Ohio Tax Brackets 2026

Ohio taxes income in graduated bands for 2026, with the top rate reaching 2.75%. Only the income inside each band is taxed at that band's rate, so the top rate applies to your highest dollars, not your whole income.

Single
RateTaxable income overUp toTax at band ceiling
0%$0$26,050$0
2.75%$26,050
Married filing jointly
RateTaxable income overUp toTax at band ceiling
0%$0$26,050$0
2.75%$26,050
Married filing separately
RateTaxable income overUp toTax at band ceiling
0%$0$26,050$0
2.75%$26,050
Head of household
RateTaxable income overUp toTax at band ceiling
0%$0$26,050$0
2.75%$26,050

Ohio also allows a personal exemption (deducted from income) of $2,400 for single filers.

Ohio municipalities levy local income tax (administered via RITA, CCA, or the city), commonly ~2-2.5% on wages, generally withheld at the work city with partial residence credits; some school districts also levy a school district income tax. Both are separate from the state tax and not modeled here.

See what these rates leave of an actual salary: Ohio paycheck calculator.

Frequently asked questions

What is the top income tax rate in Ohio?

For 2026, the top income tax rate in Ohio is 2.75%. Graduated states apply that top rate only to income above the final threshold, not to your whole salary.

How do Ohio taxes compare with other states?

The clearest comparison is take-home pay on the same salary across states. Use the take-home pages to see how Ohio stacks up against a no-income-tax state and its neighbors.

Federal: IRS 2026 brackets (Rev. Proc. 2025-32) · FICA: IRS Topic 751 · Wage base: SSA · Ohio: Ohio Department of Taxation. Rates current as of July 16, 2026. Annual-liability estimates, not payroll withholding — see methodology.