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KIRO Radio: Harger: ‘Seattle, we have a problem.’ Head of the Downtown Seattle Association warns about the city’s JumpStart Tax
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This story was originally published by KIRO Radio on April 15, 2026.
By Charlie Harger
Jon Scholes runs the Downtown Seattle Association. Earlier this week, he posted something on LinkedIn that deserves a wider audience. He opened with five words in all caps.
“SEATTLE WE HAVE A PROBLEM.”
“Seattle’s JumpStart Tax,” he wrote, “has jump-started Bellevue’s economy. Not Seattle’s.”
Then he added this: “We don’t need more business taxes in Seattle. We need more businesses in Seattle paying taxes.”
I’ll give whoever named that tax some credit. JumpStart is a great name. It’s optimistic, forward-looking, and really rolls off the tongue.
They just didn’t specify which city was getting jumped.
What Seattle’s JumpStart Tax actually is
The JumpStart Tax, officially the Seattle Payroll Expense Tax, is a city-level employer-paid payroll tax on large businesses operating in Seattle. It passed in July 2020 and took effect on January 1, 2021. Here’s how it works:
A business is subject to the tax if it has more than roughly $9 million in total Seattle payroll and at least one employee earning above about $194,000. The tax is paid by the employer, not deducted from paychecks. Rates range from about 0.75% to 2.557%, depending on company size and how much individual employees earn. The biggest companies with the highest-paid employees get hit the hardest.
This wasn’t Scholes venting out of nowhere. Last week, he sat down with Gee and Ursula right here on KIRO Newsradio and laid out the same concern in detail. He said Seattle simply isn’t attractive right now to employers looking to grow. They’re choosing the east side of the lake.