Hawaii ranks 24th in the U.S. for the most documentarty and stock transfer taxes paid in 2021

Adobe Stock
Adobe Stock
0Comments

In 2021, Hawaii collected $62.7 million in documentarty and stock transfer taxes, ranking it 24th in the United States, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of State Government Tax Collections (STC).

The STC survey includes five broad tax categories and up to 25 subcategories. Data is gathered from all 50 state governments and all dependent state-level entities.

The Census Bureau cautions it sets the tax classifications among the survey categories, and they may differ from the classifications set by the state governments.

Below is a breakdown of how taxes were classified by the bureau and how much was collected.

U.S. documentarty and stock transfer taxes by State in 2021
Rank State Amount
1 Florida $4,846,085,000
2 Washington $1,810,495,000
3 New York $1,387,474,000
4 Virginia $810,105,000
5 Pennsylvania $787,842,000
6 District of Columbia $553,515,000
7 New Jersey $495,943,000
8 Massachusetts $479,389,000
9 Michigan $411,412,000
10 Minnesota $410,830,000
11 Tennessee $392,898,000
12 Connecticut $378,209,000
13 Maryland $269,373,000
14 Delaware $246,549,000
15 New Hampshire $202,700,000
16 South Carolina $183,899,000
17 Nevada $144,312,000
18 North Carolina $121,008,000
19 Wisconsin $106,166,000
20 Illinois $88,379,000
21 Alabama $80,496,000
22 Vermont $71,421,000
23 Arkansas $67,983,000
24 Hawaii $62,723,000
25 Maine $52,186,000
26 Iowa $30,598,000
27 Oklahoma $27,171,000
28 Nebraska $21,139,000
29 Arizona $19,160,000
30 Rhode Island $17,716,000
31 West Virginia $15,913,000
32 Missouri $14,599,000
33 Kentucky $3,592,000
34 Oregon $1,957,000
35 South Dakota $199,000

Source: U.S. Census Bureau



Related

Mandy K. Cohen, CDC Director - cdc.gov

Hawaii reports surge in measles infections this year as of week ending Aug. 23

Latest CDC data shows measles cases in Hawaii for 2025 are now estimated within the range of 1-9, marking no change compared to the previous figures updated as of week ending Aug. 16.

Ken Sorenson Acting United States Attorney for the District of Hawaii - Honolulu Civil Beat Inc.

Two navy employees indicted for false statements about Red Hill jet fuel spill

John Floyd and Nelson Wu, both civilian employees of the United States Navy’s Fleet Logistics Center Pearl Harbor, have been indicted for conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States and causing another person to make a materially…

Ken Sorenson Acting United States Attorney for the District of Hawaii - Honolulu Civil Beat Inc.

Four Hawaii residents convicted in $1 million IRS refund fraud scheme

A federal jury in Honolulu has convicted four Hawaii residents for their involvement in a tax refund fraud scheme that spanned from at least January 2015 through September 2018.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Aloha State News.