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Bill > SB116


CO SB116

CO SB116
Property Tax Modifications


summary

Introduced
02/19/2026
In Committee
02/19/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Sections 1, 2, and 3 of the bill give municipalities the authority, upon voter approval, to levy a lodging tax up to the same rate and for the same purposes allowed to counties to be collected, administered, and enforced by the state. The bill prohibits, commencing on and after January 1, 2027, any municipal tax on lodging or on the business of providing lodging that is not a municipal lodging tax adopted in accordance with the requirements of section 3. An existing municipal tax on lodging or on the business of providing lodging adopted on or before December 31, 2026, is allowed to continue under the bill. However, there can be no tax rate increase, expansion of tax base, or material change in uses of the tax revenue absent adoption of a municipal lodging tax that is in accordance with the requirements of section 3. Section 4 clarifies that, notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, in any case in which the income approach is used to determine the actual value of any lodging property, the assessor shall include "net rental income" and "resort fee income", each income amount capitalized to value at a rate typical within the relevant market in the actual value of the lodging property. "Net rental income" means the net operating income generated from payments made in connection with the rental of the lodging property, including any unit within or connected to the lodging property, whether or not the unit is individually and separately owned, after the deduction of expenses typical in the relevant market and excluding any rents remitted to a unit owner for use of the owner's unit. "Resort fee income" means the net income generated from the collection of any fee or charge, however denominated, by the property, that is retained by the property but does not include any fee or charge amounts that the property remits to any county, city, city and county, special district, or other local government. Sections 5 and 6 extend the portable qualified-senior primary residence benefit created for property tax years 2025 and 2026 to future property tax years. Section 7 changes the state property tax exemption for business personal property, commencing on and after January 1, 2027, by setting the exemption threshold for such property at $60,000, without an adjustment for inflation, and by eliminating the reimbursement provision for property tax losses due to the exemption. Sections 8 and 9 subject the municipal lodging tax authorized by section 3 to the department of revenue's administrative scope and mandatory electronic filing and payment requirements.

AI Summary

This bill allows municipalities, with voter approval, to enact a lodging tax of up to six percent, similar to taxes already permitted for counties, to fund purposes such as tourism promotion, workforce housing, visitor experience enhancements, infrastructure improvements, and public safety. This new municipal lodging tax will be collected and administered by the state's Department of Revenue, which will retain a portion to cover its costs. Importantly, starting January 1, 2027, any existing municipal lodging taxes will be prohibited unless they are adopted under these new requirements, though existing taxes can continue without rate increases or changes in their use unless they are brought into compliance with the new law. The bill also clarifies how property tax assessors should determine the value of lodging properties by mandating the inclusion of "net rental income" (income from renting the property after expenses, excluding payments to unit owners) and "resort fee income" (fees retained by the property, excluding those remitted to local governments) when using the income approach. Furthermore, it extends a property tax benefit for qualified seniors' primary residences to future years and, starting January 1, 2027, changes the state property tax exemption for business personal property to a flat $60,000 threshold, eliminating the state's reimbursement to local governments for lost tax revenue due to this exemption. Finally, the bill subjects the new municipal lodging tax to the Department of Revenue's administrative rules, including mandatory electronic filing and payment.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Senate Finance Committee Hearing (14:00:00 3/17/2026 SCR 357) (on 03/17/2026)

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