Georgia bill to repeal new data center tax breaks advances out of Senate

Matt Brass stands in front of a blue background for a press conference and speaks into a microphone and a cell phone.
Georgia state Senator Matt Brass, R-Newnan, speaks during a press conference after the Senate passed SB 410, a bill sponsored by Brass to repeal new sales tax breaks for data centers, at the Georgia State Capitol on Friday, March 6, 2026. (Matthew Pearson/WABE)

A bill to repeal new sales tax subsidies for data center equipment advanced out of the Georgia state Senate on Friday, while critics say a portion of the bill does not protect customers from rising utility costs associated with data centers’ high energy demand.

This comes after Georgians voted in two Democrats last year to the Georgia Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities in the state, as rising energy bills became a key concern.

“We had a poll with the PSC election, and that poll said people want to make sure that utility rates were going to go down,” said Senate Minority Leader Harold Jones II after the vote.