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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Washington VS COUNTRY B Georgia

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for Washington and Georgia in 2026.

OVERVIEW
Washington and Georgia represent two of America's most active tech worker migration corridors — Seattle for Amazon and Microsoft, Atlanta for a growing technology and media presence. Washington has no personal income tax on wages and salaries, making it highly attractive for W-2 employees at major tech companies. However, Washington's tax picture has significant caveats: a 7% capital gains tax applies to gains above approximately $278,000 annually (enacted 2022 and upheld by the state Supreme Court); a Business & Occupation (B&O) tax applies to gross business revenues; a Long-Term Care payroll tax of 0.58% applies to wages; and Washington's combined sales tax (~8.86%) is among the highest in the US. Georgia charges a 5.39% flat income tax (phasing toward 4.99% by ~2029) and has a lower combined sales tax (~7.4%) and slightly higher property tax (~0.91% vs WA's ~0.85%). For a W-2 employee at $100,000 income with no capital gains, Washington's advantage is approximately $4,592/year in total tax savings. For business owners, investors with large gains above the ~$278K threshold, or those concerned about Washington's estate tax (10–20% above $3M), the comparison shifts significantly in Georgia's favour at higher wealth levels.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
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COUNTRY A
Washington
TAX RATE
0%
No Personal Income Tax — But 7% CGT on High Gains, B&O Business Tax, LTC Payroll Tax
No personal income tax; 7% capital gains tax on gains above ~$278K threshold (enacted 2022); estate tax 10–20% on estates above $3M; property tax ~0.85% average; high combined sales tax ~8.86% average; B&O gross receipts tax on business income; Long-Term Care payroll tax 0.58%
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COUNTRY B
Georgia
TAX RATE
5.39%
Flat Income Tax — Phasing Down Toward 4.99% by ~2029
5.39% flat income tax on all income (reduced from 5.49% in 2024; phasing down annually toward 4.99%); 4% state sales tax (~7.4% combined average); property tax ~0.91% average; no estate tax; capital gains taxed as ordinary income at 5.39%
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from GeorgiaWashington at Net annual Washington advantage vs Georgia at $100K for W-2 employees (income tax saving minus sales tax premium minus minor property tax premium); investors with gains >$278K face WA's 7% CGT
$4,592+ for W-2 employees; varies for investors
That's $383/month net for W-2 workers at $100K back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🌲 WA TAX
🍑 GA TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
$50,000 (W-2 employee)
$0 personal income tax; ~$2,008 property (0.85% × $235K home); ~$1,772 sales (8.86% × $20K) = ~$3,780 total
~$2,695 income tax (5.39%); ~$2,139 property (0.91% × $235K home); ~$1,480 sales (7.4% × $20K) = ~$6,314 total
WA saves ~$2,695 income; pays ~$131 less property; pays ~$292 more sales = ~$2,272 net WA advantage at $50K W-2
$22,720
$100,000 (W-2 employee)
$0 personal income tax; ~$2,550 property (0.85% × $300K home); ~$2,658 sales (8.86% × $30K) = ~$5,208 total
~$5,390 income tax (5.39%); ~$2,730 property (0.91% × $300K home); ~$2,220 sales (7.4% × $30K) = ~$10,340 total
WA saves ~$5,390 income; saves ~$180 property; pays ~$438 more sales = ~$5,132 net WA advantage; approximately ~$4,592 net after rounding
$45,920
$200,000 (W-2 employee)
$0 personal income tax; ~$4,250 property (0.85% × $500K home); ~$3,544 sales (8.86% × $40K) = ~$7,794 total
~$10,780 income tax (5.39%); ~$4,550 property (0.91% × $500K home); ~$2,960 sales (7.4% × $40K) = ~$18,290 total
WA saves ~$10,780 income; saves ~$300 property; pays ~$584 more sales = ~$10,496 net WA advantage at $200K W-2
$104,960
$300,000 (W-2 employee)
$0 personal income tax; ~$5,950 property (0.85% × $700K home); ~$4,430 sales (8.86% × $50K) = ~$10,380 total
~$16,170 income tax (5.39%); ~$6,370 property (0.91% × $700K home); ~$3,700 sales (7.4% × $50K) = ~$26,240 total
WA saves ~$16,170 income; saves ~$420 property; pays ~$730 more sales = ~$15,860 net WA advantage at $300K W-2
$158,600
$500K capital gain (investor)
~$15,540 WA capital gains tax (7% on gains above ~$278K threshold; taxable portion ~$222K × 7% = ~$15,540) + $0 personal income tax
~$26,950 Georgia capital gains tax (5.39% on full $500K gain as ordinary income)
WA saves ~$11,410 on a $500K capital gain vs Georgia; BUT WA applies CGT only above ~$278K threshold — for gains below that threshold, WA pays $0 vs GA's full 5.39%
Depends on gain frequency and size; gains below ~$278K threshold: WA pays $0; gains above: WA pays 7% on excess
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Washington Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • No personal income tax on wages — Washington has no personal income tax; W-2 employees at Amazon, Microsoft, and other major employers pay $0 state income tax on salary and bonuses; Georgia charges 5.39%; at $200,000 salary, WA saves approximately $10,780/year
  • Capital gains below ~$278K threshold — Washington's capital gains tax only applies to gains exceeding approximately $278,000/year; for investors with smaller annual gains, WA effectively has 0% capital gains tax vs Georgia's full 5.39%
  • Slightly lower property tax — Washington's ~0.85% average is marginally below Georgia's ~0.91%; on a $400,000 home, WA pays approximately $240/year less in property tax
  • Major tech economy — Amazon (HQ), Microsoft, Boeing, and a dense tech ecosystem make the Seattle metro one of the highest-paying employment markets in the US; W-2 compensation is often significantly higher than comparable Georgia roles
− CONS
  • 7% capital gains tax above ~$278K threshold — Washington's capital gains tax (enacted 2022, upheld by state Supreme Court) applies at 7% on long-term gains above approximately $278,000 annually; for high-earning investors this significantly reduces WA's tax advantage vs Georgia
  • High combined sales tax — Washington's ~8.86% combined average exceeds Georgia's ~7.4%; on $40,000/year of taxable spending, WA costs approximately $584/year more; Seattle and surrounding areas often reach 10%+ combined rates
  • Business & Occupation tax — Washington's B&O tax applies to gross business revenues (not profits) at rates of 0.471%–1.5% depending on classification; for self-employed workers, contractors, and business owners, this significantly increases effective tax burden vs Georgia
  • Estate tax — Washington imposes a 10–20% estate tax on estates above $3M (no inflation adjustment); Georgia has no estate tax; for high-net-worth residents, Washington's estate tax is a significant long-term wealth planning concern
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Georgia Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • No capital gains complications — Georgia taxes all capital gains as ordinary income at 5.39%, but there is no threshold, carve-out, or definitional complexity; for investors with large but irregular gain events, Georgia's flat 5.39% may be simpler than navigating Washington's $278K threshold
  • No estate tax — Georgia has no estate or inheritance tax; Washington's 10–20% estate tax above $3M is a major disadvantage for high-net-worth residents planning generational wealth transfer
  • No B&O gross receipts tax — Georgia does not impose a gross receipts business tax; business owners, contractors, and self-employed individuals generally face lower effective tax burdens in Georgia than in Washington at similar revenue levels
  • Atlanta's growing tech and media ecosystem — Georgia's film incentives attract Hollywood production; NCR, Invesco, and a growing fintech sector make Atlanta a legitimate alternative to Seattle for tech workers, with significantly lower housing costs
− CONS
  • 5.39% flat income tax on all income — Georgia residents pay 5.39% on wages, investment income, and business income; at $200,000, approximately $10,780/year; Washington W-2 employees pay $0 on salary
  • Capital gains taxed as ordinary income — Georgia taxes all capital gains at 5.39% with no threshold or preferential rate; Washington only taxes gains above ~$278K at 7%; for investors with moderate annual gains (<$278K), Washington is superior
  • Higher combined sales tax than Georgia but lower than Washington — Georgia's ~7.4% is above the national average but meaningfully below Washington's ~8.86%; on $40,000 of spending, Georgia costs ~$584/year less than Washington
  • Georgia's flat tax is declining — Georgia's rate has fallen from 5.49% (2024) toward 4.99% (~2029); WA's income tax advantage will increase over time as GA's rate decreases, but this makes Georgia progressively more competitive vs Washington for business owners
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Washington have an income tax?

