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New Rhode Island Tax Adds $136,000 to Taylor Swift's Annual Bill

Published Jul 1, 2026
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Summary:
  • Rhode Island began collecting a $5 per $1,000 tax on vacation homes valued over $1 million on July 1, 2026.
  • The tax is projected to raise $24.5 million for affordable housing in the state's $15.2 billion budget.
  • About 8,000 property owners received notices that their second homes may be subject to the new levy.

Taylor Swift's sprawling Watch Hill estate now comes with a $136,000 annual surcharge. Yet the same tax also squeezes an 83-year-old Boston man who co-owns a tiny 1,900-square-foot cottage.

Who Pays the New Tax

"Assessed value" is the official price the government puts on a property for tax purposes.

For Taylor Swift's 12,700-square-foot mansion on five acres in Watch Hill, the assessed value is $28 million. Her publicist, Tree Paine, had no comment.

But not all affected owners are billionaires. Ed Burke, 83, and his brother jointly own a small cottage in Middletown that is almost a hundred years old. The property is just 1,900 square feet.

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Under the new tax, his family's total annual property taxes will rise to about $34,000 - over 50% more than before. The second-home tax alone adds $6,500 to that bill. "We can do this for the time being, but as we get older and the property gets more expensive, it may squeeze us to the point we have to sell," Burke said.

Rebecca Holt Fine, a New York resident, faces a $27,000 annual tax on the half-acre oceanfront cottage her great-grandfather bought in the 1930s. The assessed value is $6.4 million. "It's one-size-fits-all, which really isn't fair," Fine said. She added, "It's very sad to think we'd have to let it go just because of this tax."

Why the Tax Exists and the Pushback

State Senator Meghan Kallman, a Democrat, sponsored the tax to raise money for affordable housing. Rhode Island's median home price has nearly doubled since 2019, hitting $493,500 in early 2026. One-third of households now spend more than a third of their income on housing.

Kallman said the tax corrects a system that favors the wealthy. "I get that not everybody is Taylor Swift, but if someone is successfully maintaining a second home and they'd be touched by this policy change, that tells me their economic situation is able to sustain it," she said.

Gerald Petros, a lawyer in Providence, expects to file a lawsuit in early July 2026. He will argue the tax is unconstitutional. Petros represents affected homeowners who say the tax is unfair. Officials expect many owners will not pay at first because the rules are complicated.

Real estate agent David Huberman said the tax has not scared off luxury buyers yet. The average sale price of luxury homes in the Providence area hit $1.7 million in the three months ending May 2026, up 6.3% from a year earlier. But one buyer from Texas stopped looking for a $10-$20 million home near Newport after the tax was passed. "For the people who are middle-of-the-road with second homes, it does make a big difference," Huberman said.

What to Watch

Outside Rhode Island, New York City's own second-home tax took effect the same day. California voters will decide on a net-worth tax in November 2026. For now, thousands of second-home owners in Rhode Island are left to calculate their new tax bills.

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