Updated: How a Tax Hike Means for Your Wallet: Albuquerque’s Proposed Increase Shows Why Gross Receipts Taxes Hit Consumers and Small Businesses

Albuquerque’s proposed gross receipts tax increase offers a real-world lesson in financial literacy—showing how local taxes ripple through prices, small businesses, and household budgets.

A tax hike plan of the Albuquerque City Council is not only a political debate. It is also a lesson on how local taxes can shape the finances of households and small businesses.

City councilors are considering a 0.4875 percent increase in Albuquerque’s gross receipts tax. If approved, the tax increase is projected to generate about $130 million annually for infrastructure projects, facility repairs, and municipal operations.

Brook Bassan introduced the tax proposal, raising the city’s tax rate from 7.625 percent to 8.113 percent. The change may look small on paper, but even small tax increases can ripple through the economy.

Understanding how a gross receipts tax works

For many consumers, taxes on purchases are associated with sales tax.

But gross receipts tax is different: the gross receipts tax applies broadly to goods and services across the entire supply chain, unlike traditional sales taxes that apply mainly to retail transactions. That means businesses often pass the cost forward to consumers, who will ultimately pay.

Why do small businesses feel the tax hike more

Big corporations can absorb tax increases through scale, cost-cutting, or pricing strategies. But it is different for small businesses that operate on thin profit margins. A tax increase may force small businesses to either raise prices or absorb the cost.

This is why analysts at the Tax Policy Center said gross receipts taxes can disproportionately affect smaller enterprises. A tax hike directly affects local entrepreneurs, such as restaurants, repair shops, and service providers, their ability to remain competitive.

What the city says the money will fund

Proponents of the tax hike argue that it is necessary to address long-delayed infrastructure projects and rising construction costs. The funds are expected to support projects, namely: Paseo and Unser Buildout and North Domingo Baca Aquatic Center.

“This is the idea that I believe is going to really help project us forward,” Bassan said. Rising material and labor costs have delayed several city projects, he added. The proposal also includes a resolution to raise the wages of the city’s lowest-paid workers.

What it could mean for households

The effect of a tax increase like this may appear small in any single purchase for individual consumers. Over time, however, the cumulative impact can add up.

Small businesses will raise prices to offset taxes. As a result, consumers may pay more for restaurant meals, home repairs, professional services, and construction and housing costs. Economists at the Congressional Budget Office explain that businesses shift part of their tax burdens to consumers, workers, or shareholders.

Update: The City Council rejected the proposal on Monday night. In a vote held shortly after 10 p.m., councilors turned down the proposal with an overwhelming vote of 8-1.

For corrections, news tips, and any other content requests, please send us an email at [email protected].

Hot this week

New Mexico’s Recipe for Hantavirus Risk—Climate, Deer Mice, and Country Living

More than 30 years after the Four Corners outbreak, New Mexico continues to report among the nation’s highest hantavirus pulmonary syndrome cases. Experts say the state’s ecology, climate cycles and rural living conditions have created an enduring hotspot for the rare but deadly disease carried by deer mice.

Community Solar Program Took Years to Arrive. Now the Solar Panels Are Finally Rising.

After years of delays, New Mexico’s community solar program is beginning to expand, with new projects coming online across the state. But developers and advocates say high interconnection costs and complicated billing rules still threaten the program’s long-term success.

Patient Voices Push New Mexico Lawmakers to Spotlight Healthcare Access and Affordability

New Mexico lawmakers spotlighted healthcare after hearing directly from patients, emphasizing urgent concerns about access, affordability, and workforce shortages.

Health Officials Clarify Hantavirus Risk: No Person‑to‑Person Spread

New Mexico's health officials have emphasized that the state's Hantavirus (Sin Nombre Virus) is not transmitted from person to person, which differs from the Andes virus that was responsible for an outbreak aboard a cruise ship. There have been many reports around the world about the Andes virus being transmitted by other people, and this caused people to worry about being able to contract the Andres virus from residents of New Mexico. The Andes virus is the only hantavirus known to be transmitted by another person in South America. The Sin Nombre Virus can only be contracted by contact with infected rodents, or their excrement. There are several ways to help to prevent hantavirus exposure, including disinfecting rodent nests and debris, ensuring that all points of entry into the home are sealed and practicing safe cleanup methods.

‘You Are Not Alone’: Grief Kits Help Students Cope with Loss 

Albuquerque Public Schools received grief kits after the Rotary Club of Albuquerque and the Grief Center worked together to provide resources that help students cope with loss.

Topics

New Mexico’s Recipe for Hantavirus Risk—Climate, Deer Mice, and Country Living

More than 30 years after the Four Corners outbreak, New Mexico continues to report among the nation’s highest hantavirus pulmonary syndrome cases. Experts say the state’s ecology, climate cycles and rural living conditions have created an enduring hotspot for the rare but deadly disease carried by deer mice.

Community Solar Program Took Years to Arrive. Now the Solar Panels Are Finally Rising.

After years of delays, New Mexico’s community solar program is beginning to expand, with new projects coming online across the state. But developers and advocates say high interconnection costs and complicated billing rules still threaten the program’s long-term success.

Patient Voices Push New Mexico Lawmakers to Spotlight Healthcare Access and Affordability

New Mexico lawmakers spotlighted healthcare after hearing directly from patients, emphasizing urgent concerns about access, affordability, and workforce shortages.

Health Officials Clarify Hantavirus Risk: No Person‑to‑Person Spread

New Mexico's health officials have emphasized that the state's Hantavirus (Sin Nombre Virus) is not transmitted from person to person, which differs from the Andes virus that was responsible for an outbreak aboard a cruise ship. There have been many reports around the world about the Andes virus being transmitted by other people, and this caused people to worry about being able to contract the Andres virus from residents of New Mexico. The Andes virus is the only hantavirus known to be transmitted by another person in South America. The Sin Nombre Virus can only be contracted by contact with infected rodents, or their excrement. There are several ways to help to prevent hantavirus exposure, including disinfecting rodent nests and debris, ensuring that all points of entry into the home are sealed and practicing safe cleanup methods.

‘You Are Not Alone’: Grief Kits Help Students Cope with Loss 

Albuquerque Public Schools received grief kits after the Rotary Club of Albuquerque and the Grief Center worked together to provide resources that help students cope with loss.

New Mexico Reopens Fight Over Toxic Oil and Gas Wastewater — Environmentalists Call It a Political Gamble

New Mexico regulators voted to revive a contentious rulemaking process that could expand the use of treated oil and gas wastewater beyond drilling sites, reigniting a fierce clash between industry advocates and environmental groups over public health, water scarcity and political influence.

Wastewater Sounded the Measles Alarm in New Mexico—Before Doctors Even Caught It

A new study shows New Mexico health officials detected measles in wastewater five days before hospitals confirmed cases, highlighting sewage surveillance as a powerful early-warning system during the nation’s largest measles outbreak in decades.

Newborn Dies After Mother’s Raw Milk Listeria Infection

A newborn in New Mexico died after contracting listeria from raw milk consumed by the mother during pregnancy, state health officials confirmed. This case highlights the severe risks of drinking unpasteurized dairy products, especially for pregnant women and infants.

Related Articles