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Taxes

Stop Giving Property Tax Breaks to Senior Citizens

If the government does not reduce the cost of public services, then a special tax break for one group merely forces everyone else to pick up the slack.

Eric Boehm | 5.28.2026 11:30 AM

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A picture of a house, stack of cash, and senior citizen couple | Illustration: Adani Samat. Photo: Yuri Arcurs/Dreamstime
(Illustration: Adani Samat. Photo: Yuri Arcurs/Dreamstime)

"Our seniors should not pay property taxes," says Rep. Nancy Mace (R–S.C.).

Normally, I'd advise against paying much attention to what Mace says and even less to what she posts on Twitter. Mace is one of the most performative and vapid members of Congress—a tall task, if you're familiar with her competition. She's most well-known for having meltdowns in airports, engaging in weird bits of performance art, and terrorizing staffers, all apparently guided by the old axiom that there's no such thing as bad publicity.

But there is such a thing as bad policy, and Mace's endorsement of expanding property tax breaks for senior citizens is exactly that.

Unfortunately, this is an idea that seems to be suddenly gaining traction with more serious Republican elected officials. Indiana Gov. Mike Braun told reporters this week that he's hoping to create a new tax break for older residents who have paid off their mortgages.

"Once you get to 65, maybe you ought to have some relief from your own government to not have property taxes after that," he said.

Yes, as a libertarian writing for a libertarian publication, I am obligated to pause for a moment and acknowledge the obvious fact: Lower taxes are better than higher taxes. Government policy should always be oriented towards allowing people to keep more of their own money, rather than obligating them to shovel it into the bottomless maw of government at all levels.

But specialized tax breaks for people within certain age brackets make very little sense—and they don't actually lower taxes. If the government does not reduce the cost of public services, then a special tax break for one group merely forces everyone else to pick up the slack.

A special tax break targeted specifically to senior citizens is worse. The median household headed by someone over age 65 had a net worth of more than $400,000 in 2022, according to Federal Reserve data. For those under age 35, the average was $39,000. However you look at it, elderly homeowners are plainly not a demographic that is desperately in need of tax relief—and giving property tax breaks to the old means pushing the entire property tax burden onto relatively poorer households.

It's also important to keep in mind that senior citizens are overwhelmingly the biggest beneficiaries of government spending. Social Security and Medicare account for more than one-third of all federal spending—and those "expenditures on the elderly dwarf all other publicly funded welfare benefits," as Chris Pope, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, has noted. Seniors are, on average, collecting far more in Social Security and Medicare benefits than what they contributed during their working years.

The federal government's massive wealth redistribution machine is showering older Americans with money seized from the paychecks of younger, generally poorer, working-age people. But when it comes time for senior citizens to help pay property taxes—which foot the bill for schools and other state and local government services in most parts of the country—politicians want to give the olds a free pass. How is that fair? Where's the payroll tax break for Americans under 40?

Exempting older people from property taxes has some unfortunate side effects, too.

Yes, the intention behind these policies is to make it easier for Granny and Gramps to stay in their home as they grow old. But downsizing should be a normal part of life. Increasingly, it's not. A 2024 survey from Freddie Mac found that nearly 70 percent of baby boomers—who account for 20 percent of the U.S. population but 36 percent of all homeowners—planned to stay in their homes for the foreseeable future.

That's fine for them, but it reduces the number of homes on the market, and the reduced supply likely increases housing prices for everyone trying to buy.

At the same time, remember that exempting or reducing taxes for some people means pushing more of a tax burden on everyone else—in this case, all homeowners under age 65.

In other words, younger Americans who want to buy a home are facing artificially low supply, the resulting higher prices, and then (if they are able to afford a house despite those hurdles) end up owing a larger share of the property tax burden. All so that wealthy retirees can keep their empty nests.

Government policy doesn't need to (and shouldn't) help boot Boomers out of their homes. But it also shouldn't help them stay there longer.

The final kicker here is that Mace's and Braun's states—like most states—already offer some form of property tax relief to senior citizens. South Carolina exempts the first $50,000 in property value from taxation, but only for residents over age 65 (or disabled or blind). Indiana automatically reduces seniors' tax bills by up to $150.

Politicians are understandably looking for ways to address Americans' worries about the cost of living. Even so, these proposals to eliminate property taxes for senior citizens amount to nothing more than a promise to deliver even more special tax treatment to a cohort that's wealthier than average, receiving outsized government benefits, and already getting special tax treatment.

Instead of promising more tax breaks for senior citizens, we need elected officials who will reverse those foolish policies already on the books. Mace is wrong. Our seniors should pay property taxes, just like everyone else.

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NEXT: Leaked Plans Show School Buses Could Become Roaming Surveillance Vehicles

Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

Taxesproperty taxesFiscal policyEntitlementsTaxpayersBaby boomersHousing PolicySouth Carolina
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  1. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   1 hour ago

    Boomers gotta blow shit up.

    Log in to Reply
  2. minus the clever name   1 hour ago

    Well., maybe we could retain it. You are right, it's the profligate unmanaged BIDEN/PELOSI spending that is the damn problem.
    When I saw that Janet Yellen said we should be spending at least $3 TRILLION per year for climate, I thought "Who the hell are you ???"

    Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen stated that the global shift to a low-carbon economy requires $3 trillion in new investment annually through 2050. She has championed this initiative by urging international development banks to expand lending and emphasizing that the green transition is the "single-greatest economic opportunity of the 21st century".

