Missouri lawmakers have filed three bills aimed at professional sports teams after the Kansas City Chiefs announced plans to move to Kansas.The bills, prefiled on Dec. 31 by Sen. Nick Schroer, focus on limiting tax benefits for large stadium teams, shifting cleanup costs to departing teams, and imposing new fees when a team relocates out of state. One bill would require teams that lease large, publicly owned stadiums to pay demolition costs if they leave behind a facility that cannot easily be reused.Another bill would prevent professional teams that play in stadiums with a seating capacity of 75,000 or more from receiving state tax credits. The proposal targets large venues and would prevent those teams from accessing certain Missouri incentive programs.A third bill would require teams that announce plans to move to another state to add a $50 fee to every game ticket sold, along with a 5% surcharge on food, merchandise and other sales inside the stadium. That money would go to a local sports and convention fund.The proposals were filed after the Chiefs confirmed their move, a decision that followed months of debate in both Kansas and Missouri over stadium funding and public incentives.The bills have not yet been assigned to committees and remain in the prefiled stage ahead of the upcoming legislative session in Missouri.All three proposals would take effect Aug. 28, 2026, if approved.The bills join a wave of reaction from officials in Missouri after the announced move. Late last year, Jackson County Legislator Manny Abarca called for stadium tax dollars to be redirected from the Chiefs.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. —
Missouri lawmakers have filed three bills aimed at professional sports teams after the Kansas City Chiefs announced plans to move to Kansas.
The bills, prefiled on Dec. 31 by Sen. Nick Schroer, focus on limiting tax benefits for large stadium teams, shifting cleanup costs to departing teams, and imposing
new fees when a team relocates out of state.
One bill would require teams that lease large, publicly owned stadiums to pay demolition costs if they leave behind a facility that cannot easily be reused.
Another bill would prevent professional teams that play in stadiums with a seating capacity of 75,000 or more from receiving state tax credits.
The proposal targets large venues and would prevent those teams from accessing certain Missouri incentive programs.
A third bill would require teams that announce plans to move to another state to add a $50 fee to every game ticket sold, along with a 5% surcharge on food, merchandise and other sales inside the stadium.
That money would go to a local sports and convention fund.
The proposals were filed after the Chiefs confirmed their move, a decision that followed months of debate in both Kansas and Missouri over stadium funding and public incentives.
The bills have not yet been assigned to committees and remain in the prefiled stage ahead of the upcoming legislative session in Missouri.
All three proposals would take effect Aug. 28, 2026, if approved.
The bills join a wave of reaction from officials in Missouri after the announced move.
Late last year, Jackson County Legislator Manny Abarca called for stadium tax dollars to be redirected from the Chiefs.