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The Corporate Tax Rate in the United States stands at 21 percent. This dataset provides - United States Corporate Tax Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Graph and download economic data for U.S Individual Income Tax: Taxable Income Boundary Under which the Lowest Tax Rate Bracket Applies (IITTILB) from 1913 to 2018 about individual, tax, income, rate, and USA.
For 2023, the U.S. state with the highest tax rate on the highest corporate income bracket is New Jersey, with a top corporate income tax rate of **** percent, which applies to companies with an income over *********** U.S. dollars. North Carolina had the lowest top corporate tax rate of *** percent, and both South Dakota and Wyoming have no corporate income tax.
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The Corporate Tax Rate in France stands at 25 percent. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - France Corporate Tax Rate - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
Corporate income tax revenue in the United States amounted to 420 billion U.S. dollars in 2023, which was about 1.6 percent of the U.S. GDP. The forecast predicts an increase in corporate income tax revenue up to 551 billion U.S. dollars in 2034, which would be about 1.2 percent of the projected U.S. GDP.
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Graph and download economic data for Federal Government: Tax Receipts on Corporate Income (FCTAX) from 1929 to 2024 about receipts, tax, federal, corporate, government, income, GDP, and USA.
This table provides individual taxation statistics, including effective tax and transfer rates, the total amount of taxes paid and government transfers received, and the proportion of Canadian taxfilers that pay tax or receive government transfers.
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The Corporate Tax Rate in Switzerland stands at 14.60 percent. This dataset provides - Switzerland Corporate Tax Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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This dataset provides values for CORPORATE TAX RATE reported in several countries. The data includes current values, previous releases, historical highs and record lows, release frequency, reported unit and currency.
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Graph and download economic data for Federal government current tax receipts: Taxes on corporate income (B075RC1Q027SBEA) from Q1 1947 to Q1 2025 about receipts, tax, federal, corporate, government, income, GDP, and USA.
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Key information about US Tax revenue: % of GDP
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Graph and download economic data for Federal Receipts as Percent of Gross Domestic Product (FYFRGDA188S) from 1929 to 2024 about receipts, federal, GDP, and USA.
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Key information about United States Tax Revenue
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The Personal Income Tax Rate in the United States stands at 37 percent. This dataset provides - United States Personal Income Tax Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Years represent the tax years .Starting with 1985, tax bracket boundaries were indexed for inflation, using the U.S. Department of Labor Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers (CPS-U).
As stated by the source, tax rates shown are for the regular income tax, i.e., for normal tax and surtax, applicable to U.S. citizens and residents. Therefore, the rates exclude provisions unique to nonresident aliens. Tax rates exclude the effect of tax credits (which reduce the tax liability), except as noted, and several specific add-on or other taxes applicable to all or some tax years. Excluded are the war excess profits tax (1917), victory tax (1942-1943), Social Security self-employment tax (starting with 1951), tax under the income averaging provisions (1964-1986) and under the farm income averaging provisions (starting with 1998), and the recapture taxes resulting from having to recompute and pay back certain tax credits in later years (starting with 1963), the maximum tax on earned income or on personal service income (1971-1981), the minimum tax on tax preferences (1970-1983), and the alternative minimum tax on tax preferences (starting with 1979).
Also excluded are such other taxes as the tax on recipients of accumulation distributions of trusts (starting with 1954) and the special averaging tax or multiple recipient special averaging tax on recipients of lump-sum distributions from qualified retirement plans (starting with 1974). In addition, data excludes the taxes associated with the preferential treatment of capital gains, starting with 1922 (although certain gains received preferential treatment as early as 1918). At various times, these treatments have taken the form of special tax rates; special definitions; different asset holding periods; ceilings on taxes; and exclusions from income. Included among these special treatments were alternative tax (1938-1986) and its variations for the earlier years, although all of these taxes were in some way tied to a structure for regular tax.
