Due to the rise of remote work, office buildings aren’t as desirable or profitable as they once were. And their falling value has upended Boston’s tax system, cutting commercial collections by hundreds of millions of dollars.
To date, the city has chosen to fill this fiscal hole by raising residential tax rates, from 1.09 percent in 2024 to 1.24 percent in 2026.
Introducing rent control would exacerbate this already-serious challenge. In Boston, the average property owner can expect a reduction of around 9 percent over 3 years in their investment. This will result in a $160 million residential tax shortfall in 2029.
Filling this residential shortfall while continuing to deal with the drop in office values and heeding state rules for allowable tax rates would require a 13 percent rate increase for residents and an 8 percent rate increase on businesses.