April 23, 2024

Floridians With Low Income Taxed at Similar Rate to Wealthiest Californians, Study Finds

State Tax Rate for People with Modest Income Higher in Florida than California

Florida Think-Tank Says Implementing a Working Floridians Tax Rebate Would Make the State Tax Code Fairer

STATEWIDE - An eye-opening Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) study released on the heels of Tax Day reveals the large extent to which California’s tax system is fairer — i.e., less regressive — than Florida’s. Overall, the bottom 40 percent of income earners pay a higher tax rate in Florida than California, even though Florida has a reputation as being "low tax” and California is often referred to as "high tax."

Tax analysts from ITEP and Florida Policy Institute (FPI) discussed the two states’ tax systems during a press call held earlier today.

ITEP’s study, “Is California Really a High-Tax State?,” analyzes tax rates for working-age adults, excluding those age 65 or older. Key findings as they relate to Florida are as follows:

  • For families of modest means, Florida is a high-tax state. As a share of personal income, Florida has the 7th highest state and local tax rate in the nation for the bottom 20 percent of income earners. For the next 20 percent, Florida has the 15th highest rate. These same groups in California pay a smaller share of their income in taxes.
  • Florida’s wealthy residents enjoy low taxes. Floridians with moderate income pay 3.5 times the rate paid by the top 1 percent.
  • Floridians with low income are taxed at a similar rate to the wealthiest Californians. Floridians with income under $19,600 pay a larger share of their income in state and local taxes than the 1 percent of Californians with income over $862,100 per year.

According to FPI, implementing the Working Floridians Tax Rebate — a state-level version of the federal Earned Income Tax Credit —  would help make the tax code fairer in Florida, putting over $1.1 billion back in people’s pockets with an estimated average rebate of nearly $513 per household.

Esteban Leonardo Santis, PhD, policy analyst at FPI, said: “ITEP’s latest findings further highlight the need to reform Florida’s inequitable, regressive tax code. Our state’s dependence on sales and excise taxes overburden households on the lower-end of the income spectrum, so much so that, as a share of their personal income, these families pay a higher tax rate than wealthy households in California. If policymakers are serious about fixing our tax code, they ought to consider options like closing corporate tax loopholes via combined reporting and creating the Working Floridians Tax Rebate."

Eli Byerly-Duke, state policy analyst at ITEP and co-author of the study, said: “Some people like to call Florida a ‘low-tax’ state, but the state only has low taxes for the wealthy. While the richest 1 percent of Florida pay only 2.7 percent of their income in state and local taxes, working families pay three and a half times as much. In contrast, many families with modest incomes in ‘high-tax’ California pay less than Floridians, while even the richest 1 percent of Californians pay lower taxes than the poorest 20 percent of Florida families.”

The regressivity in Florida’s tax code is largely driven by the elimination of a personal income tax roughly 100 years ago. Florida depends heavily on its general sales tax and various excise taxes, such as taxes on motor fuel, alcoholic beverages, and tobacco, to maintain a balanced budget. FPI has calculated that sales and excise tax revenue accounts for approximately 80 percent of Florida's total tax revenue.

A recent FPI study found that implementing the Working Floridians Tax Rebate — a state-level version of the federal Earned Income Tax Credit —  would help make the tax code fairer in Florida, putting over $1.1 billion back in people’s pockets with an estimated average rebate of nearly $513 per household.

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