Ohio Capital Gains Tax Calculator (2026)
Ohio capital gains tax calculator — 2.75% flat above income threshold. Combined federal (0-20%), Ohio, and 3.8% NIIT estimate with worked examples.
Ohio levies a flat income tax rate of 2.75% on all taxable income.
What you need to know
Ohio levies a flat income tax rate of 2.75% on all taxable income. Capital gains are taxed as ordinary income under Ohio's TY2026 two-tier structure: 0% on the first $26,050 of taxable income, flat 2.75% above that threshold. No preferential rate, no exclusion, no short-term/long-term distinction. Municipal income taxes (typically 1%–3%) generally do NOT apply to capital gains/investment income. This flat-rate structure means every dollar of taxable income — whether from wages, investments, or capital gains — is taxed at the same rate regardless of income level. This calculator computes your exact capital gains tax in Ohio, combining federal and state taxes based on your specific income and filing status.
At the federal level, the tax rate on your capital gain depends on how long you held the asset and your total taxable income. Long-term gains (assets held 12+ months) are taxed at preferential rates of 0%, 15%, or 20%, while short-term gains (held less than 12 months) are taxed as ordinary income at rates from 10% to 37% across the TY2026 brackets. The 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) also applies when your modified adjusted gross income exceeds $200,000 for single filers or $250,000 for married couples filing jointly.
**Recent changes:** 2026: Flat 2.75% on income above $26,050 (eliminates 3.125% bracket per H.B. 33). 2025: Three-bracket transition year (0%, 2.75%, 3.125%) under H.B. 33 phase-in. Ohio Business Income Deduction continues at 0% on first $250,000
**How Ohio compares:** Ohio's flat 2.75% rate above the $26,050 exemption (TY2026 per H.B. 33) is lower than West Virginia's top rate of 4.82% and competitive with Indiana's flat 3.05%.
For a comprehensive view of your tax situation, use our Ohio after-tax income calculator or explore our national capital gains tax calculator. You can also plan ahead with our 401(k) retirement calculator.
How Ohio taxes capital gains
Ohio taxes capital gains at a flat rate of 2.75%. Under a flat tax system, every dollar of taxable income is taxed at the same rate regardless of income level — a $50,000 earner and a $500,000 earner both pay the same 2.75% rate on each dollar of taxable income. Capital gains are taxed as ordinary income under Ohio's TY2026 two-tier structure: 0% on the first $26,050 of taxable income, flat 2.75% above that threshold. No preferential rate, no exclusion, no short-term/long-term distinction. Municipal income taxes (typically 1%–3%) generally do NOT apply to capital gains/investment income.
**How the flat rate works in practice:** While the rate itself is flat, your effective tax rate may differ from 2.75% depending on the standard deduction and any state-specific credits you qualify for. The standard deduction reduces your taxable income before the flat rate is applied, meaning your effective rate on gross income is slightly lower than 2.75%.
**Ohio tax brackets (single filer, 2025):** - 0% on income up to $26,050 - 2.75% on income above $26,050
**Combined tax impact:** When you sell an investment in Ohio, your total capital gains tax is the sum of federal capital gains tax (0-20% for long-term, 10-37% for short-term), the 2.75% Ohio state tax, and potentially the 3.8% federal NIIT. This means your combined effective rate on a long-term gain could range from 2.75% (if the federal rate is 0%) to over 26.6% on the highest-taxed portion.
**Key deductions and credits:** First $26,050 of income is exempt from state tax (0% bracket). Personal exemption: $2,400 per exemption (phased out above $40,000 AGI). Retirement income credit for those 65+ with retirement income under $100,000. Ohio Business Income Deduction: first $250,000 of business income taxed at 0%.
What makes Ohio different
**Recent legislative changes:** 2026: Flat 2.75% on income above $26,050 (eliminates 3.125% bracket per H.B. 33). 2025: Three-bracket transition year (0%, 2.75%, 3.125%) under H.B. 33 phase-in. Ohio Business Income Deduction continues at 0% on first $250,000
**Regional comparison:** Ohio's flat 2.75% rate above the $26,050 exemption (TY2026 per H.B. 33) is lower than West Virginia's top rate of 4.82% and competitive with Indiana's flat 3.05%.
**National tax landscape:** Across the United States, state capital gains tax treatment varies dramatically. Nine states impose no income tax at all, while states like California (13.3%), New York (10.9%), and New Jersey (10.75%) levy the highest rates. The majority of states tax capital gains as ordinary income with no preferential rate, though some — such as North Dakota, South Carolina, and Wisconsin — offer partial exclusions on long-term gains that reduce the effective rate below the headline income tax rate.
Compare your tax situation with neighboring states: Indiana capital gains tax calculator, Kentucky capital gains tax calculator, Michigan capital gains tax calculator.
Capital gains examples for Ohio residents
Understanding how federal and Ohio taxes combine helps you plan investment sales strategically.
**Example 1: $50,000 long-term gain on $80,000 salary (single filer).** At the federal level, this gain falls primarily in the 15% long-term bracket. Ohio's 2.75% state rate adds to your federal liability, increasing your total tax bill compared to zero-tax states.
**Example 2: $200,000 long-term gain on $250,000 salary (married filing jointly).** Higher income pushes more of the gain into the 15% and potentially 20% federal bracket. The 3.8% NIIT also applies since MAGI exceeds $250,000. Add Ohio's state tax and the combined effective rate can exceed 27% on the highest-taxed portion.
**Example 3: Short-term gain of $30,000 on $60,000 salary (single filer).** Short-term gains are taxed as ordinary income at federal rates of 10-37%. For a single filer with $60,000 of ordinary income plus a $30,000 short-term gain, the gain is taxed at the 22% federal marginal rate. Ohio's 2.75% state rate applies on top, making the total tax on this gain roughly $7,425 combined federal and state.
