Taxation in New Jersey

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The U.S. state of New Jersey levies a state personal income tax and state corporate income tax and a state sales tax. Property taxes are also levied by municipalities, counties, and school districts.

Contents

History

From the founding of the New Jersey colony to the 1870s, the main form of taxation was property taxes. [1]

Personal income tax

The tax table below will show in detail the New Jersey state income tax rates by income tax bracket(s). There are 6 income tax brackets for New Jersey.

Tax brackets for individuals are provided below:

To give an example, if you filed individually and your earned income was $50,000 your tax would be calculated the following way: ($20,000 (first bracket) x 1.4%) + ($15,000 (second bracket) x 1.75%) + ($5,000 (third bracket) x 3.5%) + ($10,000 (fourth bracket) x 5.525%) = $280 + $262.50 + $175 + $552.50 = $1,270, for an overall rate of 2.54%.

Beginning in 2019, the top marginal rate will be raised to 10.75% for incomes over $5 million, making it the second highest top marginal tax rate in the nation (after California's top rate of 13.3%). [2] [3]

Sales tax

New Jersey has a 6.625% state sales tax, which was cut in steps from the previous rate of 7%. [4] All revenues are deposited in the State Treasury for general state use; nothing goes to municipalities.

In urban enterprise zones, the state sales tax is cut in half to encourage economic development, resulting in an effective tax rate of 3.3125%. A full list of urban enterprise zones is available on the State of New Jersey website. [5] [ failed verification ]

New Jersey does not charge sales tax on most unprepared foods, household paper products, medicine, and clothing. As of July 1, 2022 New Jersey Does not charge sales tax on medical cannabis. [6] New Jersey does not charge sales tax on gasoline, but gasoline is subject to a $0.418/gallon excise tax.[ citation needed ]

Cigarettes are subject to a $2.70 per pack excise tax in addition to sales tax.[ citation needed ]

Property tax

Former governor Jon Corzine and Bergen County executive Dennis McNerney have suggested that smaller municipalities merge into larger municipalities to share services and reduce overhead. [7] [8]

Corporate income tax

New Jersey's current[ when? ] corporate income is 9% for corporation with income greater than $100,000. Companies with income up to $100,000, but greater than $50,000 pay a rate of 7.5% and companies with incomes of $50,000 or less pay a rate of 6.5%. [2] Under a budget deal reached on June 30, 2018, New Jersey's the rate will rise to 11.5% for companies with income over $1 million for the next two years. In the third year it would be decreased to 10.5% before being returned to 9% in the fifth year. [9] New Jersey's top rate of 11.5% will be[ when? ] the second highest in the nation (after Iowa's top rate of 12%). [2]

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. Mathews, John M. (1912). "Tax Administration in New Jersey". Journal of Political Economy. 20 (7): 716–737. doi:10.1086/252077. ISSN   0022-3808.
  2. 1 2 3 Scarboro, Morgan (5 March 2018). "State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets for 2018". Tax Foundation. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  3. Corasaniti, Nick (June 30, 2018). "Last-Minute Budget Deal Averts Shutdown in New Jersey". New York Times. Retrieved 1 July 2018.
  4. NOTICE SALES AND USE TAX RATE CHANGE 6.875% SALES AND USE TAX RATE (P.L. 2016, c. 57) AMENDMENTS TO THE SALES AND USE TAX ACT, EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 2017, New Jersey Department of the Treasury Division of Taxation, updated December 19, 2016. Accessed January 4, 2017. "The New Jersey Sales and Use Tax will be reduced in two phases between 2017 and 2018. P.L. 2016, c. 57 decreases the Sales and Use Tax rate from 7% to 6.875% on and after January 1, 2017. The tax rate will decrease to 6.625% on and after January 1, 2018."
  5. "New Jersey urban enterprise zone program - local zone support" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-01-27.
  6. "NJ Division of Taxation - Medical Cannabis".
  7. County exec urges mergers of towns, Retrieved November 7, 2013
  8. Tiny Towns in N.J. May Have to Merge, Washington Post, Retrieved November 7, 2013
  9. King, Kate (June 30, 2018). "New Jersey Governor, Lawmakers Reach Budget Deal, Avoid Shutdown" . Retrieved 1 July 2018.