// Exemption
Sand and gravel for local road construction
B&O Tax exemption · RCW 82.04.415 · enacted 1965
Details
- Citation
- RCW 82.04.415
- Study reference
- E1090-1
- Tax type
- B&O Tax
- Preference type
- Exemption
- Category
- Government
- Year enacted
- 1965
- End date
- None scheduled
Fiscal impact (2024 study estimates)
- Revenue if repealed — local ($M)
- FY 2024: 0 · FY 2025: 0 · FY 2026: 0 · FY 2027: 0
- Revenue if repealed — state ($M)
- FY 2024: 0 · FY 2025: 0.26 · FY 2026: 0.31 · FY 2027: 0.32
- Taxpayer savings — local ($M)
- FY 2024: 0 · FY 2025: 0 · FY 2026: 0 · FY 2027: 0
- Taxpayer savings — state ($M)
- FY 2024: 0.27 · FY 2025: 0.29 · FY 2026: 0.31 · FY 2027: 0.32
CTI = confidential taxpayer information · D = unable to disclose
From the 2024 DOR Tax Exemption Study
82.04.415 - Sand and gravel for local road construction Description B&O tax does not apply to the cost of labor and services performed in mining, sorting, crushing, screening, washing, hauling, and stockpiling of sand, gravel and rock taken from a pit owned by or leased to a city or county. The sand, gravel or rock must be either: - Placed on a street of the city or county. - Sold at cost to another city or county for use on public roads. Purpose Reduces the cost of local governments building and maintaining streets and roads. Taxpayer ($ in millions): savings FY 2024 FY 2025 FY 2026 FY 2027 State Taxes $0.270 $0.290 $0.310 $0.320 Local Taxes $0.000 $0.000 $0.000 $0.000 Repeal of Repealing this deduction would increase revenues. exemption Potential ($ in millions): revenue gains FY 2024 FY 2025 FY 2026 FY 2027 from full repeal State Taxes $0.000 $0.260 $0.310 $0.320 Local Taxes $0.000 $0.000 $0.000 $0.000 Assumptions - This repeal takes effect July 1, 2024, and impacts 11 months of collections in fiscal year 2025. - Growth rate reflects the compound annual growth rate of 6.0% based on excise tax data. - Sand and gravel used in local construction represent 7.5% of government contrac
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This is reference data from the 2024 study — not advice, and 2025–26 legislation may have changed it. Three ways to go deeper: