Tax Policy – State and Local Sales Tax Rates, 2020
Key Findings
- Forty-five states and the District of Columbia collect statewide sales taxes.
- Local sales taxes are collected in 38 states. In some cases, they can rival or even exceed state rates.
- The five states with the highest average combined state and local sales tax rates are Tennessee (9.53 percent), Louisiana (9.52 percent), Arkansas (9.47 percent), Washington (9.21 percent), and Alabama (9.22 percent).
- No state rates have changed since Utah increased the state-collected share of its sales tax from 5.95 percent to 6.1 percent in April 2019.
- Sales tax rates differ by state, but sales tax bases also impact how much revenue is collected from a tax and how the tax affects the economy.
- Sales tax rate differentials can induce consumers to shop across borders or buy products online.
Introduction
Retail sales taxes are one of the more transparent ways to collect tax revenue. While graduated income tax rates and brackets are complex and confusing to many taxpayers, sales taxes are easier to understand; consumers can see their tax burden printed directly on their receipts.
In addition to state-level sales taxes, consumers also face local sales taxes in 38 states. These rates can be substantial, so a state with a moderate statewide sales tax rate could actually have a very high combined state and local rate compared to other states. This report provides a population-weighted average of local sales taxes as of January 1, 2020, to give a sense of the average local rate for each state. Table 1 provides a full state-by-state listing of state and local sales tax rates.
Combined Rates
Five states do not have statewide sales taxes: Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon. Of these, Alaska allows localities to charge local sales taxes.[1]
The five states with the highest average combined state and local sales tax rates are Tennessee (9.53 percent), Louisiana (9.52 percent), Arkansas (9.47 percent), Washington (9.21 percent), and Alabama (9.22 percent). The five states with the lowest average combined rates are Alaska (1.76 percent), Hawaii (4.44 percent), Wyoming (5.34 percent), Wisconsin (5.46 percent), and Maine (5.50 percent).
State Rates
California has the highest state-level sales tax rate, at 7.25 percent.[2] Four states tie for the second-highest statewide rate, at 7 percent: Indiana, Mississippi, Rhode Island, and Tennessee. The lowest non-zero state-level sales tax is in Colorado, which has a rate of 2.9 percent. Five states follow with 4 percent rates: Alabama, Georgia, Hawaii, New York, and Wyoming.[3]
No state rates have changed since April 2019, when Utah’s state-collected rate increased from 5.95 percent to 6.1 percent. (The state rate is now officially 4.85 percent, but the state collects an additional 1.25 percent in mandatory taxes that are distributed to local governments, in addition to local option taxes imposed by localities.[4])
Local Rates
The five states with the highest average local sales tax rates are Alabama (5.22 percent), Louisiana (5.07 percent), Colorado (4.75 percent), New York (4.52 percent), and Oklahoma (4.44 percent).
Average local rates rose the most in Illinois, changing the state’s combined ranking from 7th highest to 6th highest. Part of this increase can be traced to the city of Evanston, which raised its city tax from 1 percent to 1.25 percent,[5] and to Marion City, which raised its sales tax from 8.75 percent to 9.5 percent in an attempt to pay down city-levied property taxes.[6]
Louisiana moved from third to second highest when East Baton Rouge increased its parish sales tax by half a percent.[7] This new rate kicked in on April 1.[8] Meanwhile, a 1 percent increase in Tuscaloosa’s local sales tax helped take Alabama’s combined rank from 5th to 4th.[9]
Nevada’s combined ranking moved from 14th to 12th. The biggest driver of this change was a 0.125 percentage-point increase in Clark County, home to Las Vegas.[10] Iowa’s rank moved from 29th to 27th largely due to new 1 percent local sales taxes in the cities of Bondurant, Clive, Grimes, Johnston, and Urbandale.[11]
Any state whose ranking improved did so only in comparison to those who enacted rate increases. Six states (Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Texas, and Washington) actually saw small local increases while still improving their rankings.
Georgia saw a small decrease in its average local rates, but it continues to levy the 19th highest combined sales taxes. Johnson County’s special purpose local option sales tax (SPLOST) expired in September, taking the county’s combined sales tax down from 8 percent to 7 percent.[12]
It must be noted that some cities in New Jersey are in “Urban Enterprise Zones,” where qualifying sellers may collect and remit at half the 6.625 percent statewide sales tax rate (3.3125 percent), a policy designed to help local retailers compete with neighboring Delaware, which forgoes a sales tax. We represent this anomaly as a negative 0.03 percent statewide average local rate (adjusting for population as described in the methodology section below), and the combined rate reflects this subtraction. Despite the slightly favorable impact on the overall rate, this lower rate represents an implicit acknowledgment by New Jersey officials that their 6.625 percent statewide rate is uncompetitive with neighboring Delaware, which has no sales tax.
