said the bill strengthens a tax exemption for fixed‑income seniors, people with disabilities and disabled veterans while simplifying eligibility and the application process.
Senator Krishnan Dawson summarized the bill’s main provisions: eligibility thresholds tied to county median income will change from 50/60/70% to 60/70/80%, and the bill creates a standardized $7,500 deduction when calculating income. "This bill creates a standard $7,500 deduction when calculating income," the senator said on the floor. Sponsors said the changes will allow more than 30,000 additional fixed‑income individuals to qualify statewide.
Senators debated tradeoffs. Senator Gildan noted the expansion represents an approximate $200,000,000 per year tax shift and said the decision will make the bill politically and fiscally consequential for some taxpayers; other senators argued the program’s simplification and expanded reach justified the change. A technical amendment (0684) correcting an inadvertent assessed‑value limit was adopted on the floor.
After roll call, the Senate recorded enough votes to declare Substitute SB 6,162 passed (41 yeas, 8 nays). The bill will be enrolled and transmitted for the next steps in the legislative process.