    Log in to Reply
    1. Nelson   37 minutes ago

      “ profligate unmanaged BIDEN/PELOSI spending”

      And then came the OBBB, where Trump said “Hold my beer”.

      Even before this misbegotten war and $2 billion slush funds, the OBBB was the largest deficit spending bill in history. And that’s saying a lot, since Biden spent in a way that made drunken sailors say, “You’re doing what now?”.

      Deficit spending is a bipartisan sport and each successive administration looks at the last’s borrowing as a record to break.

      “Fuck you, cut spending” is an empty platitude, since the deficit is the problem and you can’t cut spending enough to balance the budget without reforming SS, Medicare, and Medicaid.

      Log in to Reply
  3. Mickey Rat   1 hour ago

    "The median household headed by someone over age 65 had a net worth of more than $400,000 in 2022, according to Federal Reserve data."

    OK, but how much of that net worth is the value of their house, if they own one? Why is there an understanding when talking about wealth taxes that high net worth does not mean having a high amount of liquid assets, but not the same understanding when it comes to property taxes with the senior population? Especially when we have lived through a ridiculously inflated housing market over the past six years? We are talking about a demographic group that has a limited income.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   6 minutes ago

      Reason doesnt have financial experts working for them.

      Ironically the article should be stop charging property tax and just charge for services directly. But not at reason.

      Also remember they read CATO where Bier literally claimed funding illegal mortgages and importing them and paying rent for illegals raised property values for citizens so was a benefit.

      Log in to Reply
  4. Rick James   1 hour ago

    I like to think of these tax breaks for Sr. Citizens like Immigration. Let's agree to disagree, keep the tax breaks in place and instead embark on the long road of reducing property taxes for everyone.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

      But where will we find the money to pay for services illegal immigrants use?

      Log in to Reply
      1. middlefinger   23 minutes ago

        Taxpayer subsidized apartments in taxpayer subsidized energy and water counties, near taxpayer subsidized public transportation near taxpayer subsidized public schools near………..

        Every freakin day Reason writes about subsidized apartments for illegals. No wealth taxes on billionaires, but all in on wealth taxes on middle class families.

        It’s hard to justify public housing projects for illegals and in the next breath say, “we should cut spending”.

        Log in to Reply
  5. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

    #libertarians4progressivetaxes
    #libertarians4payinggovernmentrent

    Log in to Reply
  6. Spiritus Mundi   56 minutes ago

    Yes, as a libertarian writing for a libertarian publication.....
    But specialized tax.....

    Everything that is said before the word 'but' is a lie, debauched by everything that follows.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   3 minutes ago

      The consistency of someone writing they are a libertarian before their opinion continues to show they aren't actually libertarian. They are just using the word to justify their beliefs.

      Log in to Reply
  7. Rick James   50 minutes ago

    Manhattan sophisticate wonders why everyone in America can't just learn to love an 800 sq ft cold-water walkup.

    Don’t just build smaller houses, get people to like them

    My Manhattan apartment is about 800 square feet, the same size as my upstairs neighbors’ — except they’re a family of four plus a large dog. Much as that blows my mind, I also realize that, not so long ago, an 800-square-foot apartment for a family of four in New York would have counted as luxurious.

    How far we’ve come. A married couple living in a 2,000-square-foot house in suburban Salt Lake City recently told The New York Times that, though they always imagined having several children, they were now reluctant because they would need a bigger house, which they couldn’t afford. Even if they were just rationalizing their decision, there is a correlation between falling birthrates and rising home costs.

    Log in to Reply
  8. JFree   29 minutes ago

    Politicians are understandably looking for ways to address Americans' worries about the cost of living...Instead of promising more tax breaks for senior citizens, we need elected officials who will reverse those foolish policies already on the books.

    Get rid of elections and you get rid of pandering to voters. Random selection - sortition - is the solution. The equivalent of militia service for defense and jury duty for justice.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   22 minutes ago

      Heh, you finally said something I agree with. The problem with politics is not the People. It is the political class.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 minute ago

        Just dont vote them out ever, massie/cornyn . Except trump.

        Log in to Reply
  9. Nelson   27 minutes ago

    One of the reasons Delaware has a large influx of retirees is that we have a school tax exemption (zero right now, but likely to rise to 50% someday soon because it’s unsustainable). The tax burden in Delaware (even without the exemption) is one of the lowest in the country. We have no sales tax and a large percentage of the state is rural farmland, which developers love.

    However, that leaves the rest of us paying for schools which, as someone who isn’t using them, irritates me. If seniors get a break because they aren’t using the school system, shouldn’t everyone who doesn’t have kids in the system get an exemption as well?

    I understand that the tax system is designed to provide large subsidies for those who have children at the expense of those who don’t, but people like me are getting screwed from both ends, by both the young parents and the senior citizens.

    Log in to Reply
  10. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   17 minutes ago

    Schools are not that expensive. It is the giant, bloated administration that has sprung around them in the last 50 years that is cost prohibitive.

    Log in to Reply
  11. WellRedMan   6 minutes ago

    This misses a significant point. Social security payments are typically larger than the contributions paid in only if you ignore the compound interest which would have accumulated on those contributions over the working life of recipients for which they paid taxes. If that interest is considered, then many recipients are getting ripped off of tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of dollars they would have earned had the government not been stealing from them every paycheck.

    Log in to Reply
  12. middlefinger   2 seconds ago

    Like Adam Carolla says “why don’t you give those tax breaks to everyone, instead of just subsidized housing project developers and Hollywood”?

    Log in to Reply

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