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Marblehead could offer means-tested senior property tax relief by exempting the tax plus part of water/sewer costs for eligible seniors, capped and asset-tested locally.
Marblehead could offer means-tested senior property tax relief by exempting the tax plus part of water/sewer costs for eligible seniors, capped and asset-tested locally.
H.4225 would authorize Marblehead to create a means-tested senior citizen property tax exemption for qualifying residential parcels. The exemption is designed to reduce property tax bills for eligible seniors by replacing the standard tax with a calculated exemption equal to the tax that would be due plus half of annual water/sewer costs, minus specified deductions. The measure requires local approval (cap setting, asset rules, and implementation rules) and would operate in addition to existing exemptions.
1) Financeable exemption formula (Section 1)
- For each qualifying residential parcel, the exemption equals:
- the total tax that would otherwise be assessed, plus
- 50% of the annual water and sewer expense,
- minus: (i) 10% of income (or a different % set under Section 5), (ii) the circuit breaker income tax credit received for the prior year, and (iii) any other state exemptions or relief including the Senior Tax Work Off Program.
- The exemption cannot exceed an annual cap set by the Marblehead Select Board.
- Applies only to the taxpayer’s domicile; includes condominiums as a “parcel.”
- The exemption is additive to other exemptions unless specifically excluded.
2) Asset test and eligibility (Section 2)
- The Board of Assessors may deny an application if excessive assets are present (definition set by the Select Board).
- Real property eligibility criteria include:
- Owner-occupancy by a person ≤ income limits set by the Select Board (Section 5),
- Ownership by a single applicant aged 65+ or joint owners with at least one aged 65+,
- Domicile status in Marblehead,
- At least 10 consecutive years of Marblehead residency prior to filing,
- Maximum assessed value not exceeding the prior year’s Marblehead average for single-family homes,
- Applicant or joint applicant’s circuit breaker credit filed if eligible,
- Board of Assessors approval.
3) Cap and pro rata adjustment (Section 3)
- The exemption is in addition to other exemptions, but a town cap may limit total benefits.
- If benefits would exceed the cap, amounts are reduced pro rata.
4) Application and administration (Sections 4–5)
- Annual filing required with documentation; deadline established by the Assessors.
- Select Board may adopt implementing regulations after a public hearing.
5) Effective date (Section 6)
- Takes effect upon passage.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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