County TestimonyFeaturedhousingMaui CountyProperty Taxes

Increase property tax exemptions to provide relief for owners and renters

May 19, 2026, 9 a.m.
Kalana O Maui Building

To: Maui County Council Committee on Budget, Finance and Economic Development
Yuki Lei Sugimura, Chair
Kauanoe Batangan, Vice Chair

From: Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
Jonathan Helton, Policy Analyst

Re: Bill 181 (2025) — INCREASING THE AMOUNT OF THE HOME AND LONG-TERM RENTAL EXEMPTIONS

Aloha Chair Sugimura, Vice Chair Batangan and other members of the Committee,

The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii supports Bill 181 (2025), which would increase Maui County’s property tax home exemption from $300,000 to $400,000 and its long-term rental exemption from $200,000 to $300,000.

Bill 181 (2025) would also increase the home exemption for owner-occupied properties where a rental, such as an accessory dwelling, is also on the property, from $400,000 to $500,000.

This is a good bill because it provides tax relief to homeowners and owners of long-term rentals who have seen their property values increase dramatically in recent years.

The values of the home and long-term rental exemptions have not been increased recently to offset high property assessments. The home exemption was last increased in 2022, and the long-term rental exemption has not been changed since it was created in 2021.[1]

Increasing these exemptions by $100,000 each would help offset the higher assessments caused in part by Maui County’s housing crisis, and provide valuable tax relief to local families.

The average gross assessed value of properties in the owner-occupied tax class has increased by 28% since fiscal 2024. Meanwhile, the average gross assessed value of properties in the long-term rental class has increased by close to 63% since fiscal 2023.[2]

Furthermore, this bill would not cost the county treasury much at current tax rates. Increasing the home exemption by $100,000 would save Maui residents approximately $5.1 million,[3] and increasing the long-term rental exemption by $100,000 would save Maui rental owners approximately $1.28 million.[4]

This totals less than 1% of the $660 million in property tax revenue the county expects to collect in fiscal 2027.

A further step the Council could take to provide a relief is to index the value of these exemptions to changes in the average assessed values of properties in the classes.

This would ensure that exemptions increase when assessments spike, which would help mitigate the financial burden that higher property taxes can place on county residents.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify.

Jonathan Helton
Policy Analyst
Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
1050 Bishop St. #508 | Honolulu, HI 96813 | 808-864-1776 | info@grassrootinstitute.org

[1] Ordinance 5404, Maui County Council, signed into law by Mayor Richard Bissen on Aug. 9, 2022; and  “New Long-Term Rental Exemption and Classification in Effect Jan. 1,” Maui Now, July 14, 2021.
[2] “County of Maui Real Property Tax Valuation for Fiscal Year 2025 – 2026” and “County of Maui Real Property Tax Valuation for Fiscal Year 2022 – 2023,” Real Property Assessment Division, Honolulu Department of Budget and Fiscal Services, July 2025; and “Selected Real Property Statistics For Budget Consideration Fiscal Year 2026-2027,” Maui County Department of Finance, p. 5.
[3] This estimate is calculated by multiplying $100,000 by the 0.0018 rate for Tier 2 owner-occupied properties and then multiplying the result by 28,387 — the number of properties in the owner-occupied class. The actual cost would likely be lower than this because the average assessed value of the class is $1.16 million — below the proposed $1.5 million breakpoint for Tier 2.
[4] This is a back-of-the-envelope estimate calculated by multiplying $295 by 4,350 — the number of parcels in the long-term rental class for fiscal 2027.

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