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The Tax Policy Center's

Briefing Book

A citizen’s guide to the fascinating (though often complex) elements of the US tax system.

Tax Policy Center Briefing Book

State and Local Tax Policies

  • Chapters
    • Introduction
      • Introduction
        • Introduction
    • Some Background
      • Federal Budget
        • What are the sources of revenue for the federal government?
        • How does the federal government spend its money?
        • What is the breakdown of revenues among federal, state, and local governments?
        • How do US taxes compare internationally?
      • Federal Budget Process
        • How does the federal budget process work?
        • What is the history of the federal budget process?
        • What is the schedule for the federal budget process?
        • What is reconciliation?
        • How is a budget resolution enforced?
        • What is PAYGO?
        • What are rescissions?
        • What is the debt limit?
      • Federal Budget Outlook
        • How accurate are long-run budget projections?
        • What have federal budget trends been over the short and long term?
        • What is mandatory and discretionary spending?
        • What are tax extenders?
        • What options would increase federal revenues?
        • What does it mean for a government program to be off-budget?
        • How did the TCJA affect the federal budget outlook?
        • How did the fiscal response to the COVID-19 pandemic affect the federal budget outlook?
      • Taxes and the Economy
        • How do taxes affect the economy in the short run?
        • How do taxes affect the economy in the long run?
        • What are dynamic scoring and dynamic analysis?
        • Do tax cuts pay for themselves?
        • On what do economists agree and disagree about the effects of taxes on economic growth?
        • What were the economic effects of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act?
      • Economic Stimulus
        • What is the role of monetary policy in alleviating economic downturns?
        • What are automatic stabilizers and how do they work?
        • What characteristics make fiscal stimulus most effective?
      • Distribution of Tax Burdens
        • How are federal taxes distributed?
        • Are federal taxes progressive?
        • How should changes in tax progressivity be measured?
        • What is the difference between marginal and average tax rates?
        • What criticisms are levied against standard distributional analysis?
        • How should distributional tables be interpreted?
        • Who bears the burden of the corporate income tax?
        • Who bears the burden of federal excise taxes?
        • How do financing methods affect the long-run burdens of tax cuts?
        • How do taxes affect income inequality?
        • How do the impacts of tax policies vary by race and ethnicity?
        • Do immigrants pay taxes?
      • Tax Expenditures
        • What are tax expenditures and how are they structured?
        • What is the tax expenditure budget?
        • Why are tax expenditures controversial?
        • What are the largest tax expenditures?
        • How did the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act affect tax expenditures?
        • How will tax expenditures evolve over the coming decade?
      • Tax Administration
        • What is the audit rate?
        • What is the tax gap?
        • What is a tax shelter?
        • What is Free File?
        • What is VITA?
        • What technology does the IRS use?
        • How have cuts to the IRS’s appropriations affected its ability to administer the federal tax system?
        • How did the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 affect the IRS’s budget?
      • Recent History of the Tax Code
        • What did the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act do?
        • How did the major COVID-19 pandemic relief bills affect taxes?
        • How did the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act change personal taxes?
        • How did the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act change business taxes?
        • What did the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 do?
        • What did the 2008–10 tax stimulus acts do?
    • Key Elements of the U.S. Tax System
      • Individual Income Tax
        • What is the standard deduction?
        • What are itemized deductions and who claims them?
        • How did the TCJA change the standard deduction and itemized deductions?
        • What are personal exemptions?
        • How do federal income tax rates work?
        • What are tax credits and how do they differ from tax deductions?
        • How do phaseouts of tax provisions affect taxpayers?
      • Capital Gains and Dividends
        • How are capital gains taxed?
        • What is the effect of a lower tax rate for capital gains?
        • How might the taxation of capital gains be improved?
        • What is carried interest, and how is it taxed?
        • How is cryptocurrency taxed?
      • AMT
        • What is the AMT?
        • Who pays the AMT?
        • How much revenue does the AMT raise?
        • How did the TCJA change the AMT?
      • Taxes and the Family
        • What is the child tax credit?
        • How did the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act Change the Child Tax Credit?
        • What is the earned income tax credit?
        • Do all people eligible for the EITC participate?
