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HB960 • 2026

Personal property taxes; valuation, effective clause.

A BILL to amend and reenact § 58.1-3503 of the Code of Virginia, relating to personal property taxes; valuation.

Agriculture Taxes
Enacted

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

Sponsor
Watts
Last action
2026-03-03
Official status
Continued
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill's effectiveness is contingent upon reenactment in 2027.

Personal Property Taxes; Valuation

This bill changes how tangible personal property used in a trade or business, excluding specific types of vehicles and equipment, is valued for personal property taxes in Virginia.

What This Bill Does

  • Changes the way tangible personal property employed in a trade or business, other than certain specified items like farm animals, machinery, and various motor vehicles, must be valued based on a percentage of its original cost to the taxpayer.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Businesses that own tangible personal property used for trade or business purposes.
  • Taxpayers who need to value their property for tax purposes.

Terms To Know

Tangible Personal Property
Physical items owned by a person or business, such as equipment and vehicles.
Original Cost
The initial price paid for an item when it was first purchased.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill's provisions will not take effect unless the Virginia General Assembly reenacts them in 2027.
  • It does not specify how other types of property, such as farm animals and machinery, are valued.

Amendments

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

HB960AHC2

2026-01-29 • Committee

Subcommittee #2 Subcommittee Amendment

Plain English: The amendment changes a bill about personal property taxes by adding a new requirement that the bill's provisions will only take effect if it is passed again in the next year's legislative session.

  • Removes all text from line 81 of the original bill.
  • Adds a new clause after the removed line, stating that the bill’s changes won't become law unless the same bill passes again during the 2027 legislative session.
  • The exact content removed from line 81 is not provided in the amendment text.
  • It's unclear what specific impact this new clause will have on the implementation of the bill’s provisions.
HB960AH1

2026-01-29 • Committee

Finance Amendment

Plain English: The amendment adds a condition that the bill's changes will only take effect if the same changes are passed again in the next legislative session.

  • Adds a clause stating that the bill’s provisions will not become effective unless reenacted by the 2027 Session of the General Assembly.
  • The amendment does not specify what changes are being made to § 58.1-3503, only that they won't take effect without further action in 2027.
HB960AHC1

2026-01-29 • Committee

Finance Amendment

Plain English: The amendment changes how a bill about personal property taxes in Virginia will take effect.

  • Removes all text from line 81 of the original bill.
  • Adds new language after line 81, stating that the bill's provisions won't become effective unless it is reenacted by the General Assembly in 2027.
  • The exact content removed from line 81 cannot be determined without seeing the original text.
  • It is unclear what specific changes will need to be made for the bill to be reenacted in 2027.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-03 Finance and Appropriations

    Continued to 2027 in Finance and Appropriations (15-Y 0-N)

  2. 2026-02-17 House

    Fiscal Impact statement From TAX (2/17/2026 4:03 pm)

  3. 2026-02-04 Senate

    Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)

  4. 2026-02-04 Finance and Appropriations

    Referred to Committee on Finance and Appropriations

  5. 2026-02-03 House

    Read third time and passed House Block Vote (98-Y 0-N 0-A)

  6. 2026-02-02 House

    Read second time

  7. 2026-02-02 House

    committee amendment agreed to

  8. 2026-02-02 House

    Engrossed by House as amended

  9. 2026-01-30 House

    Read first time

  10. 2026-01-29 House

    House committee offered

  11. 2026-01-28 Subcommittee #2

    House subcommittee offered

  12. 2026-01-28 Finance

    Reported from Finance with amendment(s) (21-Y 0-N)

  13. 2026-01-27 Subcommittee #2

    Subcommittee recommends reporting with amendment(s) (10-Y 0-N)

  14. 2026-01-21 House

    Fiscal Impact statement From TAX (1/21/2026 8:29 pm)

