Fewer people accused of larceny and other property offenses would face felony charges if the Massachusetts Senate has its way.

The Senate has passed a bill raising the threshold of a felony charge from $250 to $1,500.

In a statement, Senate President Stan Rosenberg’s spokesman, Peter Wilson, wrote that under current law, larceny under $250 is a misdemeanor while a theft of more is considered a felony.

“The theft of a full cart of groceries or a smartphone can leave someone with a felony offense for larceny on their record for years,” Wilson wrote. “In addition to covering larceny, the bill addresses felony thresholds for malicious destruction of property, credit-card fraud, receiving stolen property and shoplifting.”

The threshold has not been updated since 1987, and the $1,500 level is not a historic high when inflation is taken into consideration, Wilson wrote.

In 1906, the cutoff was set at $100, which was about $2,400 in today’s dollars.

Rosenberg, D-Amherst, said the bill continued the legislative body’s focus on reforming the criminal justice system.

“This legislation will implement appropriate thresholds for crimes committed and allow offenders who made a mistake an easier path to get back on their feet,” Rosenberg wrote in a statement. “This is a perfect example of how the Legislature must continue to review and revise our laws and adopt common sense reforms, to align ourselves with current best practices.”

Wilson wrote that the bill would not affect incarceration rates. Most felony larcenies are resolved without conviction and of those that do reach the level of a conviction, only half result in incarceration, he wrote. The average for those receiving a house of correction sentence is six months, according to Wilson.

“The real impact of the bill will be in the post-conviction context,” Wilson wrote. “People have to wait much longer for felonies to age off their visible criminal record. Felonies cannot be sealed until 10 years have passed, but misdemeanors can be sealed in five and are not included in standard criminal record reports after five years.”

The bill now goes to the House of Representatives.