Bill
Bill > SSB1156
IA SSB1156
IA SSB1156A bill for an act relating to the administration of the tax by the department of revenue by modifying provisions related to personal income, property, sales and use, motor fuel, and inheritance taxes, changing tax expenditure reviews, and including effective date and retroactive applicability provisions.(See SF 614.)
summary
Introduced
02/18/2025
02/18/2025
In Committee
02/18/2025
02/18/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill relates to the administration of the tax by the department of revenue by modifying provisions related to personal income, property, sales and use, motor fuel, inheritance tax, and changing tax expenditure reviews. DIVISION I —— DISCLOSURE OF TAX INFORMATION. The bill specifies and updates the circumstances the department of revenue (department) may disclose state tax return and audit information to law enforcement. The bill also makes conforming changes related to disclosure of state tax return information to the treasurer of state for purposes of determining ownership of abandoned property. The division takes effect upon enactment. DIVISION II —— ANNUAL REPORTING. The bill strikes the requirement that the department annually report to the general assembly the areas of recurrent taxpayer noncompliance with the rules of the department including any recommendations relating to the noncompliance. DIVISION III —— PROPERTY TAX —— EXTENSIONS. Under current law, a claimant may ask the director of the department, the county treasurer, or the director of the department of health and human services for an extension to claim a reimbursement for rent constituting property taxes in case of sickness, absence, or disability. The bill strikes the director of the department from involvement in the extension request by the S.F. _____ H.F. _____ claimant. Under current law, when issuing a refund for an erroneous property tax paid by a taxpayer, the taxpayer must have presented a claim of refund to the board of supervisors, or if appealed, a claim to the property assessment appeal or district court within two years of the final decision on the property taxes owed. Under the bill, a taxpayer is eligible to claim a refund for an erroneous tax if the taxpayer had previously appealed the claim for a refund of an erroneous tax to the director of revenue within two years of the director’s final decision. This provision takes effect upon enactment. DIVISION IV —— FARM TENANCY INCOME TAX EXCLUSION. Currently, an eligible individual may exclude income received by the individual pursuant to a farm tenancy covering real property held by the individual for 10 or more years, if the individual materially participated in a farming business for 10 or more years. The bill allows the eligible individual to exclude such income under such circumstances, if the individual materially participated in a farming business for 10 or more years in the aggregate. The bill further specifies the term “held” is to be determined by the holding period provisions of section 1223 of the Internal Revenue Code and other federal regulations which is identical to the use of the term “held” under the farming business exclusion in Code section 422.7(13). DIVISION V —— PASS-THROUGH ENTITIES. Under current law, the department may issue a notice of adjustment (adjustment of tax) to a partnership or pass-through entity pursuant to Code section 422.25C, and specifies that the notice of adjustment is appealable pursuant to Code sections 422.28 and 422.29. The bill specifies the notice of adjustment is not always appealable under the circumstances provided in Code section 422.25. The division takes effect upon enactment and applies retroactively to January 1, 2024. DIVISION VI —— SALES TAX CHANGES. The bill makes changes to S.F. _____ H.F. _____ the collection of sales taxes on building materials, supplies, and equipment where an owner, contractor, subcontractor, or builder is also a retailer holding a sales and use tax permit. Under such circumstances, if a customer of the retailer purchases tangible personal property from the retailer, the bill provides that such property will not be subject to sales tax if the property will be subject to sales tax at resale at a later date or if the property will be subject to use tax at the time the retailer withdraws the property from inventory for use by the retailer in construction. The bill makes other related changes to enhance the readability of the provision. Under current law, a purchaser, user, and consumer of taxable property or services may be authorized to remit tax owed directly to the department instead of the tax being collected and paid by the seller. The bill specifies that in order to qualify for the direct pay tax permit such a taxpayer must accrue a tax liability of more than $8,000 on a monthly basis. Currently, such a taxpayer must accrue a tax liability of $4,000 on a semimonthly basis in order to qualify for the direct pay tax permit. DIVISION VII —— MOTOR FUEL TAXES. Under current law and before July 1, 2026, the department determines the rate of excise tax imposed on each gallon of ethanol blended gasoline based upon the distribution percentage calculated in Code section 452A.3(1)(b), and the excise tax rate imposed on each gallon of biodiesel blended fuel based on the distribution percentage calculated in Code section 453A.3(3)(a)(2). The department determines the distribution percentage based upon data from reports filed pursuant to Code section 452A.33. The bill allows the department to amend the initial distribution percentage due to a mistake, or if there is a late report filed by a retail dealer to the department, or the distribution percentage is not accurate. The bill changes the due date of a biannual tax return relating to electric fuel tax due in January by one day, and S.F. _____ H.F. _____ modifies the biannual tax period by one day. The bill allows a person who uses electric fuel for a nontaxable purpose to provide an exemption certificate to the license holder selling or dispensing the fuel, if the certificate is produced by the department. DIVISION VIII —— INHERITANCE TAX —— FUTURE CODE CHANGES DUE TO REPEAL. The bill changes numerous Code sections to reflect the repeal of the inheritance tax beginning for the estates of decedents dying on or after January 1, 2025. However, other provisions of Code chapter 450 relating to the inheritance tax have not been repealed. The division takes effect upon enactment and applies retroactively to the estates of decedents dying on or after January 1, 2025. DIVISION IX —— LUMP SUM DISTRIBUTION OF RETIREMENT INCOME. Under current law, commencing with tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, retirement income is not subject to Iowa individual income tax. However, under current law a lump sum distribution from a retirement account is subject to Iowa income tax under Code section 422.5(8) at a rate of 25 percent of the federal tax rate imposed on the amount of the lump sum distribution. The bill provides that the taxation of a lump sum distribution from a retirement account is also exempt from state taxation by exempting the lump sum distribution for a person who is disabled, or 55 years of age or older, or who is the surviving spouse of an individual or is a survivor having an insurable interest in an individual who would have qualified for the exemption for the tax year. The bill excludes the lump sum distribution exempt from state taxation from being included in calculating the individual income tax filing thresholds in Code section 422.5(2) and (3). The division takes effect upon enactment and applies retroactively to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. S.F. _____ H.F. _____ DIVISION X —— ESTIMATED TAX THRESHOLD. Under the bill, a taxpayer filing a return is required to make estimated tax payments if Iowa income tax liability can reasonably be expected to exceed $1,000 or more. Under current law, such a taxpayer filing a return is required to make estimated tax payments if Iowa income tax liability can reasonably be expected to exceed $200 or more. The division takes effect January 1, 2026, and applies to tax years beginning on or after that date. DIVISION XI —— TAX EXPENDITURE REVIEW. The bill specifies that the department administering a tax expenditure (tax credit) is not required to review the tax expenditure if the tax expenditure has been repealed or if a zero amount of the tax expenditure remains available to be awarded or claimed. The bill removes four tax expenditures from tax expenditure review: the Iowa fund of funds program in Code chapter 15E, the wind energy production tax credits under Code chapter 476B, the ethanol promotion tax credit in Code section 422.11N (Code 2006), and the minimum tax credit under Code section 422.11B (Code 2018). The bill amends the Acts to align the review of the renewable chemical production tax credit in Code section 2.48 with the future repeal of the renewable chemical tax credit program.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Ways & Means (S)
Last Action
Committee report approving bill, renumbered as SF 614. (on 03/18/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
Document Type | Source Location |
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State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=SSB1156 |
BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/SSB1156.html |
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