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H 3774

An Act relative to third party delivery fees

194th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by Michelle Ciccolo and 3 co-sponsors

The bill adds a minimum per-order delivery fee on third-party platforms and directs half of the revenue to municipalities for transportation needs and half to the state’s transport

Bill reported favorably by committee and referred to the committee on House Ways and Means
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Bill Summary · H 3774

Summary: H 3774 — An Act relative to third party delivery fees

Overview
- Bill: H 3774 (House Docket No. 4004), titled “An Act relative to third party delivery fees.”
- Introduced: February 27, 2025.
- Status: Referred to the Transportation Committee; hearings scheduled for Oct 14, 2025 (hearing rescheduled from earlier date). The hearing location was changed to include a virtual option.
- Relationship: Related bill noted as HD 4004 (replaces; cross-reference in materials).

Purpose and intent
- The bill establishes a framework to regulate third-party delivery service fees charged to customers for online food and beverage orders, and to dedicate a portion of fee revenue to transportation infrastructure and related municipal needs.

Key provisions and changes (definitions and new rule)
- Adds definitions to Mass. General Laws Chapter 159B:
- “Covered establishment”: a restaurant or other food/drink establishment that offers same-day delivery or pickup via a third-party platform in a single transaction.
- “Customer”: an individual placing an online order through a third-party platform.
- “Delivery-assessments”: the fee paid by the customer to the third-party delivery service.
- “Online order”: an order placed via a third-party platform for pickup or delivery in the Commonwealth.
- “Purchase price”: the menu price offered on the platform by the covered establishment; excludes taxes, gratuities, or other fees.
- “Third-party delivery service company”: an entity that facilitates same-day delivery/pickup for 20+ covered establishments in Massachusetts.
- “Department”: the Department of Public Utilities (DPU).

Section 23: Delivery fees, reporting, and distributions
- Annual reporting (by Feb 1 each year): Each third-party delivery service must report to the director (DPU) the number of deliveries originating in each city/town for the prior year and the amount collected from delivery-assessments.
- Delivery assessment (fee): A minimum delivery assessment of $0.50 per order applied to orders from covered establishments. The assessment does not apply to items not subject to state sales tax.
- Inflation adjustment: The department may adjust the delivery assessment at least every two years based on inflation.
- Revenue distribution: The funds collected are split:
- Half (1/2) distributed to municipalities (cities/towns) based on the number of rides originating there, to address transportation infrastructure and related programs (e.g., complete streets programs, alternative transportation).
- If a municipality’s distribution is $25,000 or less, the chief executive officer may expend the funds for these purposes without further appropriation.
- The other half (1/2) distributed to the Commonwealth Transportation Fund (CTF).
- Purpose of distributions: To address the impact of transportation network services on municipal roads, bridges, and other transportation infrastructure, and to support related programs and public transportation initiatives.

Who is affected
- Third-party delivery service companies (requirements to report, minimum per-order fee, potential inflation-based adjustments).
- Covered establishments (restaurants and similar venues offering same-day delivery via third-party platforms).
- Customers (new per-order delivery assessment).
- Municipalities (receive funding allocations based on delivery originations).
- Commonwealth Transportation Fund (receives half of the collected funds).

Procedural and timeline aspects
- Reporting deadline: February 1 each year.
- Fee adjustment: No less than every two years, based on inflation.
- Revenue distribution: Proportions specified (1/2 to municipalities, 1/2 to CTF), with specific spending discretion for smaller municipal allocations.
- Hearing schedule: Initially set for Oct 14, 2025 (1:00 PM–5:00 PM), with a location change to include a virtual option.
- Legislative path: Referred to the Transportation Committee; Senate concurrence noted in materials.

Notes
- The bill focuses on consumer-facing fees from third-party platforms and ties revenue to transportation infrastructure funding at both municipal and state levels.
- It does not specify tax treatment beyond noting avoidance of items not subject to state sales tax from the delivery-assessment application.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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