        • What is the adoption tax credit?
        • How does the tax system subsidize child care expenses?
        • What are marriage penalties and bonuses?
        • How did the TCJA change taxes of families with children?
      • Taxes and the Poor
        • How does the federal tax system affect low-income households?
        • What is the difference between refundable and nonrefundable credits?
        • Can poor families benefit from the child tax credit?
        • Why do low-income families use tax preparers?
        • How does the earned income tax credit affect poor families?
        • What are error rates for refundable credits and what causes them?
        • How do IRS audits affect low-income families?
      • Taxes and Retirement Saving
        • What kinds of tax-favored retirement arrangements are there?
        • How large are the tax expenditures for retirement saving?
        • What are defined benefit retirement plans?
        • What are defined contribution retirement plans?
        • What types of nonemployer-sponsored retirement savings accounts are available?
        • What are Roth individual retirement accounts?
        • Who uses individual retirement accounts?
        • How does the availability of tax-favored retirement saving affect national saving?
        • What’s the difference between front-loaded and back-loaded retirement accounts?
        • What is an automatic 401(k)?
        • How might low- and middle-income households be encouraged to save?
        • What are cash balance plans?
      • Taxes and Charitable Giving
        • What is the tax treatment of charitable contributions?
        • What entities are tax-exempt?
        • Who benefits from the deduction for charitable contributions?
        • How would various proposals affect incentives for charitable giving?
        • How large are individual income tax incentives for charitable giving?
        • How did the TCJA affect incentives for charitable giving?
      • Taxes and Health Care
        • How much does the federal government spend on health care?
        • Who has health insurance coverage?
        • Which tax provisions subsidize the cost of health care?
        • How does the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance work?
        • How might the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance be reformed?
        • What tax changes did the Affordable Care Act make?
        • What are premium tax credits?
        • How do health savings accounts work?
        • How do flexible spending accounts for health care expenses work?
      • Taxes and Homeownership
        • What are the tax benefits of homeownership?
        • Do existing tax incentives increase homeownership?
        • How do tax incentives affect home values?
        • What are options to reform tax incentives for homeownership?
      • Taxes and Education
        • What tax incentives exist for higher education?
        • What tax incentives exist to help families pay for college?
        • What tax incentives exist to help families save for education expenses?
        • What is the tax treatment of college and university endowments?
      • Tax Complexity
        • Why are taxes so complicated?
        • What are the benefits of simpler taxes?
        • What policy reforms could simplify the tax code?
      • Wealth Taxes
        • What is a wealth tax?
        • How do the estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer taxes work?
        • Who pays the estate tax?
        • How many people pay the estate tax?
        • What is the difference between carryover basis and a step-up in basis?
        • How could we reform the estate tax?
        • What are the options for taxing wealth transfers?
        • What is an inheritance tax?
      • Payroll Taxes
        • What are the major federal payroll taxes, and how much money do they raise?
        • What is the unemployment insurance trust fund, and how is it financed?
        • What are the Social Security trust funds, and how are they financed?
        • Are the Social Security trust funds real?
        • What is the Medicare trust fund, and how is it financed?
      • Excise Taxes
        • What are the major federal excise taxes, and how much money do they raise?
        • What is the Highway Trust Fund, and how is it financed?
      • Energy and Environmental Taxes
        • What tax incentives encourage energy production from fossil fuels?
        • What tax incentives encourage alternatives to fossil fuels?
        • What is a carbon tax?
      • Business Taxes
        • How does the corporate income tax work?
        • What are pass-through businesses?
        • How are pass-through businesses taxed?
        • Is corporate income double-taxed?
        • How does tax law allow businesses to recover the costs of capital assets?
        • What is the Book Minimum Tax on corporations?
      • Tax Incentives for Economic Development
        • What are Opportunity Zones and how do they work?
        • What is the New Markets Tax Credit and how does it work?
        • What is the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit and how does it work?
      • Taxes and Multinational Corporations
        • How does the current US system of international taxation work?
        • How do US corporate income tax rates and revenues compare with other countries’?
        • What are the consequences of the new US international tax system?
        • How does the tax system affect US competitiveness?
        • How would formulary apportionment work?
