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Transfer Fee

About the Bill
Bill Highlights
Contact Your Legislators
Talking Points & Sample Tweets
Write a Letter to the Editor
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About the Bill

Full title: An Act granting a local option for a real estate transfer fee to fund affordable housing (H.2747 / S.1771)

Lead Sponsors: Rep. Mike Connolly; Sen. Jo Comerford

Committee: Joint Committee on Revenue

The Issue

Massachusetts faces a growing affordable housing crisis. To rent the average 2-bedroom apartment in Massachusetts requires an income equal to $37.97 per hour, more than twice the minimum wage. Home ownership has become increasingly out of reach, as the state’s median home price has passed $600,000. The high cost of housing has led to displacement, and in a growing number of municipalities, the local workforce can no longer afford to live there. As state law prevents municipalities from generating new funding for affordable housing, the crisis deepens. 

The Solution: Smart Flexibility for the Distinctiveness of Each Community

Under the bill, municipalities could impose a transfer fee between 0.5% and 2% on real estate transactions above $1 million (or above the county median sale price for a single family home if the county’s median sales price is below $750,000) to create a dedicated revenue stream for affordable housing production and preservation.

  • Fee: No less than 0.5% and no more than 2%, with the possibility of different fees for different types of property
  • Payer: Up to the municipality. Cities and towns can decide whether the fee will be borne by purchaser, seller, or some allocation between the two.
  • Threshold: The bill would exempt transfers for less than $1 million or such higher threshold amount as set by the city or town municipality since each community knows its housing market best (If the county median sales price is below $750,000, the exemption threshold would be transfers above the county median sales price. This is largely a Western Mass provision.) Example: Boston’s home rule petition relates to property over $2 million (and only the portion above $2 million)
  • Further Exemptions: Cities and towns are able to make them as they see fit.
  • Cities & Towns with Such Proposals:  Arlington, Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Concord, Chatham, Nantucket, Provincetown, Somerville, Truro, and Wellfleet have filed Home Rule Petitions.
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Contact Your Legislators

Find your legislators’ contact information here.

Massachusetts has a housing crisis. To rent the average 2-bedroom apartment in Massachusetts requires an income equal to $37.97 per hour, more than twice the minimum wage. Home ownership has become increasingly out of reach, as the state’s median home price has passed $600,000. This is not sustainable. 

Please co-sponsor the Transfer Fee bill — An Act granting a local option for a real estate transfer fee to fund affordable housing (H.2747 / S.1771), filed by Sen. Jo Comerford and Rep. Mike Connolly. 

Many municipalities would like to act, but they remain hamstrung by outdated state policies that limit what action cities and towns can take. Indeed, Arlington, Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Chatham, Nantucket, Provincetown, Somerville, Truro, and Wellfleet have filed Home Rule Petitions in order to enact real estate transfer fees, levying a small fee on large real estate transactions in order to create a dedicated revenue stream for affordable housing production and preservation. 

By passing enabling legislation like this bill, the Legislature would give cities and towns the flexibility to pass such ordinances and prevent their own process from being bogged down by local approvals. 

These cities and towns want to be places where residents can afford to live at any stage of life. The Legislature should let them. 

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Talking Points & Sample Tweets

  • We need every tool in the toolbox to address our affordable housing crisis. A real estate #TransferFee will empower municipalities to do just that. #mapoli
  • Housing is a human right, and a real estate #TransferFee can provide some of the revenue we need to build and preserve more affordable housing. #mapoli
  • Real estate speculators are extracting millions of dollars in profits from our communities each week. A real estate #TransferFee can help municipalities keep wealth in the community. #mapoli
  • We need more affordable housing and the resources to make it happen. A real estate #TransferFee can provide that. #mapoli
  • Communities across MA are grappling with an affordable housing crisis. A local option #TransferFee will empower them to take action. #mapoli
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Write a Letter to the Editor

Adapt the template below! Or email us at issues@progressivemass.com for help!

Practically every week, we see a new statistic about how severe the housing crisis in Massachusetts has gotten. To rent the average 2-bedroom apartment in Massachusetts requires an income equal to $37.97 per hour, more than twice the minimum wage. Home ownership has become increasingly out of reach, as the state’s median home price has passed $600,000. The high cost of housing has led to displacement, and in a growing number of municipalities, the local workforce can no longer afford to live there.

Many municipalities would like to act, but they remain hamstrung by outdated state policies that limit what action cities and towns can take. Indeed, Arlington, Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Chatham, Nantucket, Provincetown, Somerville, Truro, and Wellfleet have filed Home Rule Petitions in order to enact real estate transfer fees, levying a small fee on large real estate transactions in order to create a dedicated revenue stream for affordable housing production and preservation.

By passing enabling legislation, such as the bill filed by Sen. Jo Comerford (D-Northampton) and Rep. Mike Connolly (D-Cambridge), the Legislature would give cities and towns the flexibility to pass such ordinances and prevent their own process from being bogged down by local approvals.

These cities and towns want to be places where residents can afford to live at any stage of life, and Gov. Maura Healey and the Legislature should make sure that outdated laws don’t get in the way.

 

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