The Peptide Wiki
Mapping Knowledge.
Advancing Discovery.
// STATE LEGISLATION TRACKER

Kansas SB 303 โ€” House Substitute for SB 303 by Committee on Taxation - Decreasing the rate of ad valorem tax imposed by a school distric

โš–๏ธ NEUTRAL for peptide users ๐Ÿ‘ค NONE user impact ๐Ÿ“œ Status: Unknown
State
Kansas
Bill
SB 303
Filed
2026-01-12
Read the bill
OpenStates โ†’
Last reviewed
2026-06-21

Plain-English Summary

Kansas SB 303 appears to be a tax bill about school district property tax rates, sales tax exemptions, and imposing sales tax. Based on the title and subjects provided, it does not appear to address compounded peptides, prescribing, telehealth, clinician scope, FDA compounding rules, controlled substances, or prescription monitoring.

Key Points

  • No apparent peptide-specific access change
  • No apparent telehealth or prescribing change
  • No apparent NP or naturopathic scope change
  • No apparent 503A or 503B compounding change

What to Watch For

i
Note Watch only if later amendments add healthcare, pharmacy, or compounding language.
i
Note Sales tax changes could matter indirectly if medical or pharmacy exemptions are affected, but that is not clear from the title.

Where the Bill Stands

The provided latest action says OpenStates refetch failed, so the bill's current process status cannot be confirmed from the supplied information.
โ€” Ed. Our analysis pulls public bill metadata from OpenStates and is enriched with research-model context. We don't quote bill text we haven't read directly. If this bill matters to your practice or treatment access, read the official source linked above before taking action. We're an educational research directory, not a legal or medical reference.
Bill page generated 2026-06-21 ยท enriched via codex gpt-5.5
Source: OpenStates v3 API ยท View official bill ยท โ† back to all laws