
When the Indianapolis City-County Council voted 14-10 Monday night to raise vehicle registration taxes across Marion County, it stepped into a fight that Fishers settled almost ten years ago — with a lot less drama.
The Indianapolis measure, Proposal 192, would impose a $240 wheel tax on buses, RVs, semitrailers, tractors, trailers and trucks, and a $100 excise surtax on passenger cars, trucks, motorcycles and other vehicles under 11,000 pounds. Today most Marion County drivers pay somewhere between $10 and $50 a year. The plan runs from 2027 through 2031 and is projected to raise about $855 million, money the council says it needs to unlock a $50 million annual state “match” for road and infrastructure work beginning in 2027.
Mayor Joe Hogsett opposes it and has 10 days to decide whether to veto. Overriding him would take 17 of the council’s 25 votes. The council’s Republican caucus, writing in the IndyStar days before the vote, said it supports more road money but questioned “the timing and hastiness” of what it called an $80 million tax increase. The politics are loud, the stakes are high, and the outcome is still uncertain.
Fishers has been down a version of this road already — just far more quietly.
Fishers acted first, in 2016
On the night of September 19, 2016, the Fishers City Council voted 7-0 to impose a $25-per-vehicle wheel tax to help pay for road maintenance. (Council members John Weingardt and Selina Stoller were absent.) Mayor Scott Fadness had proposed it earlier that month, and the tax took effect in 2018. It applies to both personal and commercial vehicles and was estimated to bring in roughly $2.16 million a year.
Fadness framed it at the time as a “unique opportunity” rather than a burden. His case was straightforward math: a typical road needs to be repaved every 15 to 20 years, and Fishers wasn’t keeping pace. In 2013, the city spent about $1 million on paving when it could have used $2.7 million. In 2016, it budgeted $1.95 million but needed $3.8 million. The wheel tax was meant to help close that gap, augmenting — not replacing — money the city already received from state and local sources. Fadness told the council that even if state road funding grew in the future, he believed the tax would still be needed.
Even reluctant council members came around. “I’m not usually in favor of any kind of tax increase, but this is what I consider to be vital to the safety of our community,” council member Todd Zimmerman said that night.
It’s worth remembering how new that authority was. For years, only Indiana counties could levy a wheel tax, and Hamilton County never adopted one. A 2016 state road-funding law opened the door for cities with populations over 10,000 to impose their own. Fishers was among the earliest to walk through it, alongside Valparaiso, Portage, Crown Point, Munster and LaPorte. The tax generated headlines locally mostly because the council, on the same evening, also gave itself a 58 percent pay raise — from $12,000 to $19,000 a year, its first increase since the early 1990s.
Why the wheel tax matters more now than in 2016
What looked in 2016 like a forward-leaning local choice has since become something closer to a statewide requirement — and that’s the thread connecting Fishers then to Indianapolis now.
In 2025, the General Assembly passed House Enrolled Act 1461, a sweeping transportation-funding law. Its most consequential provision for local governments ties eligibility for the state’s popular Community Crossings matching-grant program to whether a community has adopted both a wheel tax and a vehicle excise surtax. In plain terms: no local wheel tax, no access to one of the most dependable pots of road money the state offers.
The pressure didn’t stop there. SEA 1-2025, the property-tax overhaul passed the same session, capped key local revenue sources, forcing cities and counties to look harder for their own money. State leaders made the message explicit. House Speaker Todd Huston, a Republican from Fishers, warned local officials in December 2024 that they needed to help themselves before asking the Statehouse for more, saying local leaders “have to take some tough votes, too.” With an estimated $2.4 billion road-funding shortfall statewide, lawmakers argued they’d given communities the tools to raise revenue locally.
The result has been a wave of reluctant votes across Indiana over the past year. As of late 2025, 56 counties and 15 municipalities had wheel taxes on the books, with more cities and towns — from Plymouth to Evansville to Goshen — grudgingly adopting them to stay eligible for state dollars. Many councils made their frustration clear, pointing fingers at the Statehouse even as they voted yes.
Indianapolis is the biggest domino. The same funding framework that is pushing small towns to act is what stands to send Marion County a $50 million annual state match — if it raises the local revenue to qualify. That’s the machinery behind Proposal 192, and the reason the vote carried such weight Monday night.
The Fishers contrast
Seen against that backdrop, Fishers’ 2016 decision looks less like an outlier and more like a head start. The city adopted a modest, flat $25 wheel tax on its own terms, years before the state effectively linked such taxes to grant eligibility — and did it with a unanimous, low-drama council vote rather than a veto standoff.
That timing has practical consequences. Because Fishers already levies a wheel tax, it is positioned to meet the HEA 1461 eligibility test that many Indiana communities scrambled to satisfy in 2025. Indianapolis, by contrast, is only now confronting that choice, and it’s doing so with far larger dollar figures, a divided council and a mayor threatening a veto.
For Fishers residents, the wheel tax has been a quiet fixture for years — $25 a vehicle, folded into registration, funding the repaving schedule Fadness argued the city couldn’t otherwise afford. It’s the kind of decision that draws attention only when a neighbor like Indianapolis wrestles with the same question and finds it a good deal harder to answer.
Whether Indianapolis follows through now rests with Mayor Hogsett’s veto pen — and, quite possibly, with whether the council can muster 17 votes to override him.