No State Income Tax in Florida
Florida is one of the most tax-friendly states for wage earners. The Florida Constitution explicitly prohibits a personal income tax, a provision that has been in place since 1924. This means there is no state withholding from your paycheck, no state tax return to file, and no state-level brackets or deductions to track.
Your Florida paycheck deductions consist entirely of federal obligations: income tax withholding based on your W-4 elections, 6.2% for Social Security (up to the annual wage base), and 1.45% for Medicare. Workers earning above $200,000 pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax. That simplicity makes calculating your net pay in Florida straightforward.
How Florida Funds Public Services
Without income tax revenue, Florida relies on a diversified mix of other sources. The state sales tax of 6% (with local additions up to 7.5%) generates the largest share of general revenue. Tourism and hospitality taxes, including a tourist development tax on short-term rentals, bring in substantial revenue from the state's massive visitor economy. Florida also collects a 5.5% corporate income tax from businesses and levies documentary stamp taxes on real estate transactions.
Notably, Florida has no estate tax or inheritance tax, which combined with no income tax makes it especially attractive for retirees and wealthy individuals looking to preserve assets. There are also no city or local income taxes anywhere in the state, keeping the paycheck calculation uniform regardless of which Florida city you live in.
Florida Reemployment Tax and Employer Obligations
While employees see no state deductions, Florida employers pay the Reemployment Tax (formerly called Unemployment Tax) on the first $7,000 of each employee's annual wages. Rates vary based on the employer's claims history, typically ranging from 0.1% to 5.4%. New employers are assigned an initial rate of 2.7%.
Florida does not have a state disability insurance program or mandatory paid family leave funded through payroll deductions. Workers who need short-term disability coverage must obtain it through private insurance or employer-sponsored plans. This keeps employee pay stubs clean of state deductions but means workers should plan independently for disability coverage.