Authorized by a constitutional amendment, qualifying senior citizens, persons retired due to disability, and qualifying veterans are entitled to property tax relief on their primary residence (SPTE). To qualify for the SPTE, a person must be any of the following:
The home must be owned and be the primary residence of the applicant. An applicant's combined disposable income must be under the county's income threshold to qualify. Eligible individuals may qualify for a partial property tax exemption and a valuation freeze.
The partial property tax exemption for the SPTE is provided according to various income thresholds. The income thresholds and associated partial exemptions are as follows:
The income thresholds are adjusted every five years to reflect the most recent year of estimated county median household incomes published by the Office of Financial Management. The next scheduled adjustment is March 1, 2024. Beginning with the adjustment made by March 1, 2024, and every second adjustment thereafter, if an income threshold in a county is not adjusted based on percentage of county median income, then the income threshold must be adjusted based on the growth of the seasonally adjusted consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U) for the prior 12-month period, published by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, with a limit of 1 percent.
Cities and counties are permitted to exempt participants in the property tax exemption program from any portion of their regular property tax levy attributable to a levy lid lift, with voter approval.
In addition to the partial exemptions listed above, the valuation of the residence of an eligible individual is frozen, for calculating property tax liability, at the assessed value of the residence on the later of January 1, 1995, or January 1st of the assessment year in which the person first qualifies for the program. To be eligible, the person must have a disposable income less than income threshold three.
In addition to the SPTE, individuals who meet the requirements, except for the income and age requirements, are permitted to defer their property taxes if their combined disposable income is less than the deferral threshold and they are 60 years or older. The income threshold for the deferral program is the greater of 75 percent of the county median household income or $45,000.
The income thresholds for the SPTE are changed as follows:
Income thresholds for the SPTE and for the deferral program are to be adjusted every three years, beginning August 1, 2023. Income thresholds that are not adjusted based on changes in county median income will be adjusted by the CPI-U beginning with the August 1, 2023 adjustment, and every adjustment thereafter.
A person continues to qualify for the SPTE if their income exceeds the income threshold as the result of cost of living adjustments to social security or supplemental security payments, for taxes collected in 2024 only.
The Department of Revenue must engage in one-time statewide outreach and public notification of the changes in income thresholds that occur as a result of the bill, subject to appropriations.
PRO: Washington is facing a housing crisis. This is one of the most efficient and effective things we can do to keep seniors in their home. This bill funds research done by DOR so there is equity in their baseline outreach. There is an urgent need to shorten the cycle from five to three years.