Back to Hawaii

HB1991 • 2026

RELATING TO THE LIQUOR TAX.

RELATING TO THE LIQUOR TAX.

Taxes
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
MATAYOSHI, EVSLIN, HUSSEY, ILAGAN, IWAMOTO, LA CHICA, LEE, M., MARTEN, TAKAYAMA, TARNAS, Amato
Last action
2026-03-12
Official status
Referred to EDT/CPN, WAM.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary does not specify who will enforce these changes.

Changing Liquor Tax Rates

This bill changes how liquor taxes are calculated by using alcohol-by-volume categories instead of specific types of drinks, adjusts tax rates for inflation since 1998, and sets a separate rate for beer made by small craft producers.

What This Bill Does

  • Changes the way liquor is taxed based on its alcohol content rather than specific drink types like beer or wine.
  • Adjusts the current liquor tax rates to account for inflation since 1998.
  • Sets a lower tax rate specifically for beer made by small craft producers.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Liquor manufacturers and sellers who will need to pay different tax rates based on the new system.
  • Small craft beer producers who get a lower tax rate for their products.

Terms To Know

Alcohol-by-volume (ABV)
A measure of how much alcohol is in a drink, expressed as a percentage.
Inflation
The increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money over time.

Limits and Unknowns

  • It is unclear how this change will affect small businesses that are not classified as 'small craft producers'.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

HD1

1

Hawaii published version HD1

Plain English: The amendment changes the liquor tax rates and categories in Hawaii based on inflation since 1998, adjusting for different alcohol-by-volume percentages.

  • Replaces the current liquor categories with new ones based on alcohol content by volume.
  • Adjusts tax rates to account for inflation since 1998 using the CPI-U index.
  • Introduces a lower tax rate specifically for beer made by small craft producers.
  • The exact impact of these changes on specific businesses and consumers is not detailed in this amendment text.
HD2

3

Hawaii published version HD2

Plain English: The amendment changes the liquor tax rates and categories in Hawaii based on inflation since 1998, adjusting for different alcohol content levels.

  • Replaces the current liquor categories with new ones based on alcohol-by-volume (ABV) percentages.
  • Adjusts tax rates to account for inflation since 1998 using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U).
  • Sets a lower tax rate specifically for beer made by small craft producers.
  • The exact new tax rates for different ABV categories are not specified in the amendment text.
  • Some parts of the original bill and definitions have been removed or modified, but their full impact is unclear without seeing the complete context.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-12 S

    Referred to EDT/CPN, WAM.

  2. 2026-03-12 S

    Passed First Reading.

  3. 2026-03-12 S

    Received from House (Hse. Com. No. 337).

  4. 2026-03-10 H

    Passed Third Reading as amended in HD 2 with Representative(s) Amato voting aye with reservations; Representative(s) Alcos, Garcia, Gedeon, Iwamoto, Kong, Matsumoto, Reyes Oda voting no (7) and Representative(s) Pierick excused (1). Transmitted to Senate.

  5. 2026-03-06 H

    Forty-eight (48) hours notice Tuesday, 03-10-26.

  6. 2026-03-06 H

    Reported from FIN (Stand. Com. Rep. No. 1110-26) as amended in HD 2, recommending passage on Third Reading.

  7. 2026-03-02 H

    The committee on FIN recommend that the measure be PASSED, WITH AMENDMENTS. The votes were as follows: 14 Ayes: Representative(s) Todd, Takenouchi, Hartsfield, Hussey, Keohokapu-Lee Loy, Kitagawa, Kusch, Lee, M., Miyake, Morikawa, Perruso, Templo, Yamashita; Ayes with reservations: Representative(s) Gedeon; 1 Noes: Representative(s) Reyes Oda; and 1 Excused: Representative(s) Alcos.

  8. 2026-02-27 H

    Bill scheduled for decision making on Monday, 03-02-26 10:00AM in conference room 308 VIA VIDEOCONFERENCE.

  9. 2026-02-27 H

    The committee(s) on FIN recommend(s) that the measure be deferred until 03-02-26.

  10. 2026-02-24 H

    Bill scheduled to be heard by FIN on Friday, 02-27-26 2:00PM in House conference room 308 VIA VIDEOCONFERENCE.

  11. 2026-02-12 H

    Passed Second Reading as amended in HD 1 and referred to the committee(s) on FIN with none voting aye with reservations; Representative(s) Kong voting no (1) and none excused (0).

