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Which States Pay The Most (& Least) US Federal Tax Revenue Per Person

In 2023, the U.S. federal government collected $4.67 trillion in taxes and redistributed $4.56 trillion back to states and residents. But which states contributed the most—and least—on a per-person basis?

This dataset, originally published by USAFacts, shows how much federal revenue each state generated per capita.

Rank State Federal tax revenue per capita (FY 2023)
1 Delaware $24,575
2 Massachusetts $21,747
3 Minnesota $20,728
4 Connecticut $19,785
5 Washington $19,783
6 New Jersey $19,248
7 New York $18,940
8 Missouri $18,216
9 Rhode Island $17,083
10 Illinois $16,880
11 Nebraska $16,023
12 Ohio $15,761
13 Colorado $14,549
14 California $14,515
15 Florida $13,563
16 Texas $13,441
17 Pennsylvania $13,396
18 Tennessee $13,369
19 Virginia $13,050
20 Arkansas $12,824
21 New Hampshire $12,601
22 Wyoming $12,365
23 Georgia $12,069
24 Maryland $12,028
25 South Dakota $12,023
26 North Dakota $11,958
27 Wisconsin $11,703
28 Indiana $11,594
29 North Carolina $11,084
30 Kansas $11,022
31 Nevada $10,810
32 Utah $10,743
33 Kentucky $10,584
34 Michigan $10,482
35 Iowa $10,454
36 Louisiana $9,728
37 Oregon $9,638
38 Arizona $9,468
39 Oklahoma $9,392
40 Alaska $9,150
41 Idaho $9,009
42 Montana $8,799
43 Vermont $8,726
44 Maine $8,311
45 Hawaii $7,855
46 Alabama $7,001
47 South Carolina $7,000
48 New Mexico $5,882
49 Mississippi $5,148
50 West Virginia $4,867

Delaware led all states with $24,575 in federal taxes paid per resident, driven by high levels of business incorporation. Massachusetts ($21,747) and Minnesota ($20,728) followed, thanks to high average incomes. Meanwhile, the lowest contributors per person were West Virginia ($4,867), Mississippi ($5,148), and New Mexico ($5,882).

The Population-Revenue Disconnect

While California, Texas, New York, and Florida are the top contributors in absolute terms, collectively making up more than a third of all U.S. federal revenue, the per capita view tells a different story.

Smaller states with wealthy or business-friendly profiles, like Connecticut and New Jersey, rank much higher in per-person contributions.

Washington, D.C., is an outlier, contributing $54,612 per resident. That’s more than twice the amount of the top state. This is largely due to the city’s dense concentration of high-income earners and government-affiliated economic activity.

Do States Get Back What They Pay In?

Not all federal dollars stay in Washington. Most are returned to residents and states through entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicaid, as well as infrastructure, education, and defense.

However, some states get more than they give. In 2023, 19 states were net contributors—sending more to the federal government than they received. New York tops that list with a $89 billion net outflow. Conversely, Virginia received about $79 billion more than it paid in, largely due to defense spending.

Explore how federal money moves over time in our recommended Voronoi post: U.S. Federal Government Finances Over Time.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 06/13/2025 – 05:45

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