Washington is a no-income-tax state for wages and salaries — but imposes a 7% capital gains tax on gains exceeding $262,000.

Washington Income Tax: $0 on Wages

Income Type Washington Tax
Wages and salaries $0
Self-employment income $0
Interest and dividends $0
Retirement income $0
Social Security $0
Long-term capital gains (>$262K) 7%

Washington has NO income tax on wages, making it attractive for employees and self-employed workers. However, high-net-worth investors face a 7% capital gains tax.

Washington Capital Gains Tax

In 2021, Washington enacted a 7% tax on long-term capital gains. Here’s how it works:

What’s Taxed

  • Long-term capital gains (assets held >1 year)
  • Gains exceeding $262,000 threshold
  • Sale of stocks, bonds, mutual funds
  • Business interests (in some cases)

What’s Exempt

  • Real estate sales (including investment property)
  • Retirement accounts (401k, IRA, etc.)
  • Gains under $262,000 threshold
  • Livestock, timber, and agricultural products
  • Goodwill from sale of auto dealership
  • Small business stock (QSBS rules apply)

Capital Gains Tax Examples

Total Capital Gains Taxable Gains Washington Tax
$200,000 $0 $0
$300,000 $38,000 $2,660
$500,000 $238,000 $16,660
$1,000,000 $738,000 $51,660
$5,000,000 $4,738,000 $331,660

Charitable Deduction

You can deduct up to $100,000 in charitable contributions from capital gains before calculating tax.

Tax Savings: Washington vs. Other States

Income California Tax Oregon Tax Washington Tax Annual Savings
$75,000 $3,586 $5,625 $0 $3,500-$5,600
$100,000 $5,911 $8,000 $0 $5,900-$8,000
$150,000 $10,561 $13,000 $0 $10,500-$13,000
$200,000 $15,211 $17,500 $0 $15,000-$17,500

Wage/salary income only — capital gains tax may apply to investment income

Washington Sales Tax

Washington compensates for no income tax with high sales tax:

Tax Component Rate
State sales tax 6.5%
Average local sales tax 2.9%
Combined average 9.4%
Seattle 10.35%
Maximum combined 10.6%

What’s Taxed

  • Most retail purchases
  • Digital goods and software
  • Restaurant meals
  • Services (some)

Sales Tax Exemptions

  • Groceries (food for home consumption)
  • Prescription drugs
  • Manufacturing machinery

Washington Business & Occupation (B&O) Tax

Instead of corporate income tax, Washington has a gross receipts tax:

Category B&O Tax Rate
Retailing 0.471%
Wholesaling 0.484%
Manufacturing 0.484%
Service & other 1.5-1.8%

This applies to gross receipts, not profit — so even unprofitable businesses pay B&O tax.

Washington Property Tax

Metric Amount
Average effective rate 0.93%
Median home value $485,000
Median property tax $4,510

Washington property taxes are moderate, but high home values (especially in Seattle) lead to substantial tax bills.

Washington Retirement Benefits

Washington is excellent for retirees:

Benefit Tax Treatment
Social Security Not taxed
401(k) withdrawals Not taxed
IRA withdrawals Not taxed
Pension income Not taxed
Capital gains (under threshold) Not taxed
Capital gains (over $262K) 7% tax

Only high-value portfolio liquidations trigger capital gains tax.

Washington Estate Tax

Unlike most no-income-tax states, Washington has an estate tax:

Estate Value Top Marginal Rate
$0 - $2.193M 0% (exempt)
$2.193M - $4M 10%
$4M - $6M 14%
$6M - $9M 15%
Over $9M 20%

Washington’s estate tax exemption ($2.193M) is lower than federal ($13.61M in 2026).

Cost of Living in Washington

Category Washington National Average
Overall 115 100
Housing 147 100
Groceries 105 100
Healthcare 104 100
Utilities 85 100

Index: 100 = national average

Washington’s higher cost of living (especially housing in Seattle) partially offsets tax savings.

Seattle vs. Eastern Washington

Factor Seattle Metro Eastern WA
Sales tax 10.35% 7.9-8.5%
Property values Very high Moderate
Cost of living 145% of US avg 95% of US avg
Job market Tech, healthcare Agriculture, manufacturing

Eastern Washington offers lower costs with the same no-income-tax benefit.

Washington vs. Other No-Income-Tax States

State Income Tax Capital Gains Sales Tax Property Tax
Washington None 7% (>$262K) 9.4% avg 0.93%
Texas None None 8.2% avg 1.68%
Florida None None 7% avg 0.89%
Nevada None None 8.2% avg 0.55%
Tennessee None None 9.55% avg 0.66%

Washington’s capital gains tax makes it less attractive for wealthy investors compared to other no-income-tax states.

Remote Work and Washington

If you live in Washington and work remotely:

  • Washington won’t tax your wages — No matter where employer is
  • Capital gains rules still apply — Investment gains over $262K taxed
  • Some states may try to tax you — Check reciprocity rules

Tech Worker Sweet Spot

Washington is ideal for high-earning tech workers:

  • No tax on $200K+ salaries
  • RSU/stock option vesting is wage income (not capital gains) — untaxed until exercise
  • Consider timing large stock sales around $262K threshold

Key Takeaways

  1. No income tax on wages — Salaries and self-employment income untaxed
  2. 7% capital gains tax — On long-term gains over $262,000
  3. Real estate gains exempt — Home sales not subject to capital gains tax
  4. High sales tax — 9.4% average, over 10% in Seattle
  5. Estate tax applies — 10-20% on estates over $2.193M
  6. Great for high earners — No tax on wages regardless of income level
  7. Consider timing — Large stock sales to stay under $262K when possible
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