  12. 2026-02-12 H

    Reported from CPC (Stand. Com. Rep. No. 237-26) as amended in HD 1, recommending passage on Second Reading and referral to FIN.

  13. 2026-02-03 H

    The committee on CPC recommend that the measure be PASSED, WITH AMENDMENTS. The votes were as follows: 10 Ayes: Representative(s) Matayoshi, Grandinetti, Chun, Ilagan, Ichiyama, Lowen, Marten, Tam, Pierick; Ayes with reservations: Representative(s) Iwamoto; Noes: none; and 1 Excused: Representative(s) Kong.

  14. 2026-01-30 H

    Bill scheduled to be heard by CPC on Tuesday, 02-03-26 2:00PM in House conference room 329 VIA VIDEOCONFERENCE.

  15. 2026-01-28 H

    Referred to CPC, FIN, referral sheet 3

  16. 2026-01-26 H

    Introduced and Pass First Reading.

  17. 2026-01-23 H

    Pending introduction.

Official Summary Text

RELATING TO THE LIQUOR TAX.
Liquor Tax; Taxation; Alcohol By Volume; Small Craft Producer Pub Licensees
Replaces the defined liquor categories subject to the liquor tax with alcohol-by-volume categories, but with a separate rate for beer manufactured by a small craft producer pub licensee. Adjusts the liquor tax rates for inflation. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD2)

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
HB1991

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

1991

THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2026

STATE OF HAWAII

A BILL FOR AN ACT

relating
to the liquor tax
.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

����
SECTION 1.
�
The legislature finds that the liquor tax
rates established under section 244D-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, have remained
unchanged since 1998.
�
Over the past
twenty-seven years, the cost of goods and services in the State has increased
significantly due to inflation, as measured by the United States Bureau of
Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U).

����
The legislature further finds that
maintaining the 1998 tax rates in nominal terms fails to reflect the true
economic value intended by the original statute and effectively reduces the
real tax burden on alcoholic beverages over time.
�
This erodes the tax base and undermines the
purpose of the liquor tax, which includes generating revenue for the State and
supporting public health objectives.

����
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act
is to:

����
(1)
�
Replace the defined
liquor categories subject to the liquor tax with alcohol-by-volume categories;
and

����
(2)
�
Amend the liquor
tax rates to account for inflation since 1998 by applying a CPI-U-based
adjustment according to the most recent available data.

����
SECTION
2
.
�
Section 244D-1,
Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:

1.
�
By amending the definition of
"liquor" to read:

����
""Liquor"
has the same meaning as set forth in section 281-1 and includes alcohol, and
the [
liquor
]
alcohol-by-volume
categories[
:
�
beer, draft beer, cooler beverage, distilled
spirits, and wine.
]
taxed at the applicable rates under section
244D-4(a).
"

����
2.
�

By deleting the definition of "beer".

����
["
"Beer" means any
alcoholic beverage obtained by the fermentation or any infusion or decoction of
barley, malt, hops, or any other similar product, or any combination thereof in
water, and includes ale, porter, brown, stout, lager beer, small beer, and
strong beer but does not include sake, known as Japanese rice wine, or cooler
beverage.
"]

����
3.
�

By deleting the definition of "cooler beverage".

����
["
"Cooler
beverage" means either a:

����
(1)
�
Wine cooler
containing wine and more than fifteen per cent added natural or artificial
blending material, such as fruit juices, flavors, flavorings, or adjuncts,
water (plain, carbonated, or sparkling), colorings, or preservatives, and that
contains less than seven per cent of alcohol by volume; or

����
(2)
�
Malt beverage
cooler containing beer and added natural or artificial blending material, such
as fruit juices, flavors, flavorings, colorings, or preservatives, and that
contains less than seven per cent of alcohol by volume.
"]

����
4.
�

By deleting the definition of "distilled spirits".

����
["
"Distilled
spirits" means an alcoholic beverage obtained by the distillation of
fermented agricultural products, and includes alcohol for beverage use, spirits
of wine, whiskey, rum, brandy, and gin, including all dilutions and mixtures
thereof, but does not include beer, draft beer, cooler beverage, or wine.
"]

����
5.
�

By deleting the definition of "draft beer".

����
["
"Draft beer"
means beer in an individual container of five gallons or more.
"]

����
6.
�

By deleting the definition of "sparkling wine".

����
["
"Sparkling wine"
means champagne and any other effervescent wine charged with more than 0.392
grams of carbon dioxide per 100 milliliters of wine, whether artificially or as
a result of secondary fermentation of wine within the container.
"]

����
7.
�

By deleting the definition of "still wine".

