Virginia Income Tax Calculator
Estimate Virginia resident income tax using 2025 Form 760 rate brackets, the updated Virginia standard deduction, personal and dependent exemptions, senior/blind exemptions, credits, and payments.
Last Updated: May 31, 2026
Virginia Tax Inputs
Estimate 2025 tax year / 2026 filing season Virginia resident income tax using current state-published rates, deductions, exemptions, credits, and payments.
Use full-year resident income before state-specific additions and subtractions.
Enter taxable state additions not already in the income baseline.
Enter state subtractions, exclusions, or adjustments you want reflected.
Use state-allowed itemized or eligible deductions, not necessarily the federal amount.
Used for state dependent exemptions or dependent tax credits.
Use for dependents age 17+ or non-child dependent exemptions.
Enter 0, 1, or 2 qualifying filer/spouse units.
Enter 0, 1, or 2 qualifying filer/spouse units.
Enter credits you want applied after automatically modeled dependent credits.
Include state withholding, extension payments, and estimated payments.
VA total tax
$4,130.90
Taxable income
$76,320.00
Balance due
$0.00
Estimated refund
$69.10
Calculation Breakdown
VA estimated tax is $4,130.90 before comparing withholding and payments.
- State AGI
- $86,000.00
- Standard deduction
- $8,750.00
- Deduction used
- Larger deduction: standard ($8,750.00)
- Exemptions
- $930.00
- State tax before credits
- $4,130.90
- Dependent credit
- $0.00
- Other credits applied
- $0.00
- Local income tax
- $0.00
- Effective rate
- 4.80%
- Marginal state rate
- 5.75%
Bracket Detail
This table shows how much of the modeled taxable income falls into each state bracket.
| Taxable income range | Rate | Taxable amount | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0.00 - $3,000.00 | 2.00% | $3,000.00 | $60.00 |
| $3,000.00 - $5,000.00 | 3.00% | $2,000.00 | $60.00 |
| $5,000.00 - $17,000.00 | 5.00% | $12,000.00 | $600.00 |
| $17,000.00 - and above | 5.75% | $59,320.00 | $3,410.90 |
Important Disclaimer
This calculator provides an educational estimate for planning and comparison only. It is not tax, legal, financial, medical, lending, insurance, payroll, compliance, or institutional advice and it is not an official determination. Rules, rates, eligibility, formulas, and source data can change or depend on facts not captured here. Verify the result against official sources and qualified professional guidance before filing, paying, diagnosing, borrowing, investing, hiring, or making a compliance-sensitive decision.
Professional Review Status
This YMYL page has internal methodology review, but no external credentialed professional review is recorded yet.
- Reliance status
- Credentialed tax review required before professional reliance
- Required credentials
- CPA, Enrolled Agent, licensed tax professional
- Review scope
- tax formulas, jurisdiction assumptions, withholding language, filing-sensitive examples, and compliance caveats
Current reviewer: Iliyas Khan, Internal tax and sales-tax methodology reviewer.
This page is educational planning support. A named CPA, EA, or licensed tax professional should review the page before it is positioned as tax advice or used for filing decisions.
Tax credentialed review: professional reliance limit
This page is educational planning support. A named CPA, EA, or licensed tax professional should review the page before it is positioned as tax advice or used for filing decisions. Results should be treated as a preliminary estimate, not a filing instruction, diagnosis, product recommendation, eligibility decision, or compliance sign-off. Required professional review: CPA, Enrolled Agent, licensed tax professional. Source expectation: Review should cite current IRS, state revenue department, payroll-tax, or official tax authority sources where applicable.
Checked by Iliyas Khan
Virginia Income Tax Calculator is checked for formula labels, source links, and result limits.
Iliyas Khan, Chief Operating Officer. Updated May 31, 2026. Scope: tax calculators.
Tax credentialed review: Named internal reviewer: Iliyas Khan, Chief Operating Officer. External credentialed professional review is still required before this page is treated as professional advice.
Internal tax and sales-tax methodology reviewer. Review scope: calculator assumptions, labels, source context, workflow clarity, and compliance-sensitive disclaimers.
Relevant review context: CalculatorWallah tax and sales-tax calculator workflow owner; Source-first review of IRS, state revenue, rate, and filing-sensitive references; Compliance-sensitive labels, assumptions, and user-facing disclaimer review.
Required professional credentials: CPA, Enrolled Agent, licensed tax professional. Scope: tax formulas, jurisdiction assumptions, withholding language, filing-sensitive examples, and compliance caveats.