Use our Ohio after-tax income calculator to see how your salary income is taxed alongside these investment gains.
Capital gains tax strategies for Ohio
Strategic timing and planning can significantly reduce your capital gains tax liability in Ohio.
**Hold investments for 12+ months.** The difference between short-term (up to 37% federal) and long-term (0-20% federal) rates is substantial. A $100,000 gain taxed at short-term rates could cost $15,000-$20,000 more than the same gain held long-term.
**Harvest losses to offset gains.** Selling underperforming investments to generate capital losses can offset your gains dollar-for-dollar, reducing your taxable gain. You can also deduct up to $3,000 in net losses against ordinary income annually.
**Consider the state impact.** Ohio's 2.75% top rate means state tax optimization matters. If you have flexibility in timing, consider spreading large gains across multiple tax years to potentially stay in lower state brackets.
**Use the Section 121 primary residence exclusion.** If you are selling your primary home, you may exclude up to $250,000 (single) or $500,000 (married filing jointly) of capital gains from federal tax. You must have owned and lived in the home for at least two of the past five years. This exclusion is separate from investment capital gains and can result in zero tax on substantial home sale profits.
For broader financial planning, see how your investment returns compound with our home affordability calculator to understand your buying power.
Filing and tax deadlines for Ohio
Ohio residents must report capital gains on both their federal and state income tax return. Key filing dates and considerations for Ohio investors:
**Federal deadline:** April 15 (or next business day). Extensions available through October 15, but any estimated tax owed is still due by April 15.
**Estimated tax payments:** If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax (including capital gains), you may need to make quarterly estimated payments to avoid underpayment penalties. The deadlines are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 of the following year.
**Ohio state filing:** Ohio requires a separate state income tax return reporting your capital gains alongside other income. The state filing deadline typically aligns with the federal deadline. Ohio may also require quarterly estimated state tax payments if your expected state tax liability exceeds a certain threshold.
For a broader view of your finances, explore our home affordability calculator to see how capital gains affect your overall financial picture.
State-specific note
Capital gains are taxed as ordinary income under Ohio's TY2026 two-tier structure: 0% on the first $26,050 of taxable income, flat 2.75% above that threshold. No preferential rate, no exclusion, no short-term/long-term distinction. Municipal income taxes (typically 1%–3%) generally do NOT apply to capital gains/investment income. Notable deductions and credits: First $26,050 of income is exempt from state tax (0% bracket). Personal exemption: $2,400 per exemption (phased out above $40,000 AGI). Retirement income credit for those 65+ with retirement income under $100,000. Ohio Business Income Deduction: first $250,000 of business income taxed at 0%. Ohio's flat 2.75% rate applies uniformly to all taxable income levels.
How we calculate this
This Ohio-specific calculator applies the IRS progressive rate schedule — sometimes called the 'bracket stacking' or 'DTI-equivalent layering' method — using the 2025 federal capital gains tax brackets as published by the IRS (Rev. Proc. 2025-32, updated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act). For long-term gains (assets held 12+ months), three brackets apply: 0% up to $47,025 for single filers ($94,050 married), 15% up to $518,900 ($583,750 married), and 20% above those thresholds. Your capital gain 'stacks' on top of your ordinary taxable income — so your income determines where in the brackets your gain falls. The standard deduction ($15,750 single, $31,500 married for 2026) is subtracted from your gross income to determine taxable income before bracket placement. For short-term gains (held less than 12 months), the gain is taxed as ordinary income through seven federal brackets from 10% to 37%.
The calculator also computes the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) when your modified adjusted gross income exceeds $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly). These NIIT thresholds are fixed — not inflation-adjusted — so more taxpayers are affected each year. State capital gains tax uses each state's effective top rate on investment income, sourced from the Tax Foundation 2025 data. The low-to-high range accounts for potential deductions, investment losses, and local tax variations not captured in the state average rate.
Key takeaways
- Ohio taxes capital gains at same as ordinary income (0% below $26,050; flat 2.75% above — effective TY2026 per Ohio HB 33) on top of federal rates.
- Long-term gains (held 12+ months) are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% federal — significantly lower than short-term rates of 10-37%.
- Ohio's flat 2.75% rate above the $26,050 exemption (TY2026 per H.B. 33) is lower than West Virginia's top rate of 4.82% and competitive with Indiana's flat 3.05%.
- Recent changes: 2026: Flat 2.75% on income above $26,050 (eliminates 3.125% bracket per H.B. 33). 2025: Three-bracket transition year (0%, 2.75%, 3.125%) under H.B. 33 phase-in. Ohio Business Income Deduction continues at 0% on first $250,000.
- The 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) applies when modified AGI exceeds $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married).
Frequently Asked Questions
How does Ohio tax capital gains?
What is the Ohio capital gains tax rate for 2025-2026?
Does the Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) apply in addition to state tax?
Have Ohio's tax rates changed recently?
How does Ohio compare to other states for capital gains tax?
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</script>Data sources
- IRS — Federal Income Tax Rates and Brackets (2026)Verified 2026-04-05
- IRS — Topic No. 409: Capital Gains and LossesVerified 2026-04-05
- IRS — Net Investment Income TaxVerified 2026-04-05
- Tax Foundation — State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets (2026)Verified 2026-04-05
- IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 — 2026 Inflation AdjustmentsVerified 2026-04-18
- Federal Reserve — Survey of Consumer Finances (Capital Gains Distribution)Verified 2026-04-05
- Ohio Department of Revenue — Tax RatesVerified 2026-04-05