Ohio’s Property Tax Repeal Could Mean a 20% Sales Tax, DeWine Warns

by Allaire Conte

skyline-of-jacksonville

If Ohio voters abolish property taxes this November, as some grassroots organizers are pushing for, Gov. Mike DeWine says the replacement could come straight out of the checkout line. 

Referencing an Ohio Office of Budget Management (OBM) analysis, DeWine told reporters last week that sales tax rates would need to reach almost 20% to fill the gap left by the lost revenue from property taxes.

“It would be devastating for Ohio families,” he said.

The warning lands as grassroots campaigns in the state push a proposed constitutional amendment that would eliminate taxes on real property and bar any future version of them.

Organizers say the effort is a response to sticker-shock reassessments across the state. But the new memo suggests repeal would blow a $24 billion hole in local government budgets, jeopardizing funding for schools, police and fire departments, libraries, parks, and senior services unless lawmakers find a replacement on an unprecedented scale.

The memo’s bottom line: a $24 billion annual hole

An early-February memo from Ohio’s OBM puts a hard number on what property tax abolition would erase: roughly $24 billion a year from taxes on real property and public utility personal property. 

The memo frames that as a budget-scale loss, about on par with what the state collects from income and sales taxes combined.

“If that [abolition] were to happen, it would create an immediate and severe crisis,” DeWine told Ohio Township officials at the Winter Conference General Session in early February. “Many local services that depend on property tax funding would disappear almost overnight.”

And that overnight transformation would be huge. The memo estimates that local property taxes account for about 65% of local tax revenue in Ohio.

“No one likes paying taxes, but some taxes are necessary to maintain essential services,” DeWine continued. “Eliminating property taxes would also mean a loss of local control. Today, voters can approve or reject levies in their communities. If funding shifted entirely to the state level, that local authority would largely disappear.”

The replacement reality

And even if Ohio wanted to backfill local budgets quickly, the memo argues there’s no easy swap available.

Ohio already reimburses local governments for revenue lost to homestead exemptions for seniors and residents with disabilities, along with tax credits for residential homeowners. Those reimbursements cost the state more than $2 billion a year, making the prospect of finding tens of billions more to replace property taxes a fundamentally different order of problem.

For another, property taxes offer some of the most stable, predictable revenue to local governments. This is a fact that DeWine is hitting hard in his outreach to townships.

“Property taxes are relatively predictable unlike income and sales taxes which fluctuate more with economic conditions. These fluctuations make budgeting for public services more uncertain,” DeWine said.

That stability is part of what makes replacement so fraught. The OBM estimates that if Ohio tried to plug the hole primarily through sales taxes, the statewide rate would need to rise to roughly 15% to 18%. 

The memo warns that jumps of that magnitude could change consumer behavior, driving tax avoidance and pushing spending across state lines, ultimately undermining the very revenue the state would be counting on.

“Such astronomical increases would drive citizens and businesses to tax avoidance, pushing consumer spending out of state especially in border counties, harming small businesses and local economies,” the memo warns.

To blunt the size of a rate hike, the memo says lawmakers could broaden what the sales tax applies to, potentially taxing categories that are currently exempt, including food, health care, or other goods and services. But it cautions that base-broadening would require major statutory changes and, in some cases, constitutional changes.

If lawmakers leaned instead on income taxes, the memo estimates the necessary increase would be roughly 11% to 15% statewide. And if the burden shifted to the county level, some jurisdictions could require increases as steep as 27%—a shift that would move Ohio from a low-tax outlier toward the upper tier of income-tax states.

How rising assessments turned into an abolition campaign

With no easy replacement on the table, the key question is why the abolition movement has gained so much traction anyway. The answer, in Ohio, starts with reassessments and the sticker shock that followed.

Under a quirk of Ohio law, counties conduct a full reappraisal every six years. That time frame typically shields homeowners from regular increases, but the 2024 round—which landed squarely after pandemic-era run-ups in home prices—triggered residential values to jump by more than 30% in some areas, setting the stage for steep tax increases.

The backlash was swift. Beth Blackmarr, media representative for Citizens for Property Tax Reform, the grassroots group leading the abolition push, told Realtor.com® in May 2025 that some longtime homeowners were suddenly facing property tax bills higher than their original mortgage payment. 

Blackmarr said she “hit the floor” when her own notice arrived. Her home’s assessed value had climbed 51.9%, bringing what she described as a massive tax hike.

State leaders have tried to respond. Lawmakers passed additional relief measures in 2025, and DeWine has argued recent changes should help smooth out the worst spikes. But organizers say the fixes don’t go far enough, and they’re still pressing for a constitutional amendment that would abolish taxes on real property and prohibit any future version of them.

DeWine is warning that if voters take that leap, Ohio could face a cascading local funding crisis.

“If that passed, it would just be devastating to all kinds of local governments, starting with schools but also police and fire and we would be in a huge crisis in the state of Ohio,” DeWine said.

But the movement has remained undeterred. After missing the deadline in 2025, organizers are working to gather and submit 600,000 signatures by July 1 to make the November ballot.

Keith Francis

"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "

+1(904) 874-2066

keith@roundtablerealty.com

1637 Racetrack Rd # 100, Johns, FL, 32259, United States

GET MORE INFORMATION

Name
Phone*
Message

By registering on this website, you hereby grant permission to Round Table Realty, its affiliates, and its agents to contact you via email, text message, telephone, and other communication methods, including but not limited to mass communication systems, unique communication systems, and automated or artificial intelligence systems. Such communications may be for the purposes of responding to inquiries, providing real estate services, marketing, or other business-related matters.

You acknowledge that these communications may include autodialed or prerecorded messages and that you consent to receiving such communications at the email address and phone number(s) you provide, even if your phone number is on a state or national Do Not Call registry. Message and data rates may apply.

This consent is not a condition of any purchase or transaction. You may revoke your consent to receive such communications at any time by notifying us in writing or using the opt-out mechanisms provided in the communication.

Florida-Specific Notice:
Pursuant to Florida law, you are hereby informed that your contact information may be used to provide information about real estate services, listings, and related topics. Round Table Realty complies with all applicable federal and state laws, including the Florida Telephone Solicitation Act (FTSA), and takes measures to ensure the security and confidentiality of your contact information.

For more information about our policies or to exercise your rights under applicable laws, please see our Privacy Policy.

By clicking “I'm Finished” or completing the registration process, you affirmatively acknowledge that you have read and understood this disclosure and consent to the above terms.