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Bill > HB1233


CO HB1233

CO HB1233
Property Tax Proceedings for Nonresidential Property


summary

Introduced
02/18/2026
In Committee
02/18/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Penalties for providing false information for tax purposes. A county may require a nonresidential property owner to provide certain information to the assessor, the county board of equalization, or the board of county commissioners in connection with property valuation. Currently, there is no penalty for a property owner's failure to provide this information or for misreporting information that is provided. For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the bill imposes civil penalties for a nonresidential property owner's failure to provide information and for willfully providing false information. Option to move an appeal to district court. Currently, an appeal from a board of county commissioners' decision on an abatement petition may only be filed with the board of assessment appeals. In addition, currently an appeal from a county board of equalization's decision on a petition for appeal may be filed in either the district court or with the board of assessment appeals at the election of the taxpayer. For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2026, the bill allows a county or the board of assessment appeals to request to move or transfer a nonresidential property case that was filed with the board of assessment appeals to the district court when certain criteria are satisfied. The bill does not alter the de novo nature of a nonresidential appeal, but specifies that when weighing evidence and assessing credibility, the board of assessment appeals or district court shall consider changes in the valuation information submitted by a petitioner to the county assessor, county board of equalization, or board of county commissioners regarding the property at issue. Waiver of the right to interest during the tax appeal process. Currently, a county is required to pay penalty interest at the rate of 1% per month for a total of 12% per year, on any refund of taxes. For property tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2026, if the district court or board of assessment appeals finds that a nonresidential property owner changed certain disclosed information, intentionally delayed the resolution process, or intentionally provided false information, the property owner waives the right to interest earned on the tax refunded.

AI Summary

This bill, effective for property tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2026, introduces penalties for nonresidential property owners who fail to provide required information to tax authorities or who willfully provide false information, with escalating civil penalties for repeat offenses, though a 30-day period to correct errors is allowed unless fraud is suspected. It also allows for the transfer of nonresidential property tax appeals from the Board of Assessment Appeals (BAA) to district court under certain conditions, such as when the property valuation exceeds ten million dollars, involves complex legal interpretations, requires extensive discovery, or disputes the valuation methodology. Furthermore, if a property owner intentionally delays an appeal or provides false information, they will waive their right to receive penalty interest on any tax refunds, which are currently calculated at 1% per month.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance

Sponsors (3)

Last Action

Introduced In House - Assigned to Finance (on 02/18/2026)

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