(a) City, county and municipal rates vary. These rates are weighted by population to compute an average local tax rate. (b) Three states levy mandatory, statewide, local add-on sales taxes at the state level: California (1%), Utah (1.25%), and Virginia (1%). We include these in their state sales tax. (c) The sales taxes in Hawaii, New Mexico, and South Dakota have broad bases that include many business-to-business services. (d) Special taxes in local resort areas are not counted here. (e) Salem County, N.J., is not subject to the statewide sales tax rate and collects a local rate of 3.3125%. New Jersey’s local score is represented as a negative. Sources: Sales Tax Clearinghouse; Tax Foundation calculations; State Revenue Department websites |
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State | State Tax Rate | Rank | Avg. Local Tax Rate | Combined Rate | Rank | Max Local Tax Rate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ala. | 4.00% | 40 | 5.22% | 9.22% | 4 | 7.50% |
Alaska | 0.00% | 46 | 1.76% | 1.76% | 46 | 7.50% |
Ariz. | 5.60% | 28 | 2.80% | 8.40% | 11 | 5.60% |
Ark. | 6.50% | 9 | 2.97% | 9.47% | 3 | 5.125% |
Calif. (b) | 7.25% | 1 | 1.41% | 8.66% | 9 | 2.50% |
Colo. | 2.90% | 45 | 4.75% | 7.65% | 16 | 8.30% |
Conn. | 6.35% | 12 | 0.00% | 6.35% | 33 | 0.00% |
D.C. | 6.00% | (17) | 0.00% | 6.00% | (38) | 0.00% |
Del. | 0.00% | 46 | 0.00% | 0.00% | 47 | 0.00% |
Fla. | 6.00% | 17 | 1.05% | 7.05% | 23 | 2.50% |
Ga. | 4.00% | 40 | 3.31% | 7.31% | 19 | 5.00% |
Hawaii (c) | 4.00% | 40 | 0.44% | 4.44% | 45 | 0.50% |
Idaho | 6.00% | 17 | 0.03% | 6.03% | 37 | 3.00% |
Ill. | 6.25% | 13 | 2.83% | 9.08% | 6 | 10.00% |
Ind. | 7.00% | 2 | 0.00% | 7.00% | 24 | 0.00% |
Iowa | 6.00% | 17 | 0.94% | 6.94% | 27 | 1.00% |
Kans. | 6.50% | 9 | 2.18% | 8.68% | 8 | 4.00% |
Ky. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.00% | 6.00% | 38 | 0.00% |
La. | 4.45% | 38 | 5.07% | 9.52% | 2 | 7.00% |
Maine | 5.50% | 29 | 0.00% | 5.50% | 42 | 0.00% |
Mass. | 6.25% | 13 | 0.00% | 6.25% | 35 | 0.00% |
Md. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.00% | 6.00% | 38 | 0.00% |
Mich. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.00% | 6.00% | 38 | 0.00% |
Minn. | 6.875% | 6 | 0.58% | 7.46% | 18 | 2.00% |
Miss. | 7.00% | 2 | 0.07% | 7.07% | 22 | 1.00% |
Mo. | 4.225% | 39 | 3.96% | 8.18% | 14 | 5.625% |
Mont. (d) | 0.00% | 46 | 0.00% | 0.00% | 47 | 0.00% |
N.C. | 4.75% | 35 | 2.22% | 6.97% | 26 | 2.75% |
N.D. | 5.00% | 33 | 1.86% | 6.86% | 29 | 3.50% |
N.H. | 0.00% | 46 | 0.00% | 0.00% | 47 | 0.00% |
N.J. (e) | 6.625% | 8 | -0.03% | 6.60% | 30 | 3.313% |
N.M. (c) | 5.125% | 32 | 2.69% | 7.82% | 15 | 4.125% |
N.Y. | 4.00% | 40 | 4.52% | 8.52% | 10 | 4.875% |
Nebr. | 5.50% | 29 | 1.43% | 6.93% | 28 | 2.50% |
Nev. | 6.85% | 7 | 1.47% | 8.32% | 12 | 1.65% |
Ohio | 5.75% | 27 | 1.42% | 7.17% | 21 | 2.25% |
Okla. | 4.50% | 36 | 4.44% | 8.94% | 7 | 7.00% |
Ore. | 0.00% | 46 | 0.00% | 0.00% | 47 | 0.00% |
Pa. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.34% | 6.34% | 34 | 2.00% |
R.I. | 7.00% | 2 | 0.00% | 7.00% | 24 | 0.00% |
S.C. | 6.00% | 17 | 1.46% | 7.46% | 17 | 3.00% |
S.D. (c) | 4.50% | 36 | 1.90% | 6.40% | 32 | 4.50% |
Tenn. | 7.00% | 2 | 2.53% | 9.53% | 1 | 2.75% |
Tex. | 6.25% | 13 | 1.94% | 8.19% | 13 | 2.00% |
Utah (b) | 6.10% | 16 | 1.08% | 7.18% | 20 | 2.95% |
Va. (b) | 5.30% | 31 | 0.35% | 5.65% | 41 | 0.70% |
Vt. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.22% | 6.22% | 36 | 1.00% |
W.Va. | 6.00% | 17 | 0.41% | 6.41% | 31 | 1.00% |
Wash. | 6.50% | 9 | 2.71% | 9.21% | 5 | 4.00% |
Wis. | 5.00% | 33 | 0.46% | 5.46% | 43 | 1.75% |
Wyo. | 4.00% | 40 | 1.34% | 5.34% | 44 | 2.00% |
The Role of Competition in Setting Sales Tax Rates
Avoidance of sales tax is most likely to occur in areas where there is a significant difference between jurisdictions’ rates. Research indicates that consumers can and do leave high-tax areas to make major purchases in low-tax areas, such as from cities to suburbs.[13] For example, evidence suggests that Chicago-area consumers make major purchases in surrounding suburbs or online to avoid Chicago’s 10.25 percent sales tax rate.[14]
