2-4.8% progressive (8 brackets, but 4.8% top rate kicks in at just $8,449 - effectively near-flat)
Missouri has a 2-4.8% progressive income tax (8 brackets), but the 4.8% top rate kicks in at just $8,449 - making it effectively a near-flat 4.8% tax for almost everyone. At $100,000 income, Missouri residents pay approximately $4,690 state tax (4.69% effective rate) plus $12,908 federal tax. Missouri has aggressively cut taxes (from 5.4% in 2022 to 4.8% in 2026, scheduled to drop to 4.5% by 2028), making it one of the most tax-competitive Midwest states.
Missouri has a 2-4.8% progressive income tax (8 brackets), but the structure is misleading - the 4.8% top rate applies to income over just $8,449, meaning almost all Missourians pay the top rate on most of their income. For practical purposes, Missouri's tax is effectively a 4.8% near-flat tax. At $100K income: ~$4,690 state tax (4.69% effective rate), highly competitive regionally.
Missouri's aggressive tax cut campaign: Missouri cut its top rate from 5.4% (2022) to 4.95% (2023) to 4.8% (2026), with further cuts scheduled to 4.5% by 2028 if revenue growth targets are met. The goal: compete with Tennessee (0%) and Texas (0%) to attract businesses and residents from high-tax states. Missouri ranks 13th-lowest state tax burden nationally and is actively working to drop lower.
Regional comparison: Kansas (3.1-5.7%), Illinois (4.95% flat), Iowa (4.4-5.7%), Arkansas (2-4.7%), Tennessee (0%), Kentucky (4-5%), Nebraska (2.46-5.84%). At $100K: MO $4,690 vs KS $4,950, IL $4,950, IA $4,840, TN $0. Missouri is competitive except vs Tennessee's 0%.
Source: Missouri Department of Revenue - Individual Income Tax
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 - $1,207 | 2% |
| $1,207 - $2,414 | 2.5% |
| $2,414 - $3,621 | 3% |
| $3,621 - $4,828 | 3.5% |
| $4,828 - $6,035 | 4% |
| $6,035 - $7,242 | 4.25% |
| $7,242 - $8,449 | 4.5% |
| Over $8,449 | 4.8% |
Note: These are marginal rates - you only pay the higher rate on income within each bracket.
Source: Missouri Department of Revenue
Here's what Missouri residents actually pay at different income levels (2026, single filer, standard deduction):
| Annual Income | Federal Tax | State Tax | Total Tax | Take-Home Pay | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $4,166 | $2,350 | $6,516 | $43,484 | 13.0% |
| $75,000 | $8,340 | $3,550 | $11,890 | $63,110 | 15.9% |
| $100,000 | $12,908 | $4,690 | $17,598 | $82,402 | 17.6% |
| $150,000 | $25,218 | $7,090 | $32,308 | $117,692 | 21.5% |
| $250,000 | $54,094 | $11,890 | $65,984 | $184,016 | 26.4% |
Note: Includes federal and state income tax only. Does not include FICA (Social Security/Medicare), which adds 7.65% for employees.
Key takeaway: At $100K, Missouri takes $4,690 in state tax alone.
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Get Matched With a CPA โMigration Trends: Missouri experienced modest net outmigration of -5,120 residents (2021-2022). Top origin: Illinois (12,340 from IL - escaping Chicago taxes/crime, St. Louis jobs), California (5,670 from CA - massive tax savings), Texas (4,230 from TX - lower cost). Outflow: Texas (9,890 to TX - 0% tax, jobs), Florida (8,450 to FL - 0% tax, warm), Tennessee (6,120 to TN - 0% tax, Nashville boom).
Why people move to Missouri: Moderate taxes (4.8% competitive regionally), low cost of living (St. Louis $225K median home, KC $260K vs coastal $600K-1.3M), manufacturing jobs (Boeing, GM, Ford), healthcare (BJC HealthCare, Mercy Health), central US location. Why people leave: Small job markets (St. Louis 2.8M, KC 2.2M vs Chicago 9.5M, DFW 8M), declining population/economy (St. Louis lost 65K residents 2010-2020), neighboring states have 0% tax (TN, TX), harsh summers (90-100ยฐF June-Aug with 70% humidity).
