Washington State

Magazine bans, fee changes, and care expansion: Here are the new laws taking effect

Out of the 2,320 bills that were introduced during this year’s legislative session, 775 were adopted.

While most of the legislation that passed this year has already gone into effect, another long list of bills went into effect Friday, July 1.

These are some of the new laws to be aware of:

SB 5078 - Bans high-capacity magazines: As of Friday, magazines that can hold more than 10 rounds can no longer be purchased, manufactured, imported, sold or distributed in Washington state.

HB 1705: The bill has two different dates, but as of Friday, unfinished frames or receivers for ghost guns can no longer be sold, transferred or purchased in Washington.

HB 1616: Expands charity health care for state residents and requires more financial assistance from larger hospitals. According to Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s office, the program has been expanded so that 1 million Washingtonians are now eligible. For the additional 1 million Washingtonians who are already eligible for discounted care, free hospital care is now also guaranteed.

HB 5676: Provides a 3% increase in pay to those who are enrolled in Plan 1 of the Public Employees’ Retirement System or Teachers’ Retirement System Plan 1. Members must have been retired by July 1, 2021, to be eligible.

HB 1617: Aligns school holidays with state holidays. The Washington legislature made Juneteenth a state holiday last year, but the act did not specify that it also was a school holiday.

SB 5974: Also known as the “Move Ahead WA” transportation package. Portions of the historic legislation will go into effect Friday. Those portions include new fees on items such as temporary dealer permits, plates and enhanced drivers licenses. Here are some of those fees:

  • Aircraft Fuel Tax: Increases from 11 cents to 18 cents and will go into the Aeronautics Account.

  • Plates: The fee for original plates increases from $10 to $50 and replacement plates from $10 to $30. Original motorcycle plates will increase from $4 to $20, and replacement plates will increase from $4 to $12. This new revenue will go into the Move Ahead WA account.

  • Stolen Vehicle Check Fees: This check is done when someone applies for a certificate of title for a vehicle previously registered in any other state or country. The fee increases from $15 to $50 and will increase again in 2026 to $75. This new revenue will go into the Move Ahead WA account.

  • Temporary Dealer Permits: Increases from $15 to $40. This new revenue will go into the Move Ahead WA account.

The full list of bills that will go into effect Friday can be found online at the legislature’s website: leg.wa.gov.

This story was originally published July 1, 2022 at 9:16 AM with the headline "Magazine bans, fee changes, and care expansion: Here are the new laws taking effect."

Follow More of Our Reporting on

Shauna Sowersby
The Olympian
Shauna Sowersby was a freelancer for several local and national publications before joining McClatchy’s northwest newspapers covering the Legislature. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW