Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas Senate Bill SB169 Introduced / Fiscal Note

                    Division of the Budget 
Landon State Office Building 	Phone: (785) 296-2436 
900 SW Jackson Street, Room 504 	adam.c.proffitt@ks.gov 
Topeka, KS  66612 	http://budget.kansas.gov 
 
Adam Proffitt, Director 	Laura Kelly, Governor 
Division of the Budget 
 
February 14, 2023 
 
 
 
 
The Honorable Caryn Tyson, Chairperson 
Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation 
300 SW 10th Avenue, Room 548-S 
Topeka, Kansas  66612 
 
Dear Senator Tyson: 
 
 SUBJECT: Fiscal Note for SB 169 by Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation 
 
 In accordance with KSA 75-3715a, the following fiscal note concerning SB 169 is 
respectfully submitted to your committee. 
 
 Under current law, individual income tax rates are set at 3.1 percent for income under 
$15,000 ($30,000 for married filing jointly), 5.25 percent for income between $15,000 and $30,000 
(between $30,000 and $60,000 for married filing jointly), and 5.7 percent for income $30,000 and 
over ($60,000 and over for married filing jointly).  SB 169 would eliminate the individual income 
tax for taxpayers with income under $5,225 ($10,450 for married filing jointly) and set the 
individual income tax rate to 4.75 percent for income over $5,225 ($10,450 for married filing 
jointly) beginning in tax year 2024. 
 
Estimated State Fiscal Effect 
 	FY 2023 
SGF 
FY 2023 
All Funds 
FY 2024 
SGF 
FY 2024 
All Funds 
Revenue 	-- -- ($170,400,000) ($170,400,000) 
Expenditure 	-- -- $52,150 $52,150 
FTE Positions 	-- -- -- -- 
 
 The Department of Revenue estimates that SB 169 would decrease State General Fund 
revenues by $170.4 million in FY 2024, $568.5 million in FY 2025, and $574.2 million in FY 
2026.  To formulate these estimates, the Department of Revenue simulated this tax policy change 
based on actual tax return data from tax year 2020.  The estimate for FY 2024 includes 30.0 percent 
of tax year 2024 tax liability.  The estimate for FY 2025 includes 70.0 percent of tax year 2024 tax  The Honorable Caryn Tyson, Chairperson 
Page 2—SB 169 
 
 
liability and 30.0 percent of tax year 2025 tax liability. The estimated impact by tax year and fiscal 
year are as follows: 
 
 Tax Year Fiscal Year 
2024 $566,800,000 $170,400,000 
2025 $572,500,000 $568,500,000 
2026 $578,200,000 $574,200,000 
 
 The Department indicates that the bill would require $52,150 from the State General Fund 
in FY 2024 to implement the bill and to modify the automated tax system. The required 
programming for this bill by itself would be performed by existing staff of the Department of 
Revenue.  In addition, if the combined effect of implementing this bill and other enacted legislation 
exceeds the Department’s programming resources, or if the time for implementing the changes is 
too short, additional expenditures for outside contract programmer services beyond the 
Department’s current budget may be required.   
 
 The Department of Administration indicates that adjusting state income tax collections has 
the potential to have a fiscal effect on the amount of revenue collected from its debt setoff program.  
This program intercepts individual income tax refunds and homestead tax refunds and applies 
those amounts to debts owed to state agencies, municipalities, district courts, and state agencies in 
other states.  Debts include, but are not limited to child support, taxes, educational expenses, fines, 
services provided to the debtor, and court ordered restitution.  As the dollar amounts of refunds 
are increased, the amount available for possible debt setoffs is also increased.  However, the 
Department is unable to make a precise estimate of the number of debts setoffs that will be 
intercepted as a result of the bill.  Any fiscal effect associated with SB 169 is not reflected in The 
FY 2024 Governor’s Budget Report. 
 
 
 
 
 	Sincerely, 
 
 
 
 	Adam Proffitt 
 	Director of the Budget 
 
 
cc: Lynn Robinson, Department of Revenue 
 Tamara Emery, Department of Administration