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Meals Taxes in Major U.S. Cities

4 min readBy: Joseph Bishop-Henchman, Alex Raut, Kevin Duncan

Download Tax Foundation Fiscal Fact No. 293: Meals Taxes in Major U.S. CitiesTourists and business travelers quickly learn that taxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. es on meals are sometimes higher than taxes on other goods. Meals taxes generally apply to purchases of prepared food that are consumed in a restaurant or similar establishment, or taken “to go” for later consumption. In contrast, sales of groceries (or “non-prepared food”) are completely exempt from state sales taxA sales tax is levied on retail sales of goods and services and, ideally, should apply to all final consumption with few exemptions. Many governments exempt goods like groceries; base broadening, such as including groceries, could keep rates lower. A sales tax should exempt business-to-business transactions which, when taxed, cause tax pyramiding. in 30 states and the District of Columbia and partly exempt in a further eight states. Meals taxes are usually locally imposed but are sometimes imposed at the state level.

These high “prepared food” taxes are sometimes justified as a “luxury tax” intended to target higher-income individuals, although the wide diversity of takeout dining options suggests that such a tax is poorly targeted to achieve that goal. One could say that it is a tax on individuals with less flexible schedules or who do not like to cook–rich or poor.

Others justify these taxes as tourism taxes, designed to shift tax burdens to business and vacation travelers, similar to high taxes on hotel rooms and car rentals. Because the benefit derived from added economic activity from visitors and travelers probably exceeds the government services they use during their stay, “tourism” taxes are generally bad policy because they shift tax burdens away from those residents who actually demand and benefit from government services.

Regardless of the justification, meals taxes can add significant costs and lead to administrative complexity. For example, the Massachusetts Department of Revenue provides the following examples in attempting to explain which food transactions are subject to sales tax, which are subject to additional meals tax, and which are tax-exempt:

Example: If a restaurant serves a patron a lasagna dinner, then the dinner is taxable.

However, if the restaurant also sells frozen lasagna dinners that patrons heat in their own homes, these dinners are not considered meals and therefore are not taxable because they require additional preparation.

Example: If a patron purchases a pizza and two cans of soda from a restaurant, then both the pizza and sodas are taxable.

However, if the patron purchases a pizza and a two-liter bottle of soda to go, then the pizza is taxable, but the bottle of soda is tax-exempt since it was sold in an unopened original container of at least 26 fluid ounces.

Example: If a restaurant offers a patron, upon presentation of a coupon, two meals for the usual price of one, the price of the free meal is excluded from the meals tax. The tax is due only on the actual amount the restaurant charges the patron.[1]

Those who run restaurants and other eating establishments bear the burden of complying with these often complex rules.

The table below lists the sales tax and meals tax in the 50 U.S. cities with the highest population. Some key findings:

  • Thirty-five of the 50 cities do not charge a higher tax on meals than on other goods.
  • Visitors to Minneapolis, Minnesota pay the highest meals tax: a combined 10.775 percent rate. Combined rates are also high in Chicago, Illinois (10.75 percent), Virginia Beach, Virginia (10.5 percent), Seattle, Washington (10 percent), and Washington, D.C. (10 percent).
  • Visitors to Virginia Beach, Virginia see the highest jump from the regular sales tax to the meals tax: a 110% increase from 5 percent to 10.5 percent.
Table 1: Meals Taxes in the 50 U.S. Cities with Largest Population
Population Rank City State Sales Tax Additional Meals Tax Combined Tax on Meals Combined Tax Rank
Source: Tax Foundation review of city and state websites.
1 New York City NY 8.875% 8.875% 18
2 Los Angeles LA 8.75% 8.75% 19
3 Chicago IL 9.50% 1.25% 10.75% 2
4 Houston TX 8.25% 8.25% 25
5 Philadelphia PA 8% 8% 33
6 Phoenix AZ 9.30% 9.30% 7
7 San Antonio TX 8.25% 8.13% 30
8 San Diego CA 7.75% 7.75% 37
9 Dallas TX 8.25% 8.25% 25
10 San Jose CA 8.25% 8.50% 22
11 Jacksonville FL 7% 2% 9% 14
12 Indianapolis IN 7% 2% 9% 14
13 San Francisco CA 8.50% 8.50% 22
14 Austin TX 8.25% 8.25% 25
15 Columbus OH 6.75% 6.75% 45
16 Fort Worth TX 8.25% 8.25% 25
17 Louisville KY 6% 6% 46
18 Charlotte NC 8% 1% 9% 14
19 Detroit MI 6% 6% 46
20 El Paso TX 8.25% 8.25% 25
21 Memphis TN 9.25% 9.25% 9
22 Baltimore MD 6% 6% 46
23 Boston MA 6.25% 0.75% 7% 43
24 Seattle WA 9.50% 0.50% 10% 4
25 Washington DC 6% 4% 10% 4
26 Nashville TN 9.25% 9.25% 9
27 Denver CO 4.10% 4% 8.10% 31
28 Milwaukee WI 5.60% 0.05% 5.65% 49
29 Portland OR 50
30 Las Vegas NV 8.10% 8.10% 31
31 Oklahoma City OK 8.375% 8.375% 24
32 Albuquerque NM 6.9995% 6.9995% 44
33 Tucson AZ 9.10% 9.10% 11
34 Fresno CA 7.975% 7.975% 36
35 Sacramento CA 7.75% 7.75% 37
36 Long Beach CA 8.75% 8.75% 19
37 Kansas City MO 7.85% 1.23% 9.08% 12
38 Mesa AZ 9.05% 9.05% 13
39 Virginia Beach VA 5% 5.50% 10.50% 3
40 Atlanta GA 8% 8% 33
41 Colorado Springs CO 7.40% 7.40% 42
42 Omaha NE 7% 2.50% 9.50% 6
43 Raleigh NC 6.75% 1% 7.75% 37
44 Miami FL 7% 2% 9% 14
45 Cleveland OH 7.75% 7.75% 37
46 Tulsa OK 7.50% 7.50% 41
47 Oakland CA 8.75% 8.75% 19
48 Minneapolis MN 7.775% 3% 10.775% 1
49 Wichita KS 9.30% 9.30% 7
50 Arlington TX 8% 8% 33

[1] Massachusetts Department of Revenue, A Guide to Sales Tax on Meals, http://www.mass.gov/dor/individuals/taxpayer-help-and-resources/tax-guides/meals-tax-guide.html.

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