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H3979 • 2025

An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption

An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption

Taxes
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Kate Lipper-Garabedian
Last action
2025-09-26
Official status
Signed by the Governor, Chapter 35 of the Acts of 2025
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption

An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption By Representative Lipper-Garabedian of Melrose, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.

What This Bill Does

  • An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption By Representative Lipper-Garabedian of Melrose, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.
  • 3979) of Kate Lipper-Garabedian (with the approval of the mayor and city council) that the city of Melrose be authorized to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption in said city.
  • Revenue.
  • [Local Approval Received.]

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2025-09-26 Executive

    Signed by the Governor, Chapter 35 of the Acts of 2025

  2. 2025-09-18 Senate

    Enacted and laid before the Governor

  3. 2025-09-17 House

    Enacted

  4. 2025-09-15 Senate

    Taken out of the Orders of the Day

  5. 2025-09-15 Senate

    Read second, ordered to a third reading, read third (title changed) and passed to be engrossed

  6. 2025-08-14 Senate

    Read; and placed in the Orders of the Day for the next session

  7. 2025-08-11 House

    Read third and passed to be engrossed

  8. 2025-07-31 House

    Committee reported that the matter be placed in the Orders of the Day for the next sitting

  9. 2025-07-31 House

    Rules suspended

  10. 2025-07-31 House

    Read second and ordered to a third reading

  11. 2025-07-28 House

    Bill reported favorably by committee and referred to the committee on House Steering, Policy and Scheduling

  12. 2025-05-08 Joint

    Hearing scheduled for 05/13/2025 from 10:30 AM-01:00 PM in A-1

  13. 2025-04-03 Senate

    Senate concurred

  14. 2025-03-31 House

    Referred to the committee on Revenue

Official Summary Text

An Act authorizing the City of Melrose to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption
By Representative Lipper-Garabedian of Melrose, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 3979) of Kate Lipper-Garabedian (with the approval of the mayor and city council) that the city of Melrose be authorized to establish a means tested senior citizen property tax exemption in said city. Revenue. [Local Approval Received.]

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
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Bill H.3979

SECTION 1. With respect to each qualifying parcel of real property classified as class one, residential in the city of Melrose there shall be an exemption from the property tax in an amount as provided for in section 3.

The exemption shall be applied to the domicile of the taxpayer only. For the purposes of this act, “parcel” shall be a unit of real property as defined by the board of assessors of the city under the deed for the property and shall include a condominium unit. The exemption provided for herein shall be in addition to any and all other exemptions allowed by the General Laws.

SECTION 2. Real property shall qualify for the exemption pursuant to section 1 if all of the following criteria are met: (1) the qualifying real property is owned and occupied by a person whose prior year’s income would make the person eligible for the circuit breaker income tax credit pursuant to subsection (k) of section 6 of chapter 62 of the General Laws; (2) the qualifying real property is owned by a single applicant age 65 or older at the close of the previous year or jointly by persons either of whom is age 65 or above at the close of the previous year, if the joint applicant is 60 years of age or older; (3) the qualifying real property is owned and occupied by the applicant or joint applicants as their domicile; (4) the applicant or at least 1 of the joint applicants has been domiciled and owned a home in the city of Melrose for at least 10 consecutive years before filing an application for the exemption; (5) the assessed value of the domicile is no greater than the prior year’s maximum assessed value for qualification for the circuit breaker income tax credit pursuant to said subsection (k) of said section 6 of said chapter 62, as adjusted annually by the department of revenue; and (6) the board of assessors has approved the application.

SECTION 3. The exemption amount provided for in section 1 above shall be one hundred percent of the circuit breaker income tax credit pursuant to subsection (k) of section 6 of chapter 62 of the General Laws for which the applicant qualified in the previous year. The total amount exempted by this act shall be allocated proportionally within the tax levy on all residential taxpayers.

SECTION 4. A person who seeks to qualify for the exemption pursuant to section 1 shall, before the deadline established by the board of assessors, file an application, on a form to be adopted by the board of assessors, with the supporting documentation of the applicant’s income and assets as described in the application. The application shall be filed each year for which the applicant seeks the exemption. The board of assessors of the city of Melrose may deny an application for an exemption pursuant to section 1 if they find the applicant has excessive assets that place the applicant outside the category of intended recipients of the senior exemption created by this act.

SECTION 5. No exemption shall be granted under this act until the department of revenue certifies a residential tax rate for the applicable tax year where the total exemption amount is raised by a burden shift within the residential tax levy.

SECTION 6. This act shall take effect immediately upon passage, and shall replace Chapter 100 of the Acts of 2022. This act shall be repealed after 3 years of implementation of this exemption.

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