What are states collecting?
State income taxes are not the only determinant of state tax burdens. Washington, for example, is one of seven states with no personal income tax, but it still ranks 21st when it comes to state and local tax burden. When figuring state and local taxes, the Tax Foundation considers everything from sales and property taxes to gasoline excise taxes and vehicle license fees.
Federal tax rates, of course, are uniform across the country, but states with a higher per-capita income will have more taxpayers pushed into higher brackets, so the federal tax burden varies from state to state.
Your actual tax burden, of course, depends on many factors that go well beyond where you live -- how much you make, the source of your income, whether you own a home, the number of deductions you claim. The tax burden figures just provide some broad comparison.
Here's a breakdown of some of the numbers that go into your state and local taxes, and how some states fare on each.
Income tax
Seven states -- Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington and Wyoming -- have no state income tax. Tennessee and New Hampshire limit their tax to dividends and interest income only.
Comparisons for the other 41 states can be a tricky thing because income brackets and personal exemptions are all over the map. If you're interested in seeing how your state fares -- and you're willing to wade through some numbers -- check out
this chart from the National Association of Tax Administrators.
States also vary in the way they tax retirement income; 15 states tax Social Security income, for instance, at least to some extent.
Fuel taxes
The federal government levies 18.4 cents on each gallon of gasoline sold. The amount that states tax on top of that varies from 7.5 cents per gallon in Georgia and 8 cents in Alaska all the way up to 31 cents per gallon in Rhode Island and 29.1 cents in Wisconsin.
That's just the state excise tax; other localities within a state may levy additional taxes, and gasoline in many states is also subject to sales tax.
Sales taxes
Speaking of sales tax, this is another area where the range is wide. The basic state rate goes all the way from 0% (in Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon) to 7% (in Mississippi, Rhode Island and Tennessee). California has a 7.25% rate, but 1% is a state-wide tax for local communities.
Counties and other localities can -- and do -- levy their own sales taxes on top of the state rate, however. The chart below shows the top sales tax in each state.