        • What are inversions, and how did TCJA affect them?
        • What is a territorial tax and does the United States have one now?
        • What is the TCJA repatriation tax and how does it work?
        • What is the TCJA base erosion and anti-abuse tax and how does it work?
        • What is the TCJA tax on global intangible low-taxed income and how does it work?
        • What is foreign-derived intangible income and how is it taxed under the TCJA?
        • What are the OECD Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 international taxation reforms?
    • How Could We Improve the Federal Tax System?
      • Comprehensive Tax Reform
        • What is comprehensive tax reform?
        • What are the major options for comprehensive tax reform?
      • Broad-Based Income Tax
        • What is a broad-based income tax?
        • What would and would not be taxed under a broad-based income tax?
        • What would the tax rate be under a broad-based income tax?
      • National Retail Sales Tax
        • What is a national retail sales tax?
        • What would and would not be taxed under a national retail sales tax?
        • What would the tax rate be under a national retail sales tax?
        • Who bears the burden of a national retail sales tax?
        • Would tax evasion and avoidance be a significant problem for a national retail sales tax?
        • What would be the effect of a national retail sales tax on economic growth?
        • What transition rules would be needed for a national retail sales tax?
        • Would a national retail sales tax simplify the tax code?
        • What can state and local sales taxes tell us about a national retail sales tax?
        • What is the experience of other countries with national retail sales taxes?
        • What did the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform say about the national retail sales tax?
      • Value Added Tax (VAT)
        • What is a VAT?
        • How would a VAT be collected?
        • What would and would not be taxed under a VAT?
        • What would the tax rate be under a VAT?
        • What is the difference between zero rating and exempting a good in the VAT?
        • Who would bear the burden of a VAT?
        • Is the VAT a money machine?
        • How would small businesses be treated under a VAT?
        • What is the Canadian experience with a VAT?
        • Why is the VAT administratively superior to a retail sales tax?
        • What is the history of the VAT?
        • How are different consumption taxes related?
      • Other Comprehensive Tax Reforms
        • What is the Flat Tax?
        • What is the X-Tax?
        • What is the Fair Tax?
      • Recent Comprehensive Tax Reform Proposals
        • Simple, Fair, and Pro-Growth: Proposals to Fix America’s Tax System, Report of the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, November 2005
        • The Moment of Truth: Report of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, December 2010
        • Debt Reduction Task Force, “Restoring America’s Future,” Bipartisan Policy Center, November 2010
        • The Tax Reform Act of 2014: Fixing Our Broken Tax Code So That It Works for American Families and Job Creators, House Ways and Means Committee
        • The Graetz Competitive Tax Plan, Updated for 2022
      • Return-Free Tax Filing
        • What is return-free filing and how would it work?
        • What is Direct File?
        • How would the tax system need to change with exact withholding?
        • What are the benefits and drawbacks of exact withholding?
        • What are prepopulated tax returns?
        • Could the United States adopt a prepopulated tax return system?
    • State and Local Tax Policies
      • State and Local Revenues
        • What are the sources of revenue for state and local governments?
      • Specific State and Local Taxes
        • How do state and local individual income taxes work?
        • How do state and local corporate income taxes work?
        • How do state and local property taxes work?
        • How do state and local general sales and gross receipts taxes work?
        • How do state and local motor fuel taxes work?
        • How do state and local cigarette and vaping taxes work?
        • How do state and local alcohol taxes work?
        • How do state and local soda taxes work?
        • How do state and local cannabis (marijuana) taxes work?
        • How do state and local severance taxes work?
        • How do state and local estate and inheritance taxes work?
        • How do taxes on lotteries, casinos, sports betting, and other types of state-sanctioned gambling work?
        • How do state and local revenues from fines, fees, and forfeitures work?
        • How do state pass-through entity taxes work?
        • How do state and local revenues from charges work?
        • How do state earned income tax credits work?
        • How do state child tax credits work?
      • Fiscal Federalism and Fiscal Institutions
        • How do state individual income taxes conform with federal income taxes?
        • How does the federal income tax deduction for state and local taxes work?
        • What are municipal bonds and how are they used?
        • What types of federal grants are made to state and local governments and how do they work?
        • What are state rainy day funds and how do they work?
        • What are tax and expenditure limits?
        • What are state balanced budget requirements and how do they work?
    • Glossary
      • Glossary
        • Glossary

