Back to New Hampshire

CACR12 • 2026

(New Title) the adoption of tax laws.

(New Title) the adoption of tax laws.

Labor Taxes
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Timothy Lang (R), Mark McConkey (R), Keith Murphy (R), Tim McGough (R), Victoria Sullivan (R), David Rochefort (R), Daniel Innis (R), Daryl Abbas (R), Howard Pearl (r), James Gray (R), Kevin Avard (R), Denise Ricciardi (R), Bill Gannon (R), Regina Birdsell (R)
Last action
2026-05-14
Official status
HOUSE
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Checked against official source text during the last sync.

No Personal Income Tax

This bill proposes to add an amendment to New Hampshire's constitution that would prevent the House of Representatives from creating any taxes based on personal income.

What This Bill Does

  • Adds a new article, Article 18-b, to the second part of New Hampshire’s Constitution.
  • Prohibits the House of Representatives from adopting taxes based on wages, earned income, or other forms of individual income.
  • Allows for the taxation of businesses and corporations as permitted under existing laws.

Who It Names or Affects

  • The House of Representatives
  • Individual taxpayers in New Hampshire

Terms To Know

Constitutional Amendment
A change or addition to a country's constitution that requires special procedures for approval.
House of Representatives
The lower house in the New Hampshire General Court, responsible for making laws and proposing constitutional amendments.

Limits and Unknowns

  • It is unclear how this amendment will affect existing tax laws or future legislative actions.
  • Voters must approve the amendment in a general election before it becomes part of the constitution.

Amendments

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

Amendment #2026-1134h : AA RC 192-148 05/14/2026 HJ 13

Plain English: Amendment #2026-1134h : AA RC 192-148 05/14/2026 HJ 13 1

  • The official amendment file could not be read automatically during the last sync, so only the official amendment metadata is shown right now.

Bill History

  1. 2026-05-14 H

    Special Order to next order of business (Rep. Sweeney): MA VV 05/14/2026 HJ 13

  2. 2026-05-14 H

    Amendment #2026-1134h : AA RC 192-148 05/14/2026 HJ 13

  3. 2026-05-14 H

    FLAM #2026-1903h (Rep. Oppel): AF RC 17-322 05/14/2026 HJ 13

  4. 2026-05-14 H

    Ought to Pass with Amendment 2026-1134h: MF RC 193-148 Lacking Necessary Three-Fifths Vote 05/14/2026 HJ 13

  5. 2026-05-06 H

    Majority Committee Report: Ought to Pass with Amendment #2026-1134h (NT) 04/27/2026 (Vote 11-9; RC) HC 19 P. 29

  6. 2026-05-06 H

    Minority Committee Report: Inexpedient to Legislate

  7. 2026-04-15 H

    Full Committee Work Session: 04/27/2026 10:00 am GP 159

  8. 2026-04-15 H

    Executive Session: 04/27/2026 10:30 am GP 159

  9. 2026-04-01 H

    Public Hearing on non-germane Amendment #2026-1134h : 04/15/2026 03:00 pm SH Reps Hall

  10. 2026-03-09 H

    Public Hearing: 03/09/2026 10:45 am GP 159

  11. 2026-02-26 H

    Introduced (in recess of) 02/19/2026 and referred to Ways and Means HJ 5

  12. 2026-02-19 S

    Ought to Pass, RC 16Y-8N, MA, by Necessary 3/5; OT3rdg; 02/19/2026 SJ 4

  13. 2026-02-11 S

    Committee Report: Ought to Pass, 02/19/2026, Vote 5-2; SC 6

  14. 2026-01-21 S

    Hearing: 01/27/2026, Room 103, SH, 01:15 pm; SC 3

  15. 2025-11-24 S

    Introduced 01/07/2026 and Referred to Finance; SJ 1

Official Summary Text

(New Title) the adoption of tax laws.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
CACR 12 - AS AMENDED BY THE HOUSE

14May2026... 1134h
2026 SESSION
26-2117
07/08

CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
12

RELATING TO:
the adoption of tax laws.

PROVIDING THAT:
the house of representatives may not adopt based on personal income.

SPONSORS: Sen. Lang, Dist 2; Sen. McGough, Dist 11; Sen. Innis, Dist 7; Sen. Gray, Dist 6; Sen. Gannon, Dist 23; Sen. McConkey, Dist 3; Sen. Sullivan, Dist 18; Sen. Abbas, Dist 22; Sen. Avard, Dist 12; Sen. Birdsell, Dist 19; Sen. Murphy, Dist 16; Sen. Rochefort, Dist 1; Sen. Pearl, Dist 17; Sen. Ricciardi, Dist 9

COMMITTEE: Finance

-----------------------------------------------------------------

AMENDED ANALYSIS

This constitutional amendment concurrent resolution prohibits the house of representatives from adopting any tax on personal income.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Explanation: Matter added to current law appears in
bold italics.
Matter removed from current law appears [
in brackets and struckthrough.
]
Matter which is either (a) all new or (b) repealed and reenacted appears in regular type

14May2026... 1134h 26-2117
07/08
STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

In the Year of Our Lord Two Thousand Twenty-Six

CONCURRENT RESOLUTION PROPOSING CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

RELATING TO:
the adoption of tax laws.

PROVIDING THAT:
the house of representatives may not adopt based on personal income.

Be it Resolved by the Senate, the House of Representatives concurring, that the
Constitution of New Hampshire be amended as follows:

I. That the second part of the constitution be amended by inserting after article 18-a the following new article:
[Art.] 18-b. [Taxes Based on Personal Income Prohibited.] The house of representatives shall not adopt a tax on wages, earned income, personal income, or other income of individuals. This prohibition shall apply to any tax measured in whole or in part by personal income, regardless of its designation. Nothing in this article shall prohibit the taxation of businesses, corporations, or other non-individual entities as otherwise permitted under this constitution.
II. That the above amendment proposed to the constitution be submitted to the qualified voters of the state at the state general election to be held in November, 2026.
III. That the selectmen of all towns, cities, wards and places in the state are directed to insert in their warrants for the said 2026 election an article to the following effect: To decide whether the amendments of the constitution proposed by the 2026 session of the general court shall be approved.
IV. That the wording of the question put to the qualified voters shall be:
“Are you in favor of amending the second part of the constitution by inserting after article 18-a a new article to read as follows:
[Art.] 18-b. [Taxes Based on Personal Income Prohibited.] The house of representatives shall not adopt a tax on wages, earned income, personal income, or other income of individuals. This prohibition shall apply to any tax measured in whole or in part by personal income, regardless of its designation. Nothing in this article shall prohibit the taxation of businesses, corporations, or other non-individual entities as otherwise permitted under this constitution.”
V. That the secretary of state shall print the question to be submitted on a separate ballot with other constitutional questions or on the official ballot. The ballot containing the question shall include 2 ovals next to the question allowing the voter to vote “Yes” or “No.” If no oval is marked, the ballot shall not be counted on the question. The outside of the ballot shall be the same as the regular official ballot except that the words “Questions Relating to Constitutional Amendments proposed by the 2026 General Court” shall be printed in bold type at the top of the ballot.
VI. That if the proposed amendment is approved by 2/3 of those voting on the amendment, it becomes effective when the governor proclaims its adoption.
VII. Voters' Guide.
AT THE PRESENT TIME, the house of representatives may adopt a tax on personal income.
IF THE AMENDMENT IS ADOPTED, the house of representatives may not adopt a tax on personal income.