Skip to content

Taxes In Missouri

2026 Missouri Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens

How Do Missouri Taxes Compare to Other States?

Missouri has a graduated state individual income tax, with rates ranging from 2.00 percent to 4.70 percent. Missouri has a flat 4.00 percent corporate income tax rate, a 4.225 percent state sales tax rate, and an average combined state and local sales tax rate of 8.44 percent. Missouri has a 0.89 percent effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing value. Missouri does not have an estate tax or inheritance tax. Missouri’s gas tax is 29.99 cents per gallon, and its cigarette excise tax is $0.17 per pack of 20 cigarettes.

Missouri Tax Rankings, Debt, and Tax Revenue

Missouri raises tax revenue primarily through general sales taxes (28.3 percent of total state and local tax revenue), individual income taxes (28.2 percent), and property taxes (27.8 percent). Missouri collects $5,286 in state and local tax collections per capita, carries $4,530 in state and local debt per capita, and has an 84 percent funded ratio of public pension plans. Missouri’s tax system ranks 12th overall on the 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index.

Understanding Missouri’s Tax System

Each state’s tax code is a multifaceted system with many moving parts, and Missouri is no exception. Use the tabs below to compare Missouri taxes with other states and to see how Missouri 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 Missouri Compare?

How Does Missouri Collect Revenue?

How Does Missouri's Tax System Rank?


All Related Articles

Nonresident Income Tax Filing Threshold Laws by State Remote Work Tax Burden

Nonresident Income Tax Filing Laws by State, 2024

One relatively easy but meaningful step policymakers can take to make future tax seasons less burdensome is to modernize their state’s nonresident income tax filing, withholding, and reciprocity laws.

7 min read
2024 state capital gains tax rates on long term capital gains

State Tax Rates on Long-Term Capital Gains, 2024

Savings and investment are critical activities, both for individuals’ and families’ financial security and for the health of the national economy as a whole. As such, policymakers should consider how they can help mitigate—rather than add to—tax codes’ biases against saving and investment.  

5 min read
latest state tax trends and state tax cuts revenue implications include responsible state income tax relief in 2024

Can States Afford Their Recent Tax Cuts?

With state tax revenues receding from all-time highs, there’s been a great deal of handwringing about whether states can afford the tax cuts adopted over the past few years. Given that 27 states reduced the rate of a major tax between 2021 and 2023, is there reason for concern?

4 min read
Economic Nexus Tax Treatment by State, 2024

Economic Nexus Treatment by State, 2024

Reforming economic nexus thresholds would not only be better for businesses but for states as well. It is more cost-effective for states to focus on—and simplify—compliance for a reasonable number of sellers than to impose rules that have low compliance and are costly to administer. 

4 min read