Tax considerations: MO 4.8% near-flat tax kicks in at $8,449 (almost everyone pays top rate). Property tax: 0.96% avg ($2,160/year on $225K St. Louis home). Sales tax: 4.225% state + up to 5.5% local = 9.725% max (high - St. Louis 9.679%, KC 9.125%). Social Security: Partially taxed (deductible up to federal amount if income under $85K single/$100K married). No estate/inheritance tax. Kansas City MO/KS: Live on MO side (4.8% tax), work on KS side (pay MO tax as MO resident) - no savings unless you move to KS.
| State | Tax Rate | Tax on $100K Income | Difference from Missouri |
|---|---|---|---|
| Missouri | 2-4.8% | $4,690 | Baseline |
| Kansas | 3.1-5.7% | $4,950 | +$260 (more tax) |
| Illinois | 4.95% flat | $4,950 | +$260 (more tax) |
| Tennessee | 0% | $0 | -$4,690 (less tax) |
| Arkansas | 2-4.7% | $4,560 | -$130 (less tax) |
Key insight: Missouri's 4.8% near-flat tax is competitive regionally - lower than KS/IL (both ~4.95% at $100K), slightly higher than AR (4.56%). But TN (0%) crushes MO with $4,690/year savings. At $150K: TN saves $7,090/year vs MO. The question: is St. Louis/KC job market worth paying 4.8% vs moving to TN's 0% but smaller job markets?
The Tennessee temptation (Memphis/Nashville): Live in Memphis TN (0% tax), 280 miles from St. Louis (4.5 hr drive). Or Nashville TN (0% tax, booming economy). At $100K: TN saves $4,690/year vs MO. At $200K: TN saves $9,490/year. Over 10 years at $150K: TN saves $70,900. BUT: St. Louis has cheaper housing ($225K median vs Nashville $420K). Break-even: If you value MO's lower housing costs ($195K savings on home) + familiarity, stay. If maximizing take-home pay, move to TN.
Bottom line: Missouri's 4.8% rate (dropping to 4.5% by 2028) is solid for Midwest - beats IL/KS slightly. But TN's 0% is too attractive for high earners ($100K+) willing to relocate. MO is best for: manufacturing workers tied to Boeing/GM plants, families who want low cost ($225K homes) + moderate taxes, people unwilling to move to TN/TX. Not ideal for: remote workers/high earners (TN saves $5K-10K/year), retirees on fixed incomes (TN 0% vs MO 4.8% on pensions).
Missouri's 8-bracket structure (2%, 2.5%, 3%, 3.5%, 4%, 4.25%, 4.5%, 4.8%) is a historical artifact. The top 4.8% rate applies to income over just $8,449 for single filers (2026), meaning almost all income is taxed at the top rate. At $50K income: first $8,449 taxed at lower rates ($360), remaining $41,551 at 4.8% ($1,995) = $2,355 total (4.71% effective rate). At $100K: $4,690 tax (4.69% effective). The 8 brackets provide minimal progressivity - Missouri functions as a near-flat 4.8% tax in practice. Missouri is phasing down: 5.4% (2022) โ 4.95% (2023) โ 4.8% (2026) โ 4.5% (2028 target).
Missouri partially taxes Social Security and fully taxes pensions. Social Security: Deductible if income is under $85K single/$100K married (2026 thresholds). Above these thresholds, SS is fully taxable at 4.8% rate. Pension/401k/IRA: Fully taxable at 4.8% with NO special retirement deductions. At typical retiree income ($40K SS + $40K pension = $80K): $40K SS deductible (under $85K), $40K pension taxed = $1,920 MO tax (2.4% effective). This is moderate: worse than TN $0 (0%), similar to AR $2,280 (4.56%), better than KS $4,560 (5.7%). MO also has no estate or inheritance tax. Overall: MO is moderate for retirees - not great (TN/TX/FL are 0%), not terrible (lower than IL/MN).
