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Committee hears extension of property-tax exemption for disaster-damaged single-family homes

February 26, 2026 | Legislative Sessions, Washington


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Committee hears extension of property-tax exemption for disaster-damaged single-family homes
Senate Bill 6343, discussed in the House Finance Committee on Feb. 26, would extend the application deadline for a property-tax exemption for physical improvements to single-family dwellings damaged in a declared natural disaster.

Christina King, committee staff, summarized key eligibility rules: the dwelling must be in an area declared a disaster by the governor or county legislative authority; the improvement must result from a natural disaster that occurred on or after Aug. 31, 2020 and must have reduced the dwelling’s value by more than 20%; county assessors may not approve applications received after June 30, 2026 under current law, and SB 6343 would allow acceptance until June 30, 2031. The exemption applies to taxes levied for collection in 2027 and thereafter.

Sponsors and local officials framed the bill as targeted disaster relief. A sponsor introduced by the committee as Senator Orwell and Senator Kaufman—who identified herself as representing the 47th Legislative District—described December flooding that damaged homes and businesses, with one sponsor citing about $180 million in statewide damage and nearly 400 affected houses in King County. Local government speakers—Kyle Moore, government affairs manager for Kent, and Troy Linnell, mayor of Algona—said their communities experienced substantial flooding, displacement, and lost inventory and urged passage to reduce tax burdens and expedite recovery.

The committee paused and later reopened the SB 6343 hearing for public testimony; after the public comments the hearing on this bill was closed for that session.

No committee vote was recorded at the close of the hearing.

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