Regards the timeline for restoring competency in criminal cases
SB 295 expands health-care GRT deductions (private insurance, direct care, supplies) and requires Medicaid reimbursements to cover the GRT, risking large state revenue losses.
SB 295 expands health-care GRT deductions (private insurance, direct care, supplies) and requires Medicaid reimbursements to cover the GRT, risking large state revenue losses.
Status: Introduced; effective date stated as July 1, 2025 (per bill)
Subject areas: Taxation — Gross receipts tax (GRT); Health care finance; Medicaid reimbursement
SB 295 makes wide-ranging changes to New Mexico’s gross receipts tax (GRT) treatment of health‑care‑related transactions. The bill expands GRT deductions for many health‑care services and for sales of medical equipment/supplies to providers, clarifies/extends existing deductions for insured cost‑sharing, and requires Medicaid reimbursements to providers to include amounts equal to GRT they pay.
Bottom line: SB 295 reclassifies many health‑care receipts as deductible from New Mexico’s GRT, reduces tax on many private and direct‑pay health transactions, requires Medicaid reimbursement of providers’ GRT, and—per fiscal analyses—would produce large, uncertain reductions in state and local tax revenue beginning FY 2026 if enacted.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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