How do state and local motor fuel taxes work?

Specific State and Local Taxes

<5/17>
State and Local Issues
Q.

How do state and local motor fuel taxes work?

A.

Motor fuel taxes are taxes levied on gasoline, diesel, and gasohol (a mixture of ethanol and unleaded gasoline). State and local governments collected a combined $53 billion in revenue from motor fuel taxes in 2021.

Most states levy per unit taxes based on how many gallons of gasoline a consumer purchases. However, 22 states and the District of Columbia tie at least a portion of their motor fuel tax rate to a variable such as the price of gasoline (wholesale or at the pump), inflation, or another metric (e.g., state population growth).

How much revenue do state and local governments raise from motor fuel taxes?

State and local governments collected a combined $53 billion in revenue from motor fuel taxes in 2021, or 1.3 percent of general revenue. (This total excludes any revenue collected from general sales taxes levied on motor fuel purchases in addition to the motor fuel tax.) Nearly all motor fuel tax revenue (97 percent) came from state motor fuel taxes in 2021.

States earmark most of their motor fuel tax revenue for transportation spending. In 2021, state and local motor fuel tax revenue accounted for 26 percent of highway and road spending. Toll facilities provided another 8 percent and the remaining 66 percent came from other revenue sources.

How much do motor fuel tax rates differ across states?

In addition to the 18.4 cents per gallon federal tax on motor fuels, all states and the District of Columbia tax motor fuels. Per gallon gas tax rates range from 8.95 cents in Alaska to 62.9 cents in California. In addition to Alaska, five other states have per gallon gas tax rates below 20 cents: Arizona, Hawaii, Mississippi, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. After California, the next-highest per gallon tax rates are in Pennsylvania (57.6 cents), Washington (49.4 cents), Illinois (43.4 cents), and Maryland (42.7 cents). These rates include any state excise taxes on gas plus any related taxes and fees that the consumer pays at the pump, such as applicable environmental or inspection fees.

Data: View and download each state's motor fuel tax rate

Ten states also levy a general sales tax or gross receipts tax on purchases of motor fuel. In California, the (prepaid) general sales tax is included in the state’s per gallon excise tax rate. In the other nine states, the general sales tax or gross receipts tax is levied as a separate tax on the purchase.

State tax rates on gasohol are the same as tax rates on gas in every state except South Dakota, where the rates on gasohol are slightly lower. State tax rates on diesel fuel are the same as the tax rates on gas in 24 states and the District of Columbia, higher in 19 states, and lower in six states. For each state's tax rates on gas, diesel, and gasohol see our full table of state motor fuel tax rates.

Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, and New York suspended their gas tax for a period of time in calendar year 2022. Additionally, Illinois and Kentucky stopped scheduled gas tax rate increases from taking effect. Policymakers pushed gas tax holidays in 2022 as the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and various other factors increased the price of gasoline across the country.

How have state gas taxes changed over time?

In most states the gas tax is a per unit tax. That is, the consumer pays tax based on the number of gallons purchased rather than a percentage of the final purchase price. As a result, tax revenue increases only if drivers buy more gasoline or lawmakers raise the tax rate.

