Megan, the county auditor, told the Jasper County Council on Friday that several state-level tax changes are moving through the legislature and likely will not materially affect the county's immediate tax rate.
"Right now taxpayers receive a bill for separately for the boat and then separately for the motors," Megan said, explaining that the bills are being combined into one measure so taxpayers will receive a single invoice and the county will save mailing costs. She said Jasper County already taxes boats at 6 percent, so the change that takes other counties from 10 percent to 6 percent should have "zero effect on us." She warned, however, the county's property-tax software (QS1) may incur an implementation cost to change file formats and billing workflows.
Megan also described the unsettled status of the homestead exemption in Columbia. "The legislature meets again tomorrow. They're still waiting on a verdict," she said, adding that lawmakers appear far apart and a continuing resolution could extend deliberations into July. She characterized the odds that homestead will remain unchanged as higher than not, but said there was no formal confirmation.
She noted one state action that has passed: "It's House Bill SCR 06. It's a $10,000 exemption for business personal property. That actually did pass but it's not going to take effect until 2027," Megan said, adding the county would not see that impact until the later effective year.
Why this matters: the auditor's briefing reassures council members that the most immediately discussed state changes are unlikely to force a midyear local tax-rate adjustment, but it flags operational costs (software changes and billing) and a continuing legislative process around the homestead exemption that could require follow-up. Megan said she would keep the council informed of any new developments and of QS1's assessment of file-format and billing changes.
The auditor invited questions and offered to provide updates by email and in future packets.