Virginia has lower property taxes than Maryland โ€” 0.90% versus 1.06% average effective rate. On a $600,000 DC-suburb home, Virginia saves approximately $960/year in property tax. Beyond property tax, Maryland levies a county income tax (typically 2.25โ€“3.2% depending on county) on top of state income tax, creating a significantly higher combined income tax burden than Virginia. For DC-area professionals deciding between Northern Virginia (Fairfax, Arlington, Alexandria) and Maryland suburbs (Montgomery, Prince George's, Howard counties), Virginia generally offers better overall tax value despite similar quality of life.

By Daniel, Founder of CountryTaxCalc

Daniel has spent 5+ years researching tax systems across 95+ countries and all US states to make tax comparison accessible to everyone. For corrections, contact us.

Last Updated: April 2026

The Big Picture

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Virginia

0.90%

Avg Effective Rate

Below national average; rates vary significantly by locality โ€” Northern VA higher

๐Ÿฆ€ Maryland

1.06%

Avg Effective Rate

Above VA; county income tax adds significantly to Maryland's total burden

Typical Annual Savings

At $600,000 home income:

$960

Virginia saves on property tax

Tax Savings by Income Level

IncomeVA TaxMD TaxSavings10-Year
$400,000 home $3,600$4,240$640$6,400
$500,000 home $4,500$5,300$800$8,000
$600,000 home $5,400$6,360$960$9,600
$750,000 home $6,750$7,950$1,200$12,000
$1,000,000 home $9,000$10,600$1,600$16,000
$1,500,000 home $13,500$15,900$2,400$24,000
๐Ÿ’ก

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Virginia Pros and Cons

โœ… Pros

  • Lower average property tax rate than Maryland
  • No county income tax (unlike MD which charges 2.25โ€“3.2%)
  • Virginia income tax max 5.75% vs MD max 5.75% โ€” similar state rates
  • Northern VA (Fairfax, Loudoun) has excellent schools with lower total tax

โŒ Cons

  • Personal property tax on vehicles (approximately 4.57% of value annually in many localities)
  • Northern Virginia localities (Fairfax, Arlington) have higher property rates
  • Car tax can add $1,000โ€“$2,500+/year for households with newer vehicles
  • BPOL (business license tax) on gross receipts for self-employed

Maryland Pros and Cons

โœ… Pros

  • Proximity to DC without Virginia car tax burden
  • Strong public transit in Montgomery/PG County areas
  • Maryland Homestead Tax Credit caps assessment increases at 10%/year
  • No personal property tax on vehicles

โŒ Cons

  • Higher average property tax rate
  • County income tax: 2.25โ€“3.2% additional on top of state income tax
  • Maryland state income tax: 2โ€“5.75% (similar to VA)
  • Combined state + county income tax can reach 9% for top earners

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is it cheaper to live in Virginia or Maryland for DC commuters?

Virginia is generally cheaper in total taxes for most DC-area households. The key differences: (1) Virginia has no county income tax; Maryland charges 2.25โ€“3.2% county income tax on top of state rates. On a $150,000 income, Maryland's county tax adds approximately $3,400โ€“$4,800/year. (2) Virginia's property tax is moderately lower. (3) Virginia charges an annual personal property tax on vehicles (~$500โ€“$2,000/year for most households); Maryland does not. For a DC-area household earning $150,000 in a $700,000 home: Virginia typically costs $2,000โ€“$4,000 less per year in total taxes despite the car tax.

Q: What is Maryland's county income tax?

Maryland is one of the few US states that allows counties and Baltimore City to levy their own income tax. Rates range from 2.25% (Dorchester, Worcester) to 3.2% (several counties including Baltimore City, Prince George's, Anne Arundel). Montgomery County is 3.2%; Howard County is 3.2%; Prince George's is 3.2%. This is in addition to Maryland's state income tax of 2โ€“5.75%. A Montgomery County resident earning $200,000 pays approximately $8,400 in county income tax alone โ€” a cost Virginians in equivalent Northern VA localities avoid entirely.

Q: Does Virginia's car tax significantly change the comparison?

Virginia's personal property tax on vehicles is a genuine cost that Maryland residents don't face. In Fairfax County, the rate is 4.57% of assessed value (using NADA clean trade-in value at 100% in most localities). A household with two cars worth $40,000 combined pays approximately $1,830/year. Some cities have rates above 5%. This partially offsets Virginia's property tax and county income tax advantages. However, for most households the income tax savings from avoiding Maryland's county tax still exceed Virginia's car tax cost. Vehicles depreciate; the car tax burden decreases over time.

Q: Where in Northern Virginia has the lowest property tax?

Property tax rates vary significantly across Northern Virginia. Lower effective rates: Loudoun County approximately 0.87% (plus growing assessment base due to rapid development); Prince William County approximately 0.98%; Stafford County approximately 0.83%. Higher rates: Arlington County approximately 1.03%; Alexandria City approximately 1.07%; Fairfax County approximately 1.00%. By comparison, most Maryland DC suburbs (Montgomery, Howard, Prince George's counties) range from 0.95โ€“1.20% effective rate. The combination of Loudoun or Prince William County Virginia rates plus no county income tax makes these areas particularly tax-efficient for DC-area homeowners.

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