Bill
Bill > AB685
summary
Introduced
11/26/2025
11/26/2025
In Committee
02/27/2026
02/27/2026
Crossed Over
02/17/2026
02/17/2026
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
Potential new amendment
2025-2026 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill allows taxpayers to subtract certain theft losses when calculating their income for individual income tax purposes, beginning with taxable year 2024. Under the bill, a taxpayer may subtract a theft loss if the loss is deductible in the taxable year as an itemized deduction under federal law, regardless of whether the individual claims the federal deduction. Under federal law, the deduction is limited to losses that are related to a profit-seeking activity or connected to a federally declared disaster (or, beginning next year, a state declared disaster). Federal law imposes additional conditions, including that there be no reasonable chance of recovering the money or property, and generally provides that a theft loss is claimed in the year in which the taxpayer discovers the loss. The bill also provides that taxpayers who make the subtraction under the bill may not include the theft loss in the amount used to claim the itemized deductions tax credit. Under current law, that credit is based on the amount of specified itemized deductions a taxpayer is eligible to claim for federal tax purposes. Because this bill relates to an exemption from state or local taxes, it may be referred to the Joint Survey Committee on Tax Exemptions for a report to be printed as an appendix to the bill. For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
AI Summary
This bill allows Wisconsin taxpayers to subtract certain theft losses from their state income tax calculation starting in 2024. Specifically, taxpayers can deduct theft losses that are eligible for deduction under federal tax law (Section 165(c)(2) or (3) of the Internal Revenue Code), which typically include losses related to profit-seeking activities or federally declared disasters. The bill stipulates that the theft loss must meet federal criteria, such as having no reasonable chance of recovery, and is generally claimed in the year the loss is discovered. Importantly, taxpayers who claim this theft loss subtraction cannot also use the same loss amount when calculating the itemized deductions tax credit. This change provides additional tax relief for individuals who have experienced significant theft-related financial losses, aligning state tax treatment more closely with federal tax rules. The bill modifies existing state statutes to create this new tax subtraction provision, offering potential financial relief for taxpayers who have suffered theft-related financial damages.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (2)
Last Action
Available for scheduling (on 03/03/2026)
Official Document
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