Until 1948, a single set of tax rates applied to all taxpayers, regardless of marital or filing status, and married couples filing joint returns were taxed on the combined income of each spouse. However, a second, lower set of rates was introduced, starting with 1948, for married couples filing jointly. To simplify the data presentation for these more recent years, only the lowest and highest tax rates for married persons filing jointly are shown. Under this change, the combined tax of husband and wife became twice the combined tax that would have applied if their combined taxable income (net income for years before 1954) were cut in half. Thus, taxpayers using the joint return filing status split their incomes for tax purposes, in effect doubling the width of their taxable income (or net income) size brackets. The lowest and highest tax rate brackets are, therefore, the brackets for married couples filing jointly that result from taking into account this doubling of the bracket widths. Starting with 1952, a third set of rates was introduced (not shown) for heads of household, i.e., for unmarried individuals who paid over half the cost of maintaining a home for a qualifying person (e.g., a child or parent), or for certain married individuals who had lived apart from their spouses for the last 6 months of the tax year. This filing status was liberalized, starting with 1970, and provides approximately half the advantage of the income-splitting described above. Starting with 1954, the full benefits of income-splitting allowed married couples filing jointly (i.e., the same tax rates and taxable income brackets) were extended to a new, fourth filing status, surviving spouse (i.e., individuals widowed for 1 to 2 years following the death of a spouse, provided they had a dependent child and had not remarried). The remaining filing status was for single persons, who used the rates formerly applicable to taxpayers in general. However, these latter rates were moderated, starting with 1969, by limiting the tax so that it would not exceed 20 percent more than the tax on married couples filing jointly. One result of the 1969 law change was that certain married couples filing jointly had to pay more tax than they would have paid if each spouse had filed separately. To help mitigate this effect, a special deduction in computing adjusted gross income was allowed for 1982-1986 for two-earner couples filing jointly. This deduction was initially 5 percent of the lesser of $30,000 or the earned income of the spouse with the lesser earnings. The percentage was increased to 10 percent, starting with 1983. The deduction provision was repealed, starting with 1987, when new, lower rates and a reduced number of tax brackets began. For tax years preceding 1954, the lowest tax rate was either the rate for the basic normal tax (if there was just one rate for normal tax) or the lowest of the several rates for normal tax (if there was more than one rate for normal tax). The highest tax rate was the sum of the uppermost of the graduated rates (if any) for normal tax, plus the uppermost of the additional, graduated surtax rates, provided that both rates were applied to the same income. For example, for 1932, there were two graduated rates for normal tax, 4 percent (on the first $4,000 of income) and 8 percent (on all income over $4,000), and graduated rates for surtax that ranged from 1 percent to 55 percent. The lowest rate for 1932 is, therefore, shown as 4 percent (the lower of the two normal tax rates) and the highest rate as 63 percent (the sum of the 8-percent higher, graduated rate for normal tax on income over $4,000, plus 55 percent, the highest of the graduated, surtax rates, on income over $1 million.). As another example, for 1941, there was just one rate for normal tax, 4 percent, but it applied to all income. The lowest of the surtax rates, 6 percent, was applied to all income under $2,000, so that income under $2,000 was taxed at both the 4-percent normal tax rate and the 6-percent surtax rate. Therefore, the lowest rate for 1941 is 10 percent, the sum of these two tax rates. The highest rate is the sum of the 4-percent normal tax on total statutory net income, plus the highest graduated surtax rate, 77 percent on income over $5 million, so that income over $5 million was taxed at 81.0 percent, the sum of the two rates.
For tax years starting with 1954, normal tax and surtax rates were, in effect, combined into a single rate structure.
For more information on the specific adjustments, see Appendix to Selected Historical and Other Data Tables at https://www.irs.gov/uac/soi-tax-stats-historical-table-23
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The Corporate Tax Rate in Georgia stands at 15 percent. This dataset provides - Georgia Corporate Tax Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
A historical tabulation of selected tax return statistics by counties and other geographic areas reported every year by the Research Section at the Department of Revenue. Source data comes from Tables A through D in the "Returns by county, other states, and city" spreadsheet that accompanies every annual Personal Income Tax publication. Data are reported for all 36 Oregon counties as well as five areas outside Oregon, based on the mailing address on the return when it was filed. Clark County, Washington, is reported separately from the remainder of Washington because so many Clark County residents work in Portland. Idaho and California also have individual tables. Returns from all other states (and outside of the US) are grouped together as "Other". For full-year resident returns, Oregon AGI is the same as federal AGI. For part-year resident and nonresident returns, Oregon AGI is determined from Oregon sourced income and adjustments. Note that some rows have blank cells indicating that data has been omitted, often for disclosure reasons. See "data limitations" below.
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United States - Federal government current tax receipts: Taxes on corporate income was 507.71600 Bil. of $ in January of 2025, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, United States - Federal government current tax receipts: Taxes on corporate income reached a record high of 512.08500 in October of 2024 and a record low of 8.94400 in April of 1949. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for United States - Federal government current tax receipts: Taxes on corporate income - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on July of 2025.
In 2023, the total revenues of the U.S. government totaled around 4.44 trillion U.S. dollars. Revenues consist of individual and corporate income taxes, payroll taxes and other taxes. Individual income taxes amounted to 2.18 trillion U.S. dollars in 2023, whereas corporate income taxes totaled 420 billion U.S. dollars.
In 2023, revenue from individual income tax accounted for 49 percent of total tax revenues collected by the U.S. federal government. By 2029, these taxes are expected to account for 52 percent, reflecting a small decrease. Corporation income tax, however, is expected to increase from 9.4 percent in 2023, to 10.9 percent by 2029.
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The Corporate Tax Rate in the United States stands at 21 percent. This dataset provides - United States Corporate Tax Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.