Kansas City spans MO/KS border. At $100K: MO side pays $4,690 state tax (4.8%), KS side pays $4,950 (5.7% top rate) - MO saves $260/year. Property tax: MO 0.96% vs KS 1.37% - MO saves $820/year on $200K home. Sales tax: MO 9.125% (KC) vs KS 9.125% (Overland Park) - identical. Housing: Similar prices ($260K KC MO vs $280K Overland Park KS). Result: Missouri side saves $1,080/year total ($260 income + $820 property). Caveat: KS schools (Shawnee Mission, Blue Valley) rank higher than most MO districts. Trade-off: Save $1,080/year in MO vs better schools in KS suburbs. Best: Live in MO for taxes, send kids to private school with $1,080 savings if needed.
Yes. Missouri law (HB 2) schedules tax cuts to 4.5% by 2028 IF revenue growth targets are met. The schedule: 5.4% (2022) โ 4.95% (2023) โ 4.8% (2026) โ 4.7% (2027 if triggered) โ 4.5% (2028 if triggered). Trigger: State general revenue must grow 150% of CPI for 3 consecutive years. Political context: Missouri Republicans control legislature and governor's office, committed to competing with TN (0%) and TX (0%) for businesses. Realistic outcome: Likely reaches 4.5% by 2028, possibly 4% by 2030. Missouri is on a trajectory toward becoming a low-tax state to counter population loss (-65K St. Louis 2010-2020, -12K Kansas City).
Missouri's total burden is moderate-low. At $100K with $225K St. Louis home: $4,690 income + $2,160 property (0.96%) + $4,562 sales (9.125% KC or 9.679% StL on $50K) = $11,412 total (11.4%). Compare: Tennessee $100K + $225K home: $0 income + $1,440 property (0.64%) + $4,775 sales (9.55% avg) = $6,215 total (6.2%) - TN saves $5,197/year! Kansas $100K + $225K home: $4,950 income + $3,082 property (1.37%) + $4,562 sales (9.125% KC) = $12,594 total (12.6%) - MO saves $1,182/year. Result: MO beats KS/IL but loses badly to TN. MO is best if you value KC/StL job markets + low housing costs vs TN's 0% tax but higher housing (Nashville $420K).
How we calculate: Missouri uses 8 brackets (2-4.8%), but top 4.8% applies to income over $8,449. We calculate tax using progressive structure, subtract MO standard deduction ($13,850 single 2026), add federal tax. Data sources: Missouri Department of Revenue (2026 rates/brackets), U.S. Census Bureau (migration). Verification: MO's 8-bracket structure and 4.8% top rate (income over $8,449) verified against Missouri Revised Statutes Chapter 143 (Income Tax) and MO DOR 2026 guidance. Tax cut schedule (4.8% โ 4.5% by 2028) verified against HB 2 (2022). Limitations: Assumes single filer, standard deduction, W-2 income, full-year MO residency. Does not include: Social Security deduction (income under $85K single/$100K married), pension deductions, property tax (0.96% avg), sales tax (9.125-9.679% in KC/StL), MO Property Tax Credit, itemized deductions.
These calculations are estimates for informational purposes only and reflect 2026 Missouri tax law (2-4.8% progressive, 8 brackets, top rate at $8,449). Missouri is scheduled to cut to 4.5% by 2028 if revenue triggers met. Does not include: Social Security deduction ($85K/$100K thresholds), property tax (0.96% avg), sales tax (9.125-9.679%), MO-specific credits (Property Tax Credit, pension deductions). Federal tax laws change annually. Consult a licensed Missouri CPA for advice, especially for: Social Security taxation (complex income thresholds), part-year residency, Kansas City MO/KS border tax planning, scheduled tax cuts (4.5% by 2028).
Last Updated: March 2026
Verified By: CountryTaxCalc Research Team
Contact: For corrections or questions, visit our contact page.
Last Updated: March 2026