Honolulu officials have been keeping an eye on how Maui has managed the issue.

Honolulu officials are considering ways to boost city income and expand the pool of rental housing by raising the property taxes on homes that have been left vacant by their owners.

There are 34,253 empty housing units in Honolulu County, or about a 10th of the total housing stock, .

City officials are preparing a request for proposals for a study that would examine why so many houses are vacant, whether and how to implement a special tax on them and and how much it would cost officials to enforce it.

The proposal is in the 鈥渇inal review process,鈥 Andrew Kawano, director of the city鈥檚 Department of Budget and Fiscal Services, told the City Council . The study will be funded using money from the federal pandemic relief package intended for local fiscal recovery.

Kakaako condominiums skyline with foreground a view looking makai of Ward Avenue.
Honolulu residents have long noticed how many apartments in luxury high-rises seem to be vacant and unused.
(David Croxford/Civil Beat/2023)

The idea of taxing vacant houses at a higher rate has been broached in the past and discarded as too difficult to implement but is coming to the surface again as the city confronts a housing affordability and shortage crisis. The discussion has been renewed amid a tough debate over a tight city budget and local residents鈥 concerns about rising property assessments.

The hope is that the prospect of higher taxes might encourage owners of vacant properties to open them up for rental and that a higher tax will generate more cash for strapped city coffers from out-of-state investors.

Many local housing advocates have enthusiastically backed the plan but others are already opposing it.

鈥淗undreds of condo units are dark every night in some of the highest demand areas of our city,鈥 wrote Ellen Godbey Carson, former president of the Institute for Human Services and the Hawaii State Bar Association. 鈥淎 blighted house near me on Pensacola Street is a constant health and safety hazard. Beach areas are filled with empty homes for vacationers. These are all empty homes. They all hurt Honolulu.鈥

Several people told the council that they believe that many real estate speculators buy homes on the island, essentially parking their money as a safe investment haven, removing essential housing stock, they said.

鈥淭hese empty units drive up rental and sales costs for everyone; the median family home price is $1 million, which is unaffordable to most working people,鈥 wrote Betty Lou Larson, testifying for Partners in Care, an advocacy group for homeless people.

Council member Esther Kiaaina also had strong words for some investors, who she said use Hawaii as their 鈥減layground.鈥

The conservative-leaning Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, on the other hand, that said that while the proposed surtax might boost revenue, it would likely have little effect on the island鈥檚 available housing stock or home prices.

鈥淚t has become common practice in Hawaii to blame scapegoats such as foreign or mainland buyers for the state鈥檚 disastrous housing crisis,鈥 said Kelii Akina, president and chief executive officer of the Grassroot Institute, in the report.  He said that surtax would not have the desired effect.

Instead, Akina said, the city should ease regulatory barriers to housing, which would lead to increased construction.

Kaimuki Real Estate community homes houses. 9 feb 2017
There are large numbers of vacant homes in residential areas throughout Honolulu, residents say. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2017)

One reason that the island is attractive to investors is that Honolulu鈥檚 property taxes, while onerous by local standards, are the lowest in the nation, mostly because school expenses are paid by the state rather than the city. That means that many out-of-state buyers consider them a bargain and people from other countries view properties here as a safe haven for flight capital with low incremental costs.

鈥淗awaii is a very politically stable place to park an investment,鈥 said real estate agent Choon James at the city hearing.

A proposal to tax empty homes was raised last year on Maui. There, county officials ultimately ended up increasing taxes on investment properties and second homes without specifying them as empty homes, while simultaneously reducing tax rates for local residents.

The idea has been circulating in the state legislature as well but has not gone forward. would have imposed a surcharge on the state conveyance tax to 鈥渄isincentivize the residential property speculation that makes the housing market so challenging for residents.鈥

How It Works In Other Cities

Honolulu is not alone among cities considering taxing empty houses.

鈥淎 lot of cities, from San Francisco to Buffalo, are looking at different variations of vacancy taxes,鈥 said Anthony Flint, a senior fellow at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. The idea, he said, is to encourage property owners to keep homes and vacant developable land in active use.

Similar efforts elsewhere have had mixed results.

Vancouver, Canada, , initially at a rate of . According to Canadian news reports, it raised some $115 million over the five years, with the money directed to affordable housing initiatives, housing construction and renter advocacy programs. In addition, the city reported in December.

Vancouver officials considered raising the rate to 5% this year but decided not to do so in the enforcing the law. Critics said the law unfairly penalized owners of recently built homes that had not yet sold, houses damaged by floods or other disasters and where the owners had moved elsewhere temporarily for medical treatment.

Property owners in Vancouver are now required to submit a declaration annually to determine if their property is subject to the tax and can revise the declarations for up to five years.

In November, San Francisco , which placed an additional tax on multi-family housing units left vacant more than 182 days a year. But the city was calling the action unconstitutional and a violation of state law.

Even advocates of the concept, including Will Caron of the Hawaii Appleseed Center for Law and Economic Justice, say that here would need to be 鈥渃arefully calibrated鈥 to be effective at boosting housing stock, and also fair and equitable to owners.

Several City Council members urged the city administration to move as quickly as possible to get the vacant-house tax study launched.

Kawano said the proposal should be completed by June 30 and posted for solicitation of contracts by July 15. If all goes according to plan, he said, the study could be completed by the end of the year, and he would press for a quick turnaround.

鈥淲e know you have expectations on timing,鈥 he told the council. 鈥淲e understand there is a lot of interest.鈥

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