A proposal to abolish Ohio property taxes will not appear on the fall ballot after organizers said they would not submit signatures this year, but the issue is far from settled. Organizers have indicated they may continue the effort for a future ballot, making this a pause in the debate rather than the final word.
The development removes one major source of near-term uncertainty, while underscoring the need for a serious conversation about tax relief, local services and Ohio’s economic competitiveness.
“The hard part is not identifying the pressure point. It is designing relief that actually works,” said Jacob Sargent, director of public policy services for the Ohio Manufacturers’ Association. “Ohio should keep looking for ways to ease property tax pressure without creating new uncertainty for communities, employers and local services.”
Property taxes remain a significant concern across Ohio. But sweeping constitutional changes could create major questions for schools, local governments, public safety, infrastructure and economic development. Meaningful reform should lower pressure without trading one problem for another. 6/5/2026