What is a SPLOST?

The Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST) has paid for over $1.5 billion in capital improvements in Chatham County since the first iteration of the initiative. This valuable economic engine, funded by both Chatham County residents and visitors, provided a way to fund necessary capital improvements in roads, drainage, recreation, economic development and civic projects, all while fueling the local economy through jobs and construction. 

Of Georgia’s 159 counties, only Chatham County is the only one that implemented SPLOST when it first became authorized in 1985 and maintained it every year thereafter. Under the law, the 1% increase in the sales tax can be used for a specific period/dollar amount for certain capital projects (i.e. roads, courthouses, recreation and libraries) and other projects by interlocal agreement, such as drainage and civic and community-based improvements.

SPLOST has proved a popular revenue source. Voters have approved the continuation of SPLOST in every election since 1985. A SPLOST approval does not add any additional tax, only the continuation of the existing 1% sales tax.

Through the added penny, Chatham County has generated over $1.5 billion, including interest earnings. Add to this amount some $500 million in funds leveraged from the Georgia Department of Transportation for road projects, the value of an added penny totals some $1.5 billion. This number does not include matching state funds for other projects and private foundation funding for civic and community projects.

These funds have enabled more public improvements during SPLOST's first 20 years than the total sum of public improvements during the past century.

To generate the sales tax revenues from ad valorem taxes during a comparable 20-year period would cost the owner of a $100,000 home more than $12,000 in added property taxes.

While Chatham County has used 73% of the funds for roads and drainage, voters have approved use of the funds for many other quality of life issues:

  • Funding of the Savannah International Trade and Convention Center provides a recurring economic impact through more than $200 million more in visitor spending, which will create some 1,900 service-related jobs. The Trade Center also became the economic engine for the development of Hutchinson Island, a mixed-use 600-acre development which will add more than $800 million in new real estate value.
  • Funding of the Olympic Legacy Program provides recreational projects, including an Olympic-sized competitive Aquatic Center, Olympic Track, Soccer Complex and Weightlifting Center.
  • Funding of various historic and cultural projects provides a catalyst for matching private funding for the completion of such noteworthy renovation projects such as the Lucas Theater, Owens-Thomas House, Dr. Mark Ralph Gilbert Civil Rights Museum, King-Tisdell Cottage and Telfair’s Jepson Arts Center.
  • Funding of various municipal projects also helps improve local communities through use of the sale tax law’s intergovernmental provisions. Chatham County distributed funds to Savannah and other municipalities for specific city projects including parks, sidewalks, municipal buildings and public safety equipment. This greatly reduces the burden on property for big-ticket capital items.
     

Public accountability can be assured by independent annual audits of the sales tax funds. State law requires that the funds remain separate by collection period, and each audit provides a listing of projects, budgets and expenditures on an annual basis.

June 9 Virtual SPLOST Town Hall