Rhode Island Income Tax Calculator
Calculate your Rhode Island state income tax alongside federal tax. See the full bracket breakdown, effective rate, and combined tax liability.
Last updated: · Tax Foundation (2025 state brackets) + IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 (2026 federal)
On a $75,000 salary in Rhode Island (single filer, 2025), your estimated state income tax is $2,416.88 (3.2% effective rate). Combined with federal tax of $7,670.00, your total income tax is $10,086.88 (13.4% combined effective rate). Rhode Island has progressive brackets with a top rate of 5.99%. Source: Tax Foundation, state revenue department.
Rhode Island Deduction: $10,550.00
Standard deduction: $10,550.00
Three brackets. Brackets indexed for inflation. Standard deduction phases out at higher incomes.
Federal estimates use 2026 IRS brackets. State estimates use 2025 state rate data.
Results
Rhode Island Tax Bracket Breakdown
| Rate | Range | Tax |
|---|---|---|
| 3.75% | $0 – $77,450 | $2,416.88 |
| Total Rhode Island Tax | $2,416.88 | |
Compare Rhode Island with Other States
How This Is Calculated
Rhode Island uses a progressive income tax system. Each bracket's rate applies only to income within that range.
| Rate | Income Range (Single) |
|---|---|
| 3.75% | $0 – $77,450 |
| 4.75% | $77,450 – $176,050 |
| 5.99% | $176,050 – No limit |
Data source
State bracket data from the Tax Foundation (2025 State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets). Cross-referenced with the Rhode Island revenue department. Federal brackets from IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 (2026).
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much is Rhode Island income tax on $75,000?
- On a $75,000 salary in Rhode Island, you would owe approximately $2,416.88 in state income tax (3.2% effective rate) plus $7,670.00 in federal income tax, for a combined total of $10,086.88 (13.4% combined effective rate).
- What is the Rhode Island income tax rate for 2025?
- Rhode Island uses a progressive income tax system with rates ranging from 3.75% to 5.99%. Three brackets. Brackets indexed for inflation. Standard deduction phases out at higher incomes.