How do I use the sales tax calculator?
To use the sales tax calculator, enter the price of the item you want to buy and the sales tax rate for your area. The calculator will then show you the total cost, including tax.
Read more18 articles about taxes
To use the sales tax calculator, enter the price of the item you want to buy and the sales tax rate for your area. The calculator will then show you the total cost, including tax.
Read moreIf you don't know the sales tax rate, you can usually find it on your state or local government's website. Many calculators also provide links to help you find the correct rate.
Read moreNo, this calculator can be used by anyone filing federal taxes, whether you are self-employed or an employee. Just make sure to include all relevant income and deductions.
Read moreA carbon tax charges companies for each ton of CO2 they emit. While the U.S. doesn't have a federal carbon tax, proposed rates of $50-200 per ton could cost households between $500 and $4,000 a yea...
Read moreCosts depend on your carbon footprint and tax level. At $100/ton (moderate level), the average American household (16 tons CO2/year) would pay $1,600/year. High emitters (20+ tons) pay $2,000+/year...
Read moreYes, most carbon tax proposals include rebates to protect low-income households. A $100/ton tax with full rebates could cost $1,600/year but return $1,200-1,400 in rebates, netting $200-400/year co...
Read moreSwitch to renewable electricity (-4-6 tons CO2/year), drive less or get an EV (-2-4 tons), improve home efficiency (-1-2 tons), and reduce consumption (-1-3 tons). These changes can cut your carbon...
Read moreWhile no federal carbon tax exists, some states have carbon pricing programs. California's cap-and-trade program and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) show state-level implementation. F...
Read moreGross pay is your total salary before any deductions. Net pay (take-home) is what you actually receive after federal tax, state tax, FICA (Social Security and Medicare), and pre-tax deductions like...
Read moreAt minimum, contribute enough to get your full employer matchâit's free money. Beyond that, max out if possible ($23,500 in 2025). Each dollar contributed saves you your marginal tax rate: in the 2...
Read moreThe U.S. uses progressive taxationâonly income within each bracket is taxed at that rate. If you're in the 22% bracket, your first $11,925 is taxed at 10%, the next chunk at 12%, and only income ab...
Read morePre-tax deductions reduce taxable income: 401(k), HSA, traditional IRA, FSA, and commuter benefits. Tax credits directly reduce tax owed: child tax credit ($2,000 per child), earned income credit (...
Read moreThis calculator provides estimates based on standard federal and state tax brackets, FICA rates, and common deductions. Actual withholding may vary based on your W-4 elections, additional income so...
Read moreCrypto is typically taxed as property. Profits from selling or swapping are capital gains (shortâterm if held â¤1 year, longâterm if >1 year). Ordinary income applies to mining, staking, airdrops, a...
Read moreFIFO (firstâin, firstâout) and LIFO (lastâin, firstâout) are common. Specific Identification may lower taxes if you track lot IDs accurately. Consistency and proper documentation are key.
Read moreYes. Swapping one coin for another is a taxable disposition in many jurisdictions, triggering capital gains/losses at fair market value at the time of the trade.
Read moreYes. Realized losses can offset gains and potentially up to $3,000 of ordinary income annually in the U.S., with excess carried forward. Beware of washâsale rules as guidance evolves.
Read moreMaintain detailed records: dates, amounts, cost basis, fair value, fees, and wallet/exchange. Consider using crypto tax software and consolidate data across wallets and chains.
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