Skip to content

Rhode Island Capitol Update

Rhode Island Capitol Update

June 1, 2026

Tax Hikes Clear Another Hurdle

Last Friday, the Rhode Island House Committee on Finance released the $15.2 billion FY2027 state budget. Included in the budget bill is an amended version of Governor McKee’s 3% tax surcharge on income over $1 million.

The House iteration of the tax plan will roll the tax hike over a 3-year period, adding 1% in 2027, an additional 1% in 2028, and reaching the full 3% in 2029. The Governor’s version rolled out the 3% tax surcharge in 2027.

What many small business owners may not realize, is that this tax could negatively impact pass-through businesses like S-corps, LLCs, partnerships, and sole proprietors who may be subjected to the higher 8.99% rate. As you are aware, a pass-through entity’s income is money used to reinvest in the business for land, equipment, facility upgrades, and job creation.

Rhode Island lawmakers have cited a similar tax on higher income earners in Massachusetts has yielded billions of dollars in tax revenue. But what they fail to mention is that Massachusetts lost a record number of residents following the implementation of their 4% surtax taking $4.2 billion in adjusted growth income with them.

NFIB Rhode Island State Director Christopher Carlozzi responded to media outlets following the budget’s Friday release saying:

“In the race to the bottom in national tax rankings, Rhode Island lawmakers chose a marathon approach over the Governor’s sprint. Gradually rolling a 3% income tax surcharge over a three-year period does nothing to help Rhode Island’s image as a high cost, high tax state. Instead, the proposal makes Rhode Island less competitive and progressively exposes pass-through entity small businesses to higher tax rates.”

 

Get to know NFIB

NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.

Receive our newsletter and email notification
Knowledge is power. Let us help you stay informed with breaking legislative news, regulatory updates, business tips, and more.

Related Articles

Panel discussion: woman in a light suit speaks with hand gesture to a man in a dark suit; water bottles on the table, American flag in background.
Related
June 11, 2026
NFIB Members Bring Small Business Agenda Directly to Washington Policymakers
Small business owners met with Administration and Congressional leaders during 2026 NFIB Fly-In
Read More
Car Mechanic Working
Related
June 10, 2026
Arizona Small Businesses Back Tax Conformity Deal
Bipartisan budget agreement delivers needed tax certainty to Main Street Arizonans.
Read More
Businessman pressing an Taxes concept button on a circular display.
Related
June 8, 2026
NFIB California Main Street Minute, June 8-12
Will a deal be cut to remove November ballot initiative on special taxes?
Read More
United States Capitol East Facade at angle
Related
June 8, 2026
Small Business Owners Converge on Capitol Hill for NFIB Fly-In
NFIB’s Annual Fly-In takes place June 8-10 in Washington, D.C.
Read More

© 2001 - 2026 National Federation of Independent Business. All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Accessibility