����
["
"Still wine"
means any nonsparkling wine and shall include those wines containing not more
than 0.392 grams of carbon dioxide per 100 milliliters of wine.
"]

����
8.
�

By deleting the definition of "wine".

����
["
"Wine" means the
product obtained from normal alcoholic fermentation of the juice of sound ripe
grapes or other agricultural products containing natural or added sugar or any
such alcoholic beverage to which is added grape brandy, fruit brandy, or
spirits of wine, which is distilled from the particular agricultural product or
products of which the wine is made and other rectified wine products and by
whatever name and which contains not more than twenty-four per cent of alcohol
by volume, and includes vermouth and sake, known as Japanese rice wine, but
does not include cooler beverage.
"]

����
SECTION
3
.
�
Section 244D-4,
Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as
follows:

����
"
(a)
�
Every person who
sells or uses any liquor in the State not taxable under this chapter, in
respect of the transaction by which the person or the person's vendor acquired
the liquor, shall pay a gallonage tax that is hereby imposed at the following
rates for the various [
liquor
]
alcohol-by-volume
categories [
defined
in section 244D-1:
]
listed in the applicable tax rate below:

����
On July 1, 1998, and thereafter, the tax
rate shall be:

����
(1)
�
$5.98
per wine gallon on distilled spirits;

����
(2)
�
$2.12
per wine gallon on sparkling wine;

����
(3)
�
$1.38
per wine gallon on still wine;

����
(4)
�
$0.85
per wine gallon on cooler beverages;

����
(5)
�
$0.93
per wine gallon on beer other than draft beer; and

����
(6)
�
$0.54
per wine gallon on draft beer;

and
at a proportionate rate for any other quantity so sold or used.

����
On July 1, 2026, and thereafter, the tax
rate shall be:

����
(1)
�
$1.00
per gallon on beverages 9.9 per cent alcohol by volume or lower;

����
(2)
�
$1.75
per gallon on beverages 10 per cent to 15 per cent alcohol by volume;

����
(3)
�
$6.00
per gallon on beverages 16 per cent to 40 per cent alcohol by volume; and

����
(4)
�
$6.50
per gallon on beverages above 40 per cent alcohol by volume;

and
at a proportionate rate for any other quantity so sold or used.
"

����
SECTION
4
.
�
Section 244D-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
amended to read as follows:

����
"
�244D-6
�

Return, form, contents.
�
Every taxpayer shall, on or before
the twentieth day of each month, file with the department a return showing all
sales of liquor by gallonage and dollar volume in each
[
liquor
]
alcohol-by-volume

category [
defined in section 244D-1 and
]
taxed under section 244D-4(a) made by the taxpayer during the
preceding month, showing separately the amount of the nontaxable sales, and the
amount of the taxable sales, and the tax payable thereon.
�
The form and manner of the return shall be
prescribed by the department and shall contain any information the department
may deem necessary for the proper administration of this chapter.
"

����
SECTION
5
.
�
Section 244D-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is
amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

����
"(a)
�
Every dealer shall keep a record of all sales
of liquor by gallonage and dollar volume in each [
liquor
]
alcohol-by-volume

category [
defined in section 244D-1 and
] taxed under section 244D-4(a)
made by the dealer, in a form prescribed by the department of taxation.
�
Every person holding a license under the
liquor law, other than a manufacturer's or wholesaler's license, shall keep a
record of all purchases by the person of liquor by gallonage and dollar volume
in each [
liquor
]
alcohol-by-volume
category [
defined in
section 244D-1 and
] taxed under section 244D-4(a), in a form prescribed by
the department.
�
All records shall be
offered for inspection and examination at any time upon demand by the
department and shall be preserved for a period of five years, except that the
department may in writing consent to their destruction within the five-year
period or may require that they be kept longer.

����
The
department may by rule require the dealer to keep other records as it may deem
necessary for the proper enforcement of this chapter."

����
SECTION 6.
�
Statutory material to be repealed is
bracketed and stricken.
�
New statutory
material is underscored.

����
SECTION 7.
�
This Act shall take effect upon its approval.

INTRODUCED BY:

_____________________________

Report Title:

Liquor
Tax; Taxation; Alcohol By Volume

Description:

Replaces
the defined liquor categories subject to the liquor tax with alcohol-by-volume categories.
�
Adjusts the liquor tax rates for inflation.

The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.