South DakotaVoteScope
Chris Karr
Chris Karr

Sen. Chris Karr on

Taxes & Property Tax

23 bills voted on

Votes

HB 1051Voted Yes

Changes how schools calculate property taxes and state funding for general and special education.

This bill revises property tax levies for school districts by reducing the maximum general fund levy rates and adjusting the state aid formula. It decreases the maximum levy from $5.211 to $4.874 per thousand dollars of taxable valuation for general property, from $1.125 to $1.052 for agricultural property, and from $2.518 to $2.355 for owner-occupied single-family dwellings. The bill also updates the target teacher salary base year and makes minor adjustments to the overhead rate in the state aid formula.

Passed3/12/2026
HB 1241Voted Yes

Changes public notice requirements for school districts raising property taxes.

This bill increases the property tax exemption for disabled veterans and surviving spouses from $200,000 to $225,000 of the full and true value of their owner-occupied dwellings. It also makes minor administrative changes to application procedures and language cleanup.

Failed3/9/2026
HB 1253Nay · Amended

Changes how property taxes are calculated for homes and non-farm properties.

This bill changes property tax assessment methodology for owner-occupied single-family homes and nonagricultural property. Instead of using only current year fair market value, assessments will be based on an 'olympic average' (removing highest and lowest values) of the most recent 8 assessment years. The bill defines assessment sample period as 8 years, creates the olympic averaging formula, and requires directors of equalization to use this intertemporal average value method. Properties with use changes or additions use a shorter averaging period from when the change occurred.

Failed3/9/2026
HB 1245Nay · Amended

Allows cities to create their own funding systems for local construction projects.

This bill creates a new local funding mechanism for municipalities to finance capital improvement projects. It establishes a capital improvement board structure with 5 appointed members to approve ordinances for a special gross receipts tax (up to 1% on tangible personal property and services). The tax requires board approval, then voter approval by 60% margin, and can only be used for municipal acquisition/lease of property and equipment, or construction/repair/renovation of municipal property. The tax has a maximum 60-month duration or until minimum specified funds are collected, and municipalities cannot impose the tax again for 24 months after collection ends.

Passed3/5/2026
HB 1089Voted No

Changes how tax money from new mining permits gets distributed.

This bill modifies how severance tax revenues from precious metals mining are distributed. It creates a new category for permits issued on or after July 1, 2026, maintaining the existing 80% state/20% county split but removing the $1 million cap per county. The bill also makes technical language updates, changing 'shall' to 'must' and updating references from 'secretary of revenue' to 'secretary of the department.'

Passed3/4/2026
HB 1260Voted Yes

Allows cities to create property tax rebate programs.

This bill authorizes municipalities to create property tax rebate programs for owner-occupied single-family dwellings. The rebate can only apply to municipal taxes (not county or school district taxes). If a municipality establishes such a program, it must provide rebates to all applicants who meet the criteria set in the municipal ordinance.

Passed2/25/2026
SB 196Voted YesSponsor

Raises income limits for seniors to qualify for property tax freezes.

This bill increases the income limits for property tax assessment freezes from $65,000 to $85,000 for multiple-member households (single-member household limit remains at $55,000). It also changes the automatic inflation adjustment start date from 2026 to 2027 and clarifies that the freeze applies to 'individual's owner-occupied' dwellings rather than just 'person's' dwellings.

Failed2/24/2026
SB 228Voted YesSponsor

Changes the rules for tax increment financing districts.

This bill modifies the requirements for creating tax increment financing (TIF) districts in South Dakota. Key changes include: requiring referendum approval for TIF district creation, reducing the maximum assessed value threshold from 10% to 5% of total political subdivision property, increasing the blighted area requirement from 25% to 50%, requiring cost-benefit analysis showing social/economic benefits exceed costs, requiring mutual consent between municipalities and counties for TIF district creation, limiting grants to 10% of project costs, and making various technical definition updates.

Passed2/24/2026
SB 118Nay · Amended

Puts certain tax money into a fund to reduce homeowner taxes.

Creates a homeowner tax reduction fund in the state treasury that will provide property tax rebates for owner-occupied single-family dwellings. Starting January 31st each year, the state treasurer must deposit the greater of $100 million or a calculated percentage of tax revenues from various state tax chapters into this fund. The Department of Revenue will administer the fund and provide rebates to qualifying homeowners. The bill becomes effective July 1, 2027.

Failed2/24/2026
SB 199Voted YesCo-Sponsor

Creates a fund to help reduce property taxes.

This bill creates a new Property Tax Relief Fund in the state treasury, administered by the Department of Revenue. Starting in 2026, the state will transfer 25% of annual general fund increases into this fund. The fund's purpose is to supplement property tax levies of political subdivisions to reduce property taxes on real property, with expenditures requiring legislative appropriation.

Failed2/23/2026
SB 96Nay · Amended

Lets counties add a sales tax to lower property taxes for homeowners.

This bill creates a new county option gross receipts tax (up to 0.5%) on sales of tangible personal property and services that are already subject to state sales tax. Counties must use all proceeds to provide property tax credits, first to owner-occupied residential property, then to agricultural and other property. The tax requires county ordinance adoption and can be subject to voter referendum. The state Department of Revenue will administer the tax collection and distribution.

