Skip to content

Taxes In California

2026 California Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens

How Do California Taxes Compare to Other States?

California has a graduated state individual income tax, with rates ranging from 1.00 percent to 13.30 percent. An additional payroll tax on wage income brings the top rate to 14.6 percent on wage income—the highest combined income tax rate in the United States. California has an 8.84 percent corporate income tax rate, a 7.25 percent state sales tax rate, and an average combined state and local sales tax rate of 8.99 percent. California has a 0.70 percent effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing value. California does not have an estate tax or inheritance tax. California’s gas tax is 70.92 cents per gallon, and its cigarette excise tax is $2.87 per pack of 20 cigarettes.

California Tax Rankings, Debt, and Tax Revenue

California raises tax revenue primarily through individual income taxes (27.5 percent of total state and local tax revenue), property taxes (26.3 percent), and general sales taxes (21.5 percent). California collects $8,942 in state and local tax collections per capita, carries $14,812 in state and local debt per capita, and has an 84 percent funded ratio of public pension plans. California’s tax system ranks 48th overall on the 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index.

Understanding California’s Tax System

Each state’s tax code is a multifaceted system with many moving parts, and California is no exception. Use the tabs below to compare California taxes with other states and to see how California raises tax revenue. You can also browse our tax maps, which are compiled from our annual publication, Facts & Figures 2026: How Does Your State Compare?

See Related Articles

Tax Data by State

Get facts about taxes in your state and around the US

Explore Data

How Do Taxes in California Compare?

How Does California Collect Revenue?

How Does California's Tax System Rank?


All Related Articles

California Worldwide Combined Reporting, CA Corporate Income Taxation

California’s Mandatory Worldwide Combined Reporting Proposal Is a Mistake

California lawmakers are considering mandating worldwide combined reporting, bringing back a policy the state abandoned in the 1980s due to strong pushback from international trading partners and the federal government. The policy failed to work as intended then and doesn’t make any better sense now.

8 min read
Road Taxes and Funding by State, 2026

Road Taxes and Funding by State, 2026

The amount of revenue states raise through roadway-related revenues varies significantly across the US. Only two states raise enough revenue to fully cover their highway spending.

5 min read
California Wealth Tax

Would California’s Wealth Tax Be Temporary?

Proponents of a California wealth tax ballot initiative insist that the proposed wealth tax is temporary: a one-time 5 percent tax that can be paid upfront or over five years with deferral charges. Others are skeptical that the wealth tax would be allowed to expire.

6 min read
Property Taxes in the United States by State and County, 2026

Property Taxes by State and County, 2026

Property taxes are the primary tool for financing local governments. While no taxpayers in high-tax jurisdictions will be celebrating their yearly payments, property taxes are largely rooted in the benefit principle of taxation: the people paying the property tax bills are most often the ones benefiting from the services.

9 min read
Vaping Taxes United States 2026

Vaping Taxes by State, 2026

The vaping industry has grown rapidly in recent decades, becoming a well-established product category and a viable alternative to cigarettes for those trying to quit smoking. US states levy a variety of tax structures on vaping products.

8 min read