HR-5366-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by W. Steube (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would provide federal income tax exclusions or reductions for payments received by individuals as a result of federally declared disasters. It would establish or clarify that certain disaster-related financial relief — such as insurance payouts, government assistance, or settlement payments tied to a disaster — would not be counted as taxable income. The specific mechanics and scope of the exclusions are not fully detailed in the available bill text.
Who benefits
Individuals and families who have received or will receive financial payments following a federally declared disaster, such as wildfire, flood, hurricane, or tornado victims. Homeowners who received insurance settlements for destroyed property. Residents of disaster-affected areas who received government assistance payments. Indirectly, disaster relief organizations and insurers may benefit from reduced friction in distributing aid. Californians affected by wildfires — given the bill's sponsor, Rep. Doug LaMalfa of Northern California — may be a primary intended beneficiary group.
Who is hurt
The federal government would collect less tax revenue, which could indirectly affect funding for federal programs. Taxpayers in non-disaster-affected areas who do not qualify for the exclusions bear the relative cost of the revenue reduction. State governments that conform their tax codes to federal law may also see reduced state tax revenue. Taxpayers who experienced disasters not covered by a federal disaster declaration would not benefit and may perceive unequal treatment.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that taxing disaster relief payments amounts to taxing people twice — once when they lose their homes or livelihoods, and again when they receive compensation meant to help them recover. They contend that disaster victims are already in financial distress and that tax liability on relief payments can delay or undermine recovery, citing examples where wildfire survivors faced unexpected tax bills on insurance proceeds. Providing certainty in the tax treatment of these payments, they argue, allows victims to plan their recovery without fear of a surprise tax burden.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that broad or permanent disaster tax exclusions create an uneven tax code where similarly situated taxpayers are treated differently based on geography and the federal disaster declaration process — a process that critics note is inconsistent and politically influenced. They contend that existing law already provides significant disaster-related tax relief through casualty loss deductions and prior legislative fixes, and that adding further exclusions without offsets increases the federal deficit, shifting costs to all other taxpayers. They may also argue the bill's benefits are narrowly concentrated in specific regions rather than addressing a universal need.