|
 |
"The health of our community as a whole depends on ensuring the
well-being of all of our individual members. Your tax dollars contribute
to a more vibrant, active and caring community for everyone by
supporting a breadth of needs ranging from roads, trails and land use
projects to programs that promote and protect the interests and health
of our residents." -Boulder County Commissioners |
Your taxes: a basic overview
There are two primary ways that you directly contribute
tax dollars to Boulder County: property
taxes on the property you own and sales and use taxes. Sales taxes
are collected at the point of purchase when you buy retail goods within Boulder
County, and use taxes
are assessed on motor vehicles (collected during vehicle registration) and
on building and construction materials purchased at retail (collected when a
building permit is obtained).
Property taxes
Property taxes within Boulder County vary according to your location within
municipal and special district boundaries. Received collectively by the
Boulder County Treasurer, your property taxes are then apportioned to the various
governmental agencies and special tax districts to which you belong, including your local school
district, fire protection district, municipality and/or water district. In all,
there are 88 taxing authorities (i.e., entities that receive a portion of your
property taxes each year) in Boulder County alone.
Boulder
County receives approximately 30% of your total property taxes and uses those funds to provide
essential services directly to residents as well as indirectly through funding
for local non-profits.
Sales and Use Taxes
Sales and use taxes are collected by the State of Colorado and reapportioned
back to the counties and municipalities in which they were collected. Boulder
County receives less than 1%* of the value of all purchases made in Boulder
County. For more information on sales and use taxes in Boulder County,
download the 2009 Sales and Use Tax Brocure
(PDF).
*The total sales tax rate in Boulder County varies from
location to location based on varying municipal sales tax rates. The sales tax rate for Boulder
County government is currently set at 0.65% and applies to all purchases made
within county boundaries.
Each year, the Boulder County Budget Office produces a
Budget Summary
providing an overview of the County's total revenues, expenditures, and
distribution of property taxes.
Meeting community needs every day Where do my tax dollars go?
The Boulder County tax dollars that
you pay, whether through property taxes or sales and use taxes, help support
key infrastructure and services such as:
Combined with a variety of other funding sources, your tax dollars also
contribute to help provide a breadth of other services that collectively create
a healthy community. Through funding supplied by grants, state and federal
allocations, your local taxes, fees and other revenue sources, Boulder County
government is able to offer:
Your generosity makes a
difference
In addition to paying property taxes, voters in Boulder
County continuously show their commitment to investing in and improving their
community by passing special ballot issues that enact specific property or sales and use taxes.
Some of these special
tax funds include:
-
Developmental Disabilities and Health and Human Services:
Funding for local nonprofits and
programs that serve the developmentally disabled; funding to support health
and human services programs that have suffered funding cutbacks from other
sources.
-
Worthy Cause: funding for capital improvement
projects by local human services non-profit agencies
-
Open space: various taxes to support acquisition, trails and maintenance
of open space.
-
2005 Issue
1A: A TABOR exemption that provides funding for public safety,
sustainability and health and human services programs
-
Public Safety Sales Tax:
provides funds for a jail expansion, construction of an
addiction recovery center, and ongoing support for jail programs.
-
Transportation improvements, including
increased transit, regional trails and bikeway shoulders.
Questions?
Email
colist@bouldercounty.org
|