All states

Vermont

Progressive brackets
Filing status
Income
Pre-tax adjustments
Itemized deductions
Household

Estimated taxes

Tax year 2025
Gross income$0
Total tax$0
Take-home pay$0

Overall effective rate: 0.0%

Federal

Adjusted gross income
$0
Standard deduction
$15,000
Taxable income
$0
Tax before credits
$0
Credits
- $0
Federal income tax
$0
Effective / marginal rate
0.0% / 0.0%

FICA

Social Security
$0
Medicare
$0
FICA total
$0

State — Vermont (VT)

State taxable income
$0
State income tax
$0
State + local tax
$0
Effective / marginal rate
0.0% / 0.0%

Notes

  • Vermont has four progressive brackets (3.35% / 6.6% / 7.6% / 8.75%) applied to Vermont taxable income. The 2025 single 3.35% band tops out at $49,400 (joint $82,500, head of household $66,200); each filing status has its own inflation-indexed schedule (Schedule X / Y-1 / Y-2 / Z).
  • Minimum tax (Form IN-111, Line 8): a filer whose federal AGI exceeds $150,000 pays the GREATER of the rate-schedule tax on Vermont taxable income or 3% of federal AGI (less U.S.-obligation interest, which is not a separate input here, so full federal AGI is used).
  • Vermont taxable income = federal AGI − Vermont standard deduction − Vermont personal exemptions ($5,300 per person: taxpayer, spouse if filing jointly, and each dependent). The Vermont standard deduction for 2025 is $7,650 single/MFS, $15,300 joint, $11,450 head of household.
  • Since Act 11 of 2018 Vermont allows NO itemized deduction — every filer takes the standard deduction, and the former itemizing benefit is delivered through tax credits instead. This module ignores the mortgage-interest, property-tax, SALT, charitable, and other-deduction inputs.
  • NOT modelled: the +$1,250 additional standard deduction for filers who are 65+ and/or blind; the 5% charitable-contribution tax credit and the medical-expense credit; Vermont additions (e.g. non-Vermont municipal bond interest) and subtractions (US-obligation interest, the Social Security / retirement-income exemptions, the capital-gains exclusion). These credits and subtractions would generally lower the bill.

Disclaimer: This is an informational estimate for the 2025 tax year only and is provided on a best-effort basis. It is not tax, legal, investment, or financial advice. Results are approximate, may be inaccurate or out of date, and may not reflect all credits, deductions, phase-outs, or local rules. This site assumes no liability for any decisions made or outcomes resulting from its use. Consult a qualified tax professional before filing or making any decisions.