The Tax Foundation

April 10, 2008

Tax Freedom Day to Arrive April 23 in 2008

Contact: Bill Ahern (202) 464-5101

America Will Work Three Days Less to Pay Taxes in 2008 than in 2007; Stimulus Rebates Push Date of Celebration Up

Washington, D.C., March 24, 2008 - Tax Freedom Day® will fall on April 23 this year, according to the Tax Foundation's annual calculation using the latest government data on income and taxes.

That's three days earlier than in 2007. Stimulus rebates and a projection of slow growth in 2008 are the principal reasons for the earlier celebration.

The study is Tax Foundation Special Report No. 160, "America Celebrates Tax Freedom Day®," by Tax Foundation senior economist Gerald Prante and Tax Foundation president Scott Hodge.

In addition to announcing the nation's Tax Freedom Day®, the new study compares tax payments to other major consumer expenditures, traces the course of America's tax burden since 1900, examines the composition of today's tax burden by type of tax, and finally calculates a Tax Freedom Day® for each state.

Taxes vs. Other Expenses
"Government continues to dominate the American taxpayer's budget," said Tax Foundation president Scott Hodge. "Americans will still spend more on taxes in 2008 than they will spend on food, clothing and housing combined."

In 2008, Americans will work 74 days to afford their federal taxes and 39 more days to pay state and local taxes. Meanwhile, buying food requires 35 days of work, clothing 13 days, and housing 60 days. Other major categories are health and medical care (50 days), transportation (29 days), and recreation (21 days).

Bush Era Has Seen Tax Freedom Day® Fluctuate Substantially
"Tax freedom has been a see-saw affair in recent years," said Tax Foundation senior economist Gerald Prante. "In 2000, Tax Freedom Day® was celebrated May 3, the latest date ever. Then a string of tax cuts between 2001 and 2003 pushed Tax Freedom Day® up by more than two weeks, so that it fell on April 16 in 2003 and April 17 in 2004. For the next three years, incomes and tax collections soared, pushing Tax Freedom Day® back to April 26 in 2007. Now the stimulus rebates and a projected slowing of income growth have made Tax Freedom Day® come three days earlier, on April 23."

Which Taxes Are Biggest?
Five major categories of tax dominate the tax burden. Individual income taxes, both federal and state, require 42 days' work. Payroll taxes take another 28 days' work. Sales and excise taxes, mostly state and local, take 16 days to pay off. Corporate income taxes take 13 days, and property taxes take 12.

Tax Freedom Day® by State
Alaskans kick off the celebration of Tax Freedom Day® on March 29, more than a week before any other state's taxpayers. Mississippi (April 7), Montana and West Virginia (April 8), and Alabama (April 9) round out the first five. The next five are Kentucky (April 10), Tennessee and Oklahoma (April 11), and New Mexico and South Dakota (April 12).

Tax Freedom Day® is early in low-income states because the federal income tax hits most of their federal income taxes at the lower rates, 10% and 15%. Alaska stands out as an exception: income and federal tax payments are above average there, but state-local taxes are extraordinarily low.

Three states will have to wait until May to celebrate their state-specific Tax Freedom Days: Connecticut, New Jersey and New York. Although they have high state-local taxes too, the main culprit is the progressive federal income tax. States with large metropolitan areas offer higher-paying jobs, and as a result, many of the citizens earn enough to pay income tax at the highest rates -- currently 25%, 28%, 33% and 35%. If those rates rise, as they are scheduled to do in 2011, these states will bear the brunt.

Other states where citizens wait unusually long for Tax Freedom Day® are California (April 30), Washington (April 29), Massachusetts (April 28), Maryland (April 28), Minnesota (April 27), and Florida and Hawaii on April 26.

How Tax Freedom Day® Is Calculated
Tax Freedom Day® answers the basic question, "What price is the nation paying for government?" An official government figure for total tax collections is divided by the nation's total income. The answer this year is that taxes will amount to 30.8 percent of our income, and the stretch of 113 days from January 1 to April 23 is 30.8 percent of the year. Income and tax data are then parsed out to the states, yielding 50 state-specific Tax Freedom Days.

The Tax Foundation is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that has monitored fiscal policy at the federal, state and local levels since 1937.