Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham approved sending New Mexicans rebate checks by the start of this summer when signing a tax bill last week.
The governor confirmed the cash assistance payments in a Twitter post on Friday.
This year’s round of rebate checks will be automatically processed for all residents who filed 2021 tax returns. However, some individuals could have their rebate checks withheld by the state if they still owe 2021 back taxes to the state.
State lawmakers approved the rebates as part of a lengthy tax package during this year’s 60-day legislative session, and this comes as the governor approved and vetoed many bills earlier this month.
“Expanding the Child Tax Credit will help over 200,000 New Mexico families and broaden our successful effort to reduce child poverty rates, which dropped by a full percentage point between 2019 and 2021. Cutting the gross receipts tax for health care practitioners will lower costs for patients and keep more doctors in New Mexico, and increasing our support for film and television will leverage more private investment in our state and mean more jobs for New Mexicans.”
One of the most prominent vetoed bills was a 20 percent increase on alcohol taxes. Grisham said the numbers just weren’t right and insisted more work needs to be done.
The expanded child tax credit provides more than $100 million in tax relief for an estimated 214,000 families who will be able to claim a larger credit of up to $600 per child, depending on family income, the bill states.
The bill as signed will also help make health care more affordable by allowing health care providers to deduct copays and deductible payments from gross receipts tax on many health care practitioner services covered by insurance or managed health care plans, according to the bill.
“I am so pleased that Governor Lujan Grisham continues to support health care providers and ensure access to care by expanding the gross receipts tax deduction for health care,” Dr. Barbara McEneny, CEO of the New Mexico Cancer Center said in a statement. “With this step, New Mexico just became more competitive in recruiting and retaining doctors.”Eligible New Mexico residents have until May 31, 2024, to file a 2021 New Mexico Personal Income Tax return and still qualify for the rebates.