RI Has 7th Highest Tax Burden in U.S.
GoLocalProv Business Team
RI Has 7th Highest Tax Burden in U.S.

According to a recent study completed by WalletHub, Rhode Island has the seventh highest tax burden in the country, and fourth highest in New England.
The ranking is two spots higher than 2017's ranking, in which Rhode Island had the ninth highest tax burden in the U.S.
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST“Unlike tax rates, which vary widely based on an individual’s circumstances, tax burden measures the proportion of total personal income that residents pay toward state and local taxes. And it isn’t uniform across the U.S., either,” said Wallethub.
RI's Budget Deficit
The rankings come as Rhode Island is attempting to close a projected $204.1 million budget deficit.
As GoLocalProv reported in January, at a budget briefing at the Department of Administration, officials unveiled how the state plans to resolve the deficit — which includes expanding the number of medical marijuana compassion centers, and anticipating increased revenue from cigarette and tobacco taxes.
* Sports betting $23.5 million
* Increasing Access to Compassion Centers $5.1 million
* Cigarette & Tobacco Taxes $6.2 million
* Services Tax Modification to align with MA $14.5 million
RI’s Rankings:
- 7th Highest – Overall Tax Burden (10.14%)
- 5th Highest – Property Tax Burden (4.70%)
- 27th Highest – Individual Income Tax Burden (2.31%)
- 34th Highest – Total Sales & Excise Tax Burden (3.13%)
The Rankings
Rhode Island is ranked behind Minnesota and Connecticut, who rank fifth and sixth respectively.
Rhode Island is ranked just ahead of Illinois and New Jersey, who rank eighth and ninth respectively.
The state with the highest tax burden is New York, while the state with the lowest is Alaska.
See the full rankings in the map below:

The Method
In order to determine the states that tax their residents the most and least aggressively, WalletHub compared the 50 states across the following three tax burdens and added the results to obtain the overall tax burden for each state:
- Property Tax as a Share of Personal Income
- Individual Income Tax as a Share of Personal Income
- Total Sales & Excise Tax as a Share of Personal Income
