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Missouri House gives income tax phase-out plan initial approval

Missouri House meets for floor discussion during a special session on June 11, 2025.
KMIZ
Missouri House meets for floor discussion during a special session on June 11, 2025.

By: Lucas Geisler, Madson Stuerman

EDITOR'S NOTE: The story has been corrected to say the bill received initial approval.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) -- The Missouri House of Representatives gave initial approval Tuesday to a plan that would ask voters to phase out the state income tax over several years.

The chamber voted 85-48 around 1 p.m. Tuesday to perfect HJR 173. A final vote is expected Thursday.

If HJR 173 is passed by voters in November, the state would lower the income tax by 0.01% if net general revenue collections are $20 million more than what was collected at the end of fiscal 2025. The rate would drop another 0.01% for every $20 million collected after that.

State budget numbers show that the state collected $13,430,978,645 by June 30, 2025, the final day of the fiscal year. The collections threshold to reduce income tax further would grow every year by the rate of inflation.

Resolution sponsor Rep. Bishop Davidson (R-Republic) said the Department of Revenue estimated that 0.01% of state income tax amounted to about $20 million, which he hoped would make the reduction "revenue neutral."

The measure would also allow lawmakers to expand the sales tax to apply to other services to make up for revenue lost.

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