Passed2/23/2026
SB 208Voted Yes

Requires governments to pay legal costs when property owners win tax assessment appeals.

This bill requires courts to award attorney fees and disbursements to property owners and taxpayers who successfully appeal their property tax assessments in both circuit court and Supreme Court cases. Currently, courts may only award fees against unsuccessful appellants. The bill makes fee awards mandatory when property owners/taxpayers prevail in their appeals.

Passed2/20/2026
SB 234Voted No

Changes rules for how data centers buy goods and services.

This bill creates sales tax exemptions for data center operations in South Dakota. It defines qualified data centers and establishes exemptions from sales and use tax for enterprise information technology equipment and computer software used in qualified data centers. The bill requires data centers to have written agreements with electric utilities to avoid cost-shifting to other customers, provide notice to water providers about consumption needs, and file annual affidavits to maintain exemption eligibility.

2/18/2026
SB 195Voted YesSponsor

Makes temporary sales tax cuts permanent.

This bill repeals the sunset provision for a reduction in gross receipts and use tax rates that was set to expire on June 30, 2027. By removing this expiration date, the tax rate reductions become permanent.

Failed2/17/2026
SB 183Voted Yes

Changes public notice requirements before voting on tax increases.

This bill establishes new public notice requirements for school districts and other taxing districts before voting to impose excess tax levies. It requires at least 21 days advance notice through website publication or newspaper, plus direct mail/electronic notification to all property owners. The notice must specify the maximum amount being considered, current allowable amount, hearing details, estimated tax increase per $100,000 of taxable value, and intended use of the levy funds. The governing body must provide opportunity for public comment at the hearing.

Passed2/17/2026
SB 20Voted Yes

Provides emergency funding for tax refunds to elderly and disabled residents.

This bill appropriates $425,000 from the general fund to the Department of Revenue to provide tax refunds to elderly persons and persons with disabilities for real property tax and sales tax under existing chapters 10-18A and 10-45A. Up to $20,000 of the appropriation may be used for administration. The bill includes standard appropriation language regarding voucher approval, warrant drawing, fund reversion by June 30, 2027, and declares an emergency for immediate effect.

Passed2/17/2026
SB 97Nay · Amended

Limits how much property tax revenue can increase each year.

This bill increases the cap on property tax revenue increases for taxing districts and school districts from 3% to 5% for taxes payable in years 2027-2031. The bill modifies existing property tax limitation statutes to allow higher percentage increases in property tax revenue during this specific five-year period.

Passed2/17/2026
SB 125Voted Yes

Creates a fund to reduce taxes for homeowners.

This bill establishes the homeowner tax reduction fund in the state treasury, administered by the Department of Revenue, to provide property tax rebates for owner-occupied single-family dwellings. The rebate amount is calculated using a formula based on total appropriations and number of eligible property owners, with rebates equal to the lesser of the calculated amount or the property taxes exceeding $250. Administrative costs are covered by $2 per property owner.

Passed2/10/2026
HB 1060Voted Yes

Removes a budget calculation requirement for counties.

This bill removes the 5% buffer calculation requirement from county budget and tax levy processes. It eliminates the requirement that counties add 5% to their calculated tax levy needs as a cushion, and repeals the section that mandated this 5% addition to appropriations when determining tax levy amounts.

Passed2/9/2026
SB 154Voted Yes

Allows multiple garages on your property to qualify for homeowner tax breaks.

This bill expands the tax classification definition of 'owner-occupied single-family dwelling' to include all garages and ancillary structures related to residential use, even if they are located on separate parcels of land. It changes the language from 'attached or unattached garage' and 'parcel' (singular) to 'all garages and ancillary structures' and 'parcels' (plural). The bill also updates the contractor provision to reference the expanded definition.

Passed2/5/2026
SB 21Nay · Amended

Changes tax refund rules for elderly and disabled residents.

This bill modifies tax refund programs for elderly persons and persons with disabilities by: (1) updating income thresholds and calculation methods for retail sales and service tax refunds, (2) eliminating the property tax refund program (repealing chapter 10-18A), (3) updating cross-references throughout the tax code to remove references to the eliminated property tax refund program, and (4) modifying how pro rata distributions are calculated when appropriated funds are insufficient to pay all claims.

Passed2/2/2026
SB 22Voted Yes

Clarifies when property value certifications are sent to counties.

This bill makes two minor administrative changes to property tax assessment procedures: (1) extends the deadline for the Department of Revenue to transmit certification of values to counties from the second Monday of August to the fourth Monday of August, and (2) clarifies that 'the certificate' (rather than just 'it') must be transmitted within a reasonable time to avoid invalidating assessments or tax levies.

Passed1/22/2026
SB 12Voted Yes

Gives veterans and their surviving spouses refunds on past property taxes.

This bill allows qualifying disabled veterans and their unremarried surviving spouses to petition county commissioners for a refund of property taxes paid in the previous four years on property that would have qualified for the veteran disability tax exemption if they missed the application deadline. The bill adds this refund provision to existing law that already exempts these veterans from property taxes on their primary residence.

Passed1/21/2026