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1 Kail Padgitt, Ranking State and Local Sales Taxes 1 (2011)

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Febtwai\ , 2011
No. 258
Ranking State and Local Sales Taxes
By
Kail Padgitt
Introduction
Retail sales taxes are correctly described in textbooks as transparent taxes; citizens are
aware of how much they pay and when. On any particular purchase, an individual can easily
identify the amount and percentage he paid in sales tax; it's right there on the receipt. As a
result, even people with no interest in taxation have an idea of the general sales tax rate where
they live.
However, in two-thirds of the country, local-option sales taxes make it somewhat more
difficult for citizens to know what the rates are, and transparency suffers. Thirty-three states
allow localities to charge a local sales tax. The rates vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and
here we average those in a way that gives an accurate impression of the sales tax in each state
(see Table 1).
Combined Rates
Five states do without a general statewide sales tax: Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New
Hampshire and Oregon. Four of them prohibit local-option taxes as well, so they have a
combined rate of zero. Alaska does allow the local option, notably Juneau's city sales tax rate
of 5 percent, and the weighted average of the local rates is 1.1 percent, so the combined rate
is also 1.1 percent.
Among states with a state-level general sales tax, the five with the lowest combined rates are
Hawaii (4.35 percent), Maine (5 percent), Virginia (5 percent), South Dakota (5.22 percent),
and Wyoming (5.3 percent). The five states with the highest combined state-local rates are
Tennessee (9.44 percent), California (9.08 percent), Arizona (9.01 percent), Louisiana (8.69
percent) and Washington (8.64 percent).

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