During the past two decades, Americans drove fewer miles and purchased more fuel-efficient vehicles. Consequently, aggregate gasoline consumption stagnated.

For most of this period, most states did not respond to a flat or declining tax base with tax rate hikes, and as a result inflation-adjusted state and local motor fuel tax revenue was higher in 2007 ($47.2 billion) than it was in 2014 ($46.8 billion). At the same time, construction costs and demands for transportation project spending continued to increase. Thus, many states faced transportation funding gaps. 

As a result, in recent years, many states have made changes to their gas tax. Between 2013 to 2021, 33 states and the District of Columbia enacted legislation that increased their gas tax—but often in different ways.

In fact, states have various options when increasing transportation funding, including:

  • Raise the gas tax rate. States can compensate for the decline in gasoline consumption by raising the per gallon tax rate. In 2017, for example, Indiana raised its per gallon rate from 18 cents to 28 cents. Although increasing the rate with legislation is simple, it is often politically difficult.
  • Tie the gas tax rate to the price of gasoline. Twelve states and the District of Columbia tie a portion of their gas tax rate to the price of gasoline. This option helps raise revenue when the price of gasoline is high, but it is counterproductive when gasoline prices fall. For example, Kentucky and North Carolina previously tied a large share of their tax rates to gas prices. When gas prices peaked in the early 2010s these states had two of the highest gas tax rates in the country, but when prices dropped their legislatures had to scramble to prevent large rate declines and revenue losses. In 2015, Kentucky created a new tax rate "floor" and in 2017​ North Carolina stopped using gas prices and instead began calculating its gas tax rate based on population and inflation growth. As a result, no state currently ties a large portion of their tax rate to the price of gasoline.
  • Tie the gas tax rate to inflation or population. In 2013, Maryland raised its gas tax rate to 27 cents and tied future increases to the consumer price index. As a result, the state’s per gallon tax rate has increased roughly 15 cents since then. The rate will continue to slowly increase as long as consumer prices go up. These automatic rate increases help states maintain gas tax revenue as gas consumption slows. California, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina, Utah, and Virginia also use inflation in their gas tax rate calculations. Some states are also now experimenting with other gas tax rate formulas that would have similar effects. For example, North Carolina uses population growth and Georgia uses fuel-efficiency standards in their rate calculations.
  • Use toll roads. States are increasingly using toll roads, charging drivers a fee to use specific roads, to generate revenue for infrastructure projects. State and local governments collected $19.1 billion in toll highway charges in 2020, up from $8.3 billion in 2000 (in 2020 inflation-adjusted dollars). Thus, over that time period, revenue from toll highway charges increased 132 percent while gas tax revenues only increased 13 percent.

Tax miles traveled instead of gasoline. Oregon and Utah are currently running pilot programs that tax certain drivers' vehicle miles traveled (VMT) instead of gasoline purchased. The US Department of Transportation is also providing funding for additional VMT studies in several other states, and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act created a national motor vehicle per-mile user fee pilot program. The hope is that a VMT tax can provide a more stable tax base as drivers increasingly purchase hybrid and electronic vehicles. However, there are administrative challenges with a VMT tax and governments would still need to set tax rates high enough to produce the desired amount of revenue.

Updated January 2024
Further Reading

Auxier, Richard C., and John Iselin. 2017. Infrastructure, the Gas Tax, and Municipal Bonds. Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Boddupalli, Aravind, and Erin Huffer. 2020. What Do Federal Taxes Have To Do With Your Public Transit?. Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Zaretsky, Renu. 2019. Road Rage and Raising Revenue: Is It Time For States To Embrace Even Bigger Gas Tax Increases?. Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Auxier, Richard C. 2014. Reforming State Gas Taxes; How States Are (and Are Not) Addressing an Eroding Tax Base. Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

Auxier, Richard C. 2017. Four Facts for Trump's Infrastructure Week. Washington, DC: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

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