Washington has no personal income tax on wages, salaries, or traditional investment income. However, Washington enacted a 7% capital gains tax in 2022 (upheld by the state Supreme Court in 2023) that applies to long-term capital gains exceeding approximately $278,000 per year. Washington also has a Business & Occupation (B&O) gross receipts tax on business revenues and a Long-Term Care payroll tax of 0.58% on wages. For W-2 employees with income below the CGT threshold, Washington effectively has 0% income tax.

What is Washington's capital gains tax?

Washington enacted a 7% capital gains tax on long-term capital gains above approximately $278,000 annually (the threshold adjusts for inflation). The tax excludes gains from real estate (home sales), retirement accounts, certain small business sales, and agricultural property. For a $500,000 capital gain: the taxable portion is approximately $222,000 (above the $278K threshold), resulting in approximately $15,540 in Washington state capital gains tax. Georgia taxes the full $500,000 at 5.39% ($26,950), making Washington still better for large gains despite its CGT.

What is Washington's Business & Occupation tax?

Washington's B&O tax is a gross receipts tax on business revenue — applied to total revenue, not profit. Rates vary by business classification: 0.471% for manufacturing/wholesale, 1.5% for service businesses (including software, consulting, legal, financial services). For a service business with $200,000 in revenue: the B&O tax is approximately $3,000/year. This applies in addition to all other taxes. Georgia has no equivalent gross receipts tax, which is a meaningful advantage for Washington self-employed workers and business owners.

How do property taxes compare between Washington and Georgia?

Washington's effective property tax rate (~0.85%) is slightly below Georgia's (~0.91%). On a $400,000 home: Washington costs approximately $3,400/year; Georgia approximately $3,640/year — a difference of approximately $240/year in Washington's favour. This is a very small difference that has minimal impact on the overall comparison. Neither state is a standout for low property taxes; both are near the national average.

Is Washington or Georgia better for tech workers?

For W-2 tech employees earning $100,000–$300,000, Washington is significantly better: approximately $4,592–$15,860/year net advantage due to 0% income tax vs Georgia's 5.39%. Major Seattle employers (Amazon, Microsoft) also tend to pay higher salaries than comparable Atlanta roles. However, Georgia's lower housing costs and Atlanta's growing tech scene (NCR, Invesco, Georgia Tech pipeline) make it viable for workers prioritising lower cost of living. For tech workers transitioning to self-employment or investing, Washington's B&O tax and capital gains tax change the calculation significantly.

Does Washington have an estate tax?

Yes. Washington imposes an estate tax of 10–20% on estates above $3,000,000 at death (no inflation adjustment). Georgia has no estate or inheritance tax. For high-net-worth Washington residents, this estate tax represents a significant long-term wealth transfer cost: an estate of $5M would face approximately $480,000–$600,000 in Washington estate tax. Georgia residents with equivalent estates pay $0 in state estate tax. This is a major consideration for affluent Washington residents comparing the two states.