  15. 2026-01-13 House

    Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-14-2026 26104842D

  16. 2026-01-13 Finance

    Referred to Committee on Finance

Official Summary Text

Personal property taxes; valuation.
Requires that tangible personal property employed in a trade or business, other than such property set out for different valuation in current law, shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost to the taxpayer. Current law requires such property to be valued only by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost. The provisions of this bill do not become effective unless reenacted by the 2027 Session of the General Assembly.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
A BILL to amend and reenact §
58.1-3503
of the Code of Virginia, relating to personal property taxes; valuation.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §
58.1-3503
of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§
58.1-3503
. General classification of tangible personal property.
A. Tangible personal property is classified for valuation purposes according to the following separate categories which are not to be considered separate classes for rate purposes:
1. Farm animals, except as exempted under §
58.1-3505
.
2. Farm machinery, except as exempted under §
58.1-3505
.
3. Automobiles, except those described in subdivisions 7, 8, and 9 of this subsection and in subdivision A 8 of §
58.1-3504
, which shall be valued by means of a recognized pricing guide or if the model and year of the individual automobile are not listed in the recognized pricing guide, the individual vehicle may be valued on the basis of percentage or percentages of original cost. In using a recognized pricing guide, the commissioner shall use either of the following two methods. The commissioner may use all applicable adjustments in such guide to determine the value of each individual automobile, or alternatively, if the commissioner does not utilize all applicable adjustments in valuing each automobile, he shall use the base value specified in such guide which may be either average retail, wholesale, or loan value, so long as uniformly applied within classifications of property. If the model and year of the individual automobile are not listed in the recognized pricing guide, the taxpayer may present to the commissioner proof of the original cost, and the basis of the tax for purposes of the motor vehicle sales and use tax as described in §
58.1-2405
shall constitute proof of original cost. If such percentage or percentages of original cost do not accurately reflect fair market value, or if the taxpayer does not supply proof of original cost, then the commissioner may select another method which establishes fair market value.
4. Trucks of less than two tons, which may be valued by means of a recognized pricing guide or, if the model and year of the individual truck are not listed in the recognized pricing guide, on the basis of a percentage or percentages of original cost.
5. Trucks and other vehicles, as defined in §
46.2-100
, except those described in subdivisions 4, and 6 through 10 of this subsection, which shall be valued by means of either a recognized pricing guide using the lowest value specified in such guide or a percentage or percentages of original cost.
6. Manufactured homes, as defined in §
36-85.3
, which may be valued on the basis of square footage of living space.
7. Antique motor vehicles, as defined in §
46.2-100
, which may be used for general transportation purposes as provided in subsection D of §
46.2-730
.
8. Taxicabs.
9. Motor vehicles with specially designed equipment for use by individuals with disabilities, which shall not be valued in relation to their initial cost, but by determining their actual market value if offered for sale on the open market.
10. Motorcycles, mopeds, all-terrain vehicles, and off-road motorcycles as defined in §
46.2-100
, campers and other recreational vehicles, which shall be valued by means of a recognized pricing guide or a percentage or percentages of original cost.
11. Boats weighing under five tons and boat trailers, which shall be valued by means of a recognized pricing guide or a percentage or percentages of original cost.
12. Boats or watercraft weighing five tons or more, which shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost.
13. Aircraft, which shall be valued by means of a recognized pricing guide or a percentage or percentages of original cost.
14. Household goods and personal effects, except as exempted under §
58.1-3504
.
15. Tangible personal property used in a research and development business, which shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost.
16. Programmable computer equipment and peripherals used in business which shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost to the taxpayer, or by such other method as may reasonably be expected to determine the actual fair market value.
17. Computer equipment and peripherals used in a data center, as defined in subdivision A 43 of §
58.1-3506
, which shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost, or by such other method as may reasonably be expected to determine the actual fair market value.
18. All tangible personal property employed in a trade or business other than that described in subdivisions 1 through 17, which shall be valued by means of a percentage or percentages of original cost
to the taxpayer
.
19. Outdoor advertising signs regulated under Article 1 (§
33.2-1200
et seq.) of Chapter 12 of Title 33.2.
20. All other tangible personal property.
B. Methods of valuing property may differ among the separate categories, so long as each method used is uniform within each category, is consistent with requirements of this section and may reasonably be expected to determine actual fair market value as determined by the commissioner of revenue or other assessing official; however, assessment ratios shall only be used with the concurrence of the local governing body. A commissioner of revenue shall upon request take into account the condition of the property. The term "condition of the property" includes, but is not limited to, technological obsolescence of property where technological obsolescence is an appropriate factor for valuing such property. The commissioner of revenue shall make available to taxpayers on request a reasonable description of his valuation methods. Such commissioner, or other assessing officer, or his authorized agent, when using a recognized pricing guide as provided for in this section, may automatically extend the assessment if the pricing information is stored in a computer. For any locality in which the commissioner of revenue or other assessing official adjusts the valuation of property described in subdivision A 3 to account for the amount of mileage on such vehicles, such adjustment shall also be provided to motorcycles described in subdivision A 10.
[

2. That the provisions of this act shall become effective July 1, 2027.

]

[
2. That the provisions of this act shall not become effective unless reenacted by the 2027 Session of the General Assembly.
]