Updated June 2026Reviewed for Tax Year 2026

Ohio 2026 Income Tax Brackets & Rates

Ohio levies a progressive bracketed income tax with an estimated top effective rate of 3.50% for 2026. Combined sales tax averages 7.25% and property tax averages 1.52% of home value.

2026 Ohio Rate Overview

Income tax systemProgressive bracketed income tax
Top / flat state rate3.50%
Long-term capital gains3.50%
Combined sales tax (state + local avg)7.25%
Avg effective property tax1.52%
Retirement income treatmentSocial Security exempt; other retirement taxable
Business climateTop 3.5% bracket; CAT (Commercial Activity Tax) replaces corporate income tax.

Rates reflect 2026 statutory schedules from the Ohio Department of Revenue and the Tax Foundation State Tax Facts dataset. State rate shown is the estimated effective top-bracket rate used by TaxEase.money calculators — see your filing-status bracket on the Ohio Tax Guide.

How Ohio Income Tax Works in 2026

Ohio uses a progressive bracketed income tax similar to the federal system. The state’s top marginal rate reaches approximately 3.50% for 2026; lower brackets apply at the bottom of the income scale. See the Ohio Department of Revenue’s official 2026 rate schedule for exact dollar thresholds by filing status.

Most progressive states start from federal AGI, layer state-specific addbacks (e.g., out-of-state municipal bond interest) and subtractions (Social Security, qualified pensions, 529 contributions), then apply the bracket schedule. Credits — EITC match, child/dependent care, energy — reduce the bill dollar-for-dollar.

Federal + Ohio Marginal Rate Stack

State income tax stacks on top of federal income tax and FICA. The 2026 federal brackets (single filer) are:

Federal bracketUp to (single)+ Ohio rateCombined marginal
10.00%$12,4003.50%13.50%
12.00%$50,4003.50%15.50%
22.00%$105,7003.50%25.50%
24.00%$201,7753.50%27.50%
32.00%$256,2253.50%35.50%
35.00%$640,6003.50%38.50%
37.00%3.50%40.50%

FICA (7.65% combined) adds on top for wage income up to the Social Security wage base ($184,500 in 2026). See 2026 Federal Tax Brackets for the full schedule across all filing statuses.

Retirement Income, Social Security & Pensions

Ohio: Social Security exempt; other retirement taxable.

Whether you live in Ohio during retirement matters as much as where you saved. Pre-tax 401(k) and IRA contributions reduce both federal and (in most states) state taxable income today, while Roth contributions and conversions are taxed up front. If you plan to retire in a no-income-tax or retirement-friendly state, frontloading Roth conversions before you move can permanently lock in lower rates.

2026 Worked Example: $100,000 Single Filer in Ohio

Gross wage income$100,000
2026 federal standard deduction (single)$16,100
Federal taxable income$83,900
Estimated federal income tax$16,712
Estimated Ohio state tax @ 3.50%$3,500
FICA (6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare)$7,650
Combined estimated tax$27,862
Estimated take-home$72,138

Illustrative only — uses the TaxEase.money national-average state rate for Ohio and ignores state-specific deductions and credits. Run the live Ohio Income Tax Calculator for a personalized figure.

Compare Ohio With Other States

Ohio sits in a particular spot on the national tax map. These nearby states have similar effective rates:

Ohio side-by-side comparisons

Ohio Calculators & Resources

Ohio 2026 Tax FAQ

Ohio uses a progressive bracket system with a top marginal rate of approximately 3.50% for 2026. Lower brackets apply at the bottom of the income scale; consult the Ohio Department of Revenue 2026 rate schedule for exact dollar thresholds.

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Sources Used

Our data is sourced exclusively from official tax authorities and non-partisan policy institutes. Rates and thresholds are verified against the most recent official publication for tax year 2026.

Last updated for tax year 2026 on January 5, 2026. This page is informational and is not tax advice. Confirm rates with the Ohio Department of Revenue before filing.