At the statewide level, businesses sometimes locate just outside the borders of high sales-tax areas to avoid being subjected to their rates. A stark example of this occurs in New England, where even though I-91 runs up the Vermont side of the Connecticut River, many more retail establishments choose to locate on the New Hampshire side to avoid sales taxes. One study shows that per capita sales in border counties in sales tax-free New Hampshire have tripled since the late 1950s, while per capita sales in border counties in Vermont have remained stagnant.[15] Delaware actually uses its highway welcome sign to remind motorists that Delaware is the “Home of Tax-Free Shopping.”[16]
State and local governments should be cautious about raising rates too high relative to their neighbors because doing so will yield less revenue than expected or, in extreme cases, revenue losses despite the higher tax rate.
Sales Tax Bases: The Other Half of the Equation
This report ranks states based on tax rates and does not account for differences in tax bases (e.g., the structure of sales taxes, defining what is taxable and nontaxable). States can vary greatly in this regard. For instance, most states exempt groceries from the sales tax, others tax groceries at a limited rate, and still others tax groceries at the same rate as all other products.[17] Some states exempt clothing or tax it at a reduced rate.[18]
Tax experts generally recommend that sales taxes apply to all final retail sales of goods and services but not intermediate business-to-business transactions in the production chain. These recommendations would result in a tax system that is not only broad-based but also “right-sized,” applying once and only once to each product the market produces.[19] Despite agreement in theory, the application of most state sales taxes is far from this ideal.[20]
Hawaii has the broadest sales tax in the United States, but it taxes many products multiple times and, by one estimate, ultimately taxes 105.29 percent of the state’s personal income.[21] This base is far wider than the national median, where the sales tax applies to 34.25 percent of personal income.[22]
Methodology
Sales Tax Clearinghouse publishes quarterly sales tax data at the state, county, and city levels by ZIP code. We weight these numbers according to Census 2010 population figures to give a sense of the prevalence of sales tax rates in a particular state.
It is worth noting that population numbers are only published at the ZIP code level every 10 years by the U.S. Census Bureau, and that editions of this calculation published before July 1, 2011, do not utilize ZIP code data and are thus not strictly comparable.
It should also be noted that while the Census Bureau reports population data using a five-digit identifier that looks much like a ZIP code, this is actually what is called a ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA), which attempts to create a geographical area associated with a given ZIP code. This is done because a surprisingly large number of ZIP codes do not actually have any residents. For example, the National Press Building in Washington, D.C., has its own ZIP code solely for postal reasons.
For our purposes, ZIP codes that do not have a corresponding ZCTA population figure are omitted from calculations. These omissions result in some amount of inexactitude but overall do not have a palpable effect on resultant averages because proximate ZIP code areas which do have ZCTA population numbers capture the tax rate of those jurisdictions.
Conclusion
Sales taxes are just one part of an overall tax structure and should be considered in context. For example, Tennessee has high sales taxes but no wage income tax, whereas Oregon has no sales tax but high income taxes. While many factors influence business location and investment decisions, sales taxes are something within policymakers’ control that can have immediate impacts.
[1] Special taxes in Montana’s resort areas are not included in our analysis.
[2] This number includes mandatory add-on taxes which are collected by the state but distributed to local governments. Because of this, some sources will describe California’s sales tax as 6.0 percent. A similar situation exists in Utah and Virginia.
