
Sales tax rates vary widely across the United States. While most states impose a statewide sales tax, many also allow counties, cities, and special districts to add their own local rates. The result? A patchwork of combined state and local sales tax rates that can differ dramatically not just by state, but by ZIP code.
For businesses operating in multiple jurisdictions, understanding which states with the highest sales tax rates apply to them is crucial to manage compliance risk, pricing strategy, and filing complexity. This guide breaks down the states with the highest sales tax and what businesses should know if they operate there.
Sales tax is imposed at two primary levels:
Most states set a base statewide rate. Local governments, including counties, cities, and special districts, may add their own rates on top of the state rate. These additions are authorized under state law.
For example, a state may impose a 6% sales tax, while local jurisdictions add 2–4%, resulting in a much higher combined rate.
Local add-ons can significantly increase the total rate. In some metropolitan areas, combined rates exceed 9% or even 10%.
States rely on different combinations of income, property, and sales taxes to fund public services. States that rely more heavily on consumption taxes may set higher sales tax rates.
Some states with no individual income tax rely more heavily on sales tax revenue. Tennessee and Nevada are examples of states without a broad-based individual income tax that also have high combined sales tax rates. (For more context, see our guide to states with no sales tax.)

Rates below reflect statewide rates and approximate average combined state + local rates. Combined averages vary by locality and are subject to change.
State rate: 4.45%
Average combined rate: ~9.55%
Why it’s high: Louisiana allows extensive local sales tax additions, which significantly increase the combined rate in many jurisdictions.
Business takeaway: Local administration of sales tax in Louisiana can be complex, as parishes often administer and audit their own local taxes separately from the state.
State rate: 7.00%
Average combined rate: ~9.55%
Why it’s high: Tennessee has one of the highest statewide rates in the country and also permits local option taxes.
Business takeaway: Businesses should carefully track local rates, especially if selling into multiple Tennessee counties.
State rate: 6.50%
Average combined rate: ~9.45%
Why it’s high: Arkansas permits substantial local additions, pushing combined rates higher in many cities.
Business takeaway: Sellers must apply the correct destination-based combined rate for each transaction.
State rate: 6.50%
Average combined rate: ~9.38%
Why it’s high: Washington relies heavily on sales tax revenue and has no personal income tax. Local jurisdictions also impose additional rates.
Business takeaway: Washington’s business and occupation (B&O) tax is separate from sales tax and may apply even when no sales tax is due.
State rate: 4.00%
Average combined rate: ~9.29%
Why it’s high: While the state rate is moderate, local jurisdictions can add significant additional tax.
Business takeaway: Alabama is a “home rule” state, meaning many localities administer their own sales tax, increasing compliance complexity.
State rate: 4.50%
Average combined rate: ~8.98%
Why it’s high: Cities and counties frequently add local sales tax rates.
Business takeaway: Businesses must monitor both state and municipal rate changes.
State rate: 6.25%
Average combined rate: ~8.86%
Why it’s high: Illinois permits layered local taxes in certain jurisdictions, particularly in major metro areas like Chicago.
Business takeaway: Chicago and surrounding areas can have materially higher rates than the statewide base.
State rate: 7.25%
Average combined rate: ~8.85%
Why it’s high: California has one of the highest statewide base rates. Local district taxes can increase the combined rate further.
Business takeaway: California’s district taxes apply based on destination sourcing for most transactions.
Some states may not rank highest at the statewide level but have metro areas with elevated combined rates due to aggressive local add-ons.
Examples include:
In these states, business location alone does not determine exposure. Depending on your sales tax nexus footprint, you may need to collect the applicable combined rate.
High combined rates affect more than checkout totals.
More jurisdictions mean more potential registration requirements, filings, and audit exposure.
In higher-tax states, the total cost to the customer increases. Businesses should factor sales tax visibility into pricing strategy.
States with heavy local administration (e.g., Louisiana, Alabama, Colorado) often require separate filings or additional reporting layers.
Higher revenue reliance on sales tax can translate into increased enforcement activity. Businesses operating in high-rate states should ensure documentation and exemption certificate management are accurate and current.
A quick reminder, sales tax compliance is not just about the rate. Peace of mind comes from applying the correct combined rate, filing accurately, and responding confidently to notices.
If you operate in states with high sales tax, a proactive approach matters.
The name of the game is structured compliance.
Operating in high sales tax states doesn’t have to mean higher risk. When you start with nexus, businesses can navigate combined state and local sales tax requirements confidently.
High rates increase complexity. Complexity increases exposure. But with clear processes, accurate rate application, and ongoing monitoring, your business can stay compliant and focused on growth.
If you’re unsure where you stand, start by calculating your nexus footprint and reviewing your combined rate accuracy. Simplify your sales taxes and protect your business (before an auditor asks questions).
Book a free consultation with our Sales Tax experts today.
Some of the states with the highest combined sales tax rates include Tennessee, Louisiana, Arkansas, Washington, and Alabama. These states often combine relatively high statewide rates with additional local taxes that increase the total rate consumers pay.
When state and local taxes are combined, Louisiana and Tennessee frequently rank among the highest in the U.S. Some cities in these states can exceed total sales tax rates of 9–10% depending on local surtaxes.
States with the lowest sales tax rates include Colorado, Wyoming, and Wisconsin at the state level. However, local taxes can still increase the final combined rate depending on the city or county.
Five U.S. states do not impose a statewide sales tax: Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon. However, Alaska allows local municipalities to charge local sales taxes.
States that rely more heavily on consumption taxes often maintain higher sales tax rates. These states may have lower income taxes or no state income tax at all, making sales tax a primary source of government revenue.
The average combined state and local sales tax rate in the U.S. is roughly between 7% and 8%, though it varies significantly by state and municipality.
Local sales taxes imposed by cities, counties, or special districts are added to the state rate. In some areas, these local taxes can increase the total combined rate by several percentage points.
We care about your data – privacy policy





