US Tax Tools

Pennsylvania Tax Brackets 2026

Pennsylvania state income tax rates for tax year 2026 — a flat 3.07% on all taxable income.

Tax year

2026

Type

Flat

Rate range

Flat 3.07%

Brackets

1

Pennsylvania state tax at common incomes (2026)

Taxable income Single — tax Single — effective MFJ — tax MFJ — effective
$50,000 $1,535 3.07% $1,535 3.07%
$75,000 $2,303 3.07% $2,303 3.07%
$100,000 $3,070 3.07% $3,070 3.07%
$150,000 $4,605 3.07% $4,605 3.07%
$250,000 $7,675 3.07% $7,675 3.07%
$500,000 $15,350 3.07% $15,350 3.07%

State income tax only. Excludes federal tax, FICA, and local/city taxes. Assumes taxable income (after deductions).

About Pennsylvania's rates

Pennsylvania applies a flat 3.07% state income tax, but many residents also face local earned-income taxes and, in Philadelphia, a separate wage tax. That means the statewide bracket picture is simple, while the lived tax burden often is not.

Planning note

For Philadelphia and some commuter markets, local wage tax or EIT can matter as much as the state rate. Use the state overview and comparison tools if you are evaluating a move or cross-border commute.

View 2025 Pennsylvania tax brackets for comparison.

Frequently asked questions

What are the Pennsylvania tax brackets for 2026?

Pennsylvania has a flat state income tax of 3.07% for tax year 2026 — applied to all taxable income regardless of filing status.

What is the top Pennsylvania income tax rate in 2026?

3.07%.

How much Pennsylvania state tax on $100,000 in 2026?

A single filer with $100,000 of taxable income owes $3,070 in Pennsylvania state income tax for 2026 — an effective rate of 3.07%. Married filing jointly with the same income owes $3,070 (3.07% effective). Federal tax is separate.

Are Pennsylvania 2026 tax brackets the same as 2025?

Bracket thresholds may have changed for 2026 via inflation indexing or legislative action. The figures on this page are the Pennsylvania bracket thresholds in effect for tax year 2026.

Explore more Pennsylvania tax info

Related Calculators

Last updated May 14, 2026 Tax year 2025-26

Data sources: IRS (irs.gov), Social Security Administration

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by USTax Tools Editorial Desk

Read our methodology →