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Missouri Capital Gains Tax Cut Triggers Budget Shock, Forcing Lawmakers Toward Course Correction

ArgusStaff by ArgusStaff
December 30, 2025
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By Mark Bastain, Argus correspondent

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Missouri lawmakers are confronting an unexpected fiscal reckoning after a capital gains tax cut passed earlier this year is now projected to drain far more state revenue than originally estimated. What was sold as a modest reduction has quickly become a looming budget problem that could reshape the upcoming legislative session.
When the Missouri General Assembly approved the exemption of profits from stocks and other asset sales from state income tax, the official fiscal note projected an annual revenue loss of roughly $111 million, with a higher one-time impact in the first year. Updated figures from the state budget office now tell a different story. The revised estimate anticipates a revenue loss of approximately $500 million in the first year and about $360 million annually going forward, a swing large enough to destabilize long-term budget planning.
State Budget Director Dan Haug has indicated that the bulk of the revenue decline is expected during tax filing season, when capital gains income is most commonly reported. While overall collections had been trending upward earlier in the fiscal year, the new estimate reverses that trajectory, projecting a contraction in total general revenue instead of continued growth.
The shortfall arrives as Missouri enters a challenging budget cycle. Mike Kehoe, who is set to present his first full budget proposal in January, has emphasized spending restraint and has made eliminating the state income tax a long-term policy goal. Income tax collections account for roughly two-thirds of Missouri’s general revenue, making any additional reductions politically and fiscally consequential.
Missouri does have a temporary buffer. Large surpluses accumulated over recent years—peaking near $8 billion in 2023—have allowed lawmakers to fund transportation projects, building expansions, pension infusions, and salary increases. But those reserves are finite, and for three consecutive years the state has relied on surplus funds to cover ongoing program costs that exceed recurring revenue.
Democrats argue that the capital gains cut exposed a structural imbalance that was predictable and avoidable. House Budget Committee Democrats have pointed to rising demands on Medicaid, mental health services, public education, and corrections as evidence that the state’s challenge is revenue adequacy rather than excessive spending. Betsy Fogle and other Democrats have warned that absent corrective action, lawmakers may be forced to reduce optional Medicaid services, slow higher-education funding, or defer investments in public schools.
As a result, policy discussions are shifting from celebration of tax relief to damage control. Legislative options under consideration include restoring a partial tax on high-income capital gains, adding income thresholds to the exemption, implementing a sunset provision to automatically roll back the cut if revenues fall below projections, or adopting trigger legislation that suspends future tax reductions during deficit years. Some lawmakers have also raised the possibility of closing corporate tax loopholes or imposing temporary surtaxes on the highest earners to stabilize the budget.
Republicans are unlikely to abandon tax-cut ideology entirely, but fiscal realities may force concessions. Potential compromises include delaying further tax reductions, tightening eligibility for capital gains exemptions, or pairing tax relief with statutory spending caps tied to recurring revenue rather than surplus balances.
The revised revenue estimate has shifted the debate. What began as a tax policy victory now threatens to define Missouri’s next budget cycle, forcing lawmakers to choose between ideological consistency and fiscal sustainability.

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