[3] The sales taxes in Hawaii and South Dakota have bases that include many services and so are not strictly comparable to other sales taxes.
[4] This rate includes two levies, summing 1.25 percentage points, which are imposed statewide but distributed to localities. See “Second Quarter 2019 Changes,” Tax.Utah.gov, Apr. 1, 2019, https://tax.utah.gov/sales/ratechanges.
[5] Joshua Irvine, “Aldermen vote to raise sales tax,” The Daily Northwestern, Sept. 24, 2019, https://dailynorthwestern.com/2019/09/24/city/aldermen-vote-to-raise-sales-tax/.
[6] Brittany Jacob, “Marion City Council unanimously passes sales tax increase and a property tax decrease,” KFVS-TV, Sept. 23, 2019, https://www.kfvs12.com/2019/09/24/marion-city-council-unanimously-passes-sales-tax-increase-property-tax-decrease/.
[7] Terry L. Jones and Steve Hardy, “East Baton Rouge’s new sales tax starts Monday; See early plans for ambitious MovEBR projects,” The (Baton Rouge) Advocate, Mar. 30, 2019, https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/article_c6e53086-5232-11e9-a35f-d313e11c123b.html.
[8] Due to data limitations, this rate was not included in the Midyear 2019 update.
[9] Jason Morton, “Tuscaloosa sales tax increase coming Tuesday,” The Tuscaloosa News, Sept. 28, 2019, https://www.tuscaloosanews.com/news/20190928/tuscaloosa-sales-tax-increase-coming-tuesday.
[10] Michael Lyle, “Clark County approves raising sales tax of 1/8 of a cent,” Nevada Current, Sept. 3, 2019, https://www.nevadacurrent.com/2019/09/03/clark-county-approves-raising-sales-tax-1-8-of-a-cent/.
[11] “New Iowa Local Option Tax Jurisdictions,” Iowa Department of Revenue, Jan. 1, 2020, https://tax.iowa.gov/businesses/local-option-sales-tax/new-iowa-local-option-tax-jurisdictions.
[12] “Sales Tax Rates – General,” Georgia Department of Revenue, January 2020, https://dor.georgia.gov/sales-tax-rates-general.
[13] Mehmet Serkan Tosun and Mark Skidmore, “Cross-Border Shopping and the Sales Tax: A Reexamination of Food Purchases in West Virginia,” Research Paper 2005-7, Regional Research Institute, West Virginia University, September 2005, http://rri.wvu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Tosunwp2005-7.pdf. See also T. Randolph Beard, Paula A. Gant, and Richard P. Saba, “Border-Crossing Sales, Tax Avoidance, and State Tax Policies: An Application to Alcohol,” Southern Economic Journal 64:1 (July 1997), 293-306.
[14] Susan Chandler, “The sales tax sidestep,” Chicago Tribune, July 20, 2008, http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2008-07-20/business/0807190001_1_sales-tax-tax-avoidance-tax-landscape.
[15] Arthur Woolf, “The Unintended Consequences of Public Policy Choices: The Connecticut River Valley Economy as a Case Study,” Northern Economic Consulting, Inc., November 2010, http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/603373-the-unintended-consequences-of-public-policy.html.
[16] Len Lazarick, “Raise taxes, and they’ll move, constituents tell one delegate,” Marylandreporter.com, Aug. 3, 2011, http://marylandreporter.com/2011/08/03/raise-taxes-and-theyll-move-constituents-tell-one-delegate/.
[17] For a list, see Jared Walczak, Scott Drenkard, and Joseph Bishop-Henchman, 2019 State Business Tax Climate Index, Tax Foundation, Sept. 26, 2018, https://taxfoundation.org/publications/state-business-tax-climate-index/.
[18] Liz Malm and Richard Borean, “How Does Your State Sales Tax See That Blue and Black (or White and Gold) Dress?” Tax Foundation, Feb. 27, 2015, http://taxfoundation.org/blog/how-does-your-state-sales-tax-see-blue-and-black-or-white-and-gold-dress.
[19] Justin M. Ross, “A Primer on State and Local Tax Policy: Trade-Offs among Tax Instruments,” Mercatus Center at George Mason University, Feb. 25, 2014, http://mercatus.org/publication/primer-state-and-local-tax-policy-trade-offs-among-tax-instruments.
[20] For a representative list, see Jared Walczak, 2020 State Business Tax Climate Index, Tax Foundation, Oct. 22, 2019, https://taxfoundation.org/2020-state-business-tax-climate-index/.
[21] Janelle Cammenga, Facts and Figures 2019: How Does Your State Compare? Table 22, Tax Foundation, Mar. 19, 2019, https://taxfoundation.org/facts-figures-2019/.
[22] Id.
Source: Tax Policy – State and Local Sales Tax Rates, 2020