Illinois lawmakers weigh options to change rising property tax structure
[March 09, 2026]
By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Republican state Rep. Joe Sosnowski has filed
legislation he hopes will make life easier on Illinois residents now
facing some of the highest property taxes in the country.
With the issue of affordability being a critical one across much of the
nation, Sosnowski recently filed House Bill 4626, which seeks to cap
rising property taxes by basing costs on the equalized assessed value of
a home in the year that it was bought.
Final assessment costs would then not increase for as long as the person
owns their home, with the goal being to make housing more attractive and
affordable for first-time buyers, working families and fixed income
seniors.
“We're not growing, and one of the biggest problems is we have the
highest property tax rate and the highest overall combined tax rate of
any of the 50 states,” Sosnowski told The Center Square. “This
legislation would be an immediate help to homeowners. It allows people
to have an investment that grows, similar to retirement accounts and
things that just because they grow in value doesn't mean you pay more
taxes year to year.”
With Illinois also being home to the most local taxing bodies, House
Bill 3723 would also cap annual property tax increases at 1% for seniors
and House Bill 3724 would cap all such increases for homeowners at 3%.
“It's been proven that other states with low property taxes are always
appealing for people that want to move and invest in a residence,”
Sosnowski said. “We've got to do that. There's a lot more states now
starting to talk about phasing out property tax completely or limiting
it in drastic ways so that it becomes less of a burden. It's detrimental
to people if we have the highest property tax in the nation. We've seen
over time is that people are just voting by leaving.”

[to top of second column]
|

A stack of U.S. one-dollar bills bound in a $100 band with
additional bills underneath. Photo: Emilee Calametti / The Center
Square

With all three bills have now been referred to the Rules Committee,
Democratic State Rep. LaShawn Ford questions if they truly stand to
make a difference for most.
“You have people that don't own, and we have to worry about their
affordability,” Ford told The Center Square. “Affordability is
inflation and the cost of health care, the cost of food, gas. We
need to make sure that we do everything we can to look at
affordability across the board.”
While Ford warms to aspects of Sosnowski’s plan, such as the cap for
seniors, he takes issue with what he sees as its lack of overall
fairness.
“You have people that actually gut a property out and just keep the
foundation, keep the four walls and build a whole new home and we're
going to assess them at the same value as others, as if it was just
built,” he said. That doesn't make sense, and then that's cheating
local governments; it’s cheating the schools, the parks, the fire
and police.”
Ford instead argues in favor of a millionaire’s tax where he insists
the revenues could be extended to aid more residents.
“That's what we want to do,” he said. “We want to help the system,
help property owners as well as make sure that there are no
unintended consequences for the municipalities and the communities.”
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |