From the cover Lake Houston residents to benet from tax plan
BY HANNAH BROL, DANICA LLOYD & HANNAH NORTON
What else?
What you need to know
If Proposition 4 passes, the homestead exemp- tion will be raised, and homeowners will pay reduced taxes to their local school districts. • ISD tax rates will decrease by 10.7 cents. • The state will distribute $12.7 billion to schools. • For a $300,000 home, decreasing the school dis- trict tax rate by 10.7 cents would cut an average tax bill by $321. The plan also includes a nonhomestead appraisal cap , which would limit annual value increase for certain properties if Proposition 4 passes. • The value of a property worth $5 million or less cannot increase by more than 20% year over year. • This applies to all nonhomestead property, such as second homes and commercial property. • Approximately 13 million properties will qualify. As part of the new law, SB 3 also amends the state business franchise tax , which all businesses currently pay based on individual circumstances. • Businesses that make less than $2.47 million annually will no longer have to pay the tax. • Roughly 67,000 small and midsize businesses will be exempt from the tax. • Collectively, qualifying business owners will save around $300,000 each year. While lawmakers widely supported the legisla- tion, some in opposition fought for relief for rent- ers . State Sen. Paul Bettencourt, RHouston, argued that landlords who receive tax relief would pass the savings on to renters, but Dick Lavine, a senior scal analyst for the progressive advocacy group Every Texan, said the legislation does “nothing for [renters] at all.”
Home value increases across Lake Houston, 201923
Despite entities, such as Humble ISD and the city of Humble, lowering property tax rates in recent years, property appraisal increases have resulted in higher tax bills for local homeowners. State legislators approved a plan to address property tax increases in mid-July, closing out the second special session of the year. “If passed by voters this fall, Texas homestead exemptions [for school district taxes] will rise to $100,000, senior homeowners will be protected from being priced out of their home, the small- business exemption for the franchise tax will double, and Texas small businesses will be protected from excessive appraisal increases,” Gov. Greg Abbott said in an Aug. 9 news release after signing o on the plan. The $18 billion package includes two bills— Senate Bills 2 and 3—and a constitutional amendment. For the tax cuts to show up on this year’s tax bill, Texans must approve the constitutional amendment, Proposition 4, in November. Homeowners would also need to apply to receive the homestead exemption. This tax relief comes after back-to-back years of what Harris Central Appraisal District ocials called “unprecedented” property value increases. The average homeowner saw 23.3% and 17.3% market value increases in 2022 and 2023, respectively, following 8.9% and 10.4% increases in 2020 and 2021, respectively. This has been a trend across the Lake Houston area. Based on a random sampling of homes on the market in August, homes built between 1975-2017 and in neighborhoods such as Bear Branch Village and Balmoral all experienced double-digit value increases since 2019. GREENSRD. ALDINE BENDER RD.
4 Year built: 2006 Value increase: +42.52% 5 Year built: 2010 Value increase: +33.1% 6 Year built: 2017 Value increase: +17.73%
1 Year built: 1975 Value increase: +30.91% 2 Year built: 1983 Value increase: +40.29% 3 Year built: 1995 Value increase: +33.54%
1314
FORDRD.
494
N O R T H
3
BEAR BRANCH VILLAGE
1
TOWNSEN BLVD.
KINGWOOD DR.
LAKE HOUSTON PKWY.
2
59
RAMBLEWOOD
F I RSTST.
1960
WILL CLAYTON PKWY.
BALMORAL
6
LAKE HOUSTON
5
4
FALL CREEK
N
SOURCE: HARRIS CENTRAL APPRAISAL DISTRICTCOMMUNITY IMPACT
What they’re saying
What’s next
However, state Rep. Gene Wu, DHouston, criticized the plan, alleging it fails to provide relief for a large portion of the state’s population.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick touted the state’s property tax relief plan in a statement included in an Aug. 9 news release from Abbott’s oce.
After the legislation was approved, three Democratic state representatives released a statement condemning Republicans for providing more tax relief to certain groups. While school districts will receive state funds to oset lower property tax revenue, overall school funding will not change. Lawmakers are expected to return to the Capitol this fall to discuss school funding, Patrick said.
“The signing of this Texas- sized tax cut, the biggest property tax cut in history, is a massive victory for all 5.7 million Texas homeowners.” LT. GOV. DAN PATRICK
“Forty percent of [Texans] rent. ... They often live month to month
on their salaries. … We are specically leaving out 40% of this state.” STATE REP. GENE WU, DHOUSTON
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LAKE HOUSTON HUMBLE KINGWOOD EDITION
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