1099 tax calculators for all 50 US states
Pick your state for 2026 brackets, a pre-calculated $80k example, an interactive calculator, and a state-specific FAQ. Every page is real HTML — no JavaScript required to read your tax breakdown.
All 50 states + Washington DC
Each state page includes 2026 federal + state tax brackets, the $184,500 SS wage base, QBI deduction, half-SE-tax deduction, a worked $80,000 example with full breakdown, an interactive calculator, state-specific FAQ, and links to the state's official Department of Revenue.
Quick comparisons
The 9 no-income-tax states
Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming. New Hampshire fully repealed its interest-and-dividends tax in 2025. Washington taxes capital gains over $262k but not earned income. For freelancers in these states, only federal income tax (10–37%) and the 15.3% self-employment tax apply.
The 9 highest-tax states
For typical six-figure freelancers, the practical top rates that matter are: California (9.3% over $70k), Hawaii (8.25% over $48k), Oregon (8.75% over $10.7k), New York (5.5–6% over $80k + NYC adds 3–3.9%), New Jersey (5.5% over $40k), Massachusetts (5.0% flat + 4% surtax over $1M), Minnesota (6.8% over $32k), DC (8.5% over $60k), Vermont (6.6% over $48k).
Featured state guides
About the data
State brackets are 2026 figures sourced from each state's Department of Revenue and cross-checked against Tax Foundation. Federal brackets, the $184,500 SS wage base, and the $16,100 standard deduction are from IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32.
Last updated: January 15, 2026.