This page is educational planning support. A named CPA, EA, or licensed tax professional should review the page before it is positioned as tax advice or used for filing decisions.
How to Use This Calculator
Step 1: Enter VA income
Start with the Virginia resident income baseline, then add state additions and subtract state-specific exclusions or subtractions.
Step 2: Choose filing status and deductions
Select the filing status and whether to use the state standard deduction, itemized deductions, or the larger amount.
Step 3: Add exemptions, credits, and local rate
Enter dependents, senior or blind units, veteran units, credits, payments, and local tax rate where the state requires one.
Step 4: Review bracket and payment results
Compare taxable income, state tax before credits, local tax, balance due, refund, effective rate, and marginal rate.
How the Virginia Income Tax Calculator Works
Virginia looks simple because the top rate starts early, but the estimate still depends on the state standard deduction, exemption units, subtractions, and credits.
The calculator applies Virginia additions and subtractions, subtracts the selected standard or itemized deduction, subtracts personal and dependent exemptions, then applies the 2025 Form 760 rate schedule.
The result is a planning estimate, not a filed return. It is designed to expose the moving parts behind the number: income baseline, deductions, exemptions, credits, bracket tax, local tax where relevant, and payments already made.
Virginia Income Tax Guide and Latest Data Tables
Latest data used
| Data point | Current value | How it is used |
|---|---|---|
| Standard deduction | $8,750 single/MFS; $17,500 joint | Virginia lists these amounts for 2025 returns. |
| Top marginal rate | 5.75% | Applies above $17,000 of Virginia taxable income. |
| Personal/dependent exemption | $930 | Modeled per filer and dependent. |
| Senior or blind exemption | $800 | Modeled per qualifying filer/spouse unit. |
Standard deduction and deduction method
The deduction section is intentionally separate from the rate table. That makes it easier to diagnose whether the estimate changed because of income, deductions, credits, or filing status.
| Filing status | Amount or range | Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Single | $8,750.00 | Virginia standard deduction |
| Married Filing Jointly | $17,500.00 | Virginia standard deduction |
| Married Filing Separately | $8,750.00 | Virginia standard deduction |
| Head Of Household | $8,750.00 | Virginia standard deduction |
Exemptions and credits modeled
| Item | Amount | Calculator treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Filer exemption | $930.00 | Modeled per taxpayer/spouse unit. |
| Dependent exemption | $930.00 | Modeled per dependent entered. |
| Senior exemption | $800.00 | Modeled per qualifying taxpayer/spouse unit. |
| Blind/disability exemption | $800.00 | Modeled per qualifying taxpayer/spouse unit. |
2025 tax year / 2026 filing season rate schedule: Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, Head Of Household
| Taxable income range | Marginal rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| $0.00 - $3,000.00 | 2.00% | Bracket segment |
| $3,000.00 - $5,000.00 | 3.00% | Bracket segment |
| $5,000.00 - $17,000.00 | 5.00% | Bracket segment |
| $17,000.00 - and above | 5.75% | Top bracket |
Planning notes
Use the result as a withholding check after raises, remote-work changes, retirement-income changes, or self-employment income. Virginia income tax can be modest relative to federal tax, but under-withholding can still create a filing-time bill.
This tool does not replace Form 760. Review official Virginia instructions for age deduction limits, spouse tax adjustment, credit for taxes paid to another state, nonresident or part-year allocation, and Virginia-specific subtraction details.
| Review note | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Note 1 | Virginia resident filing statuses do not mirror every federal label; head of household is modeled with the single standard deduction. |
| Note 2 | Age deduction, spouse tax adjustment, credit for taxes paid to another state, and locality-specific issues are outside this simplified estimate. |
How to plan Virginia income tax through the year
A state income tax estimate is most useful when it is treated as a living planning number rather than a once-a-year filing guess. Start with current salary, filing status, and any large expected changes such as bonuses, overtime, freelance work, or equity compensation. Then compare the state estimate against your federal and payroll-tax assumptions so you can see the full picture of take-home pay instead of isolating the state line by itself.
This matters because most households do not feel tax in separate buckets. They feel it through paycheck cash flow. When you refresh a Virginia estimate after major income changes, you can adjust withholding or reserves before the difference compounds into an unpleasant surprise near filing time. The calculation is not only about compliance. It is about budgeting, compensation planning, and making sure the numbers behind your monthly decisions still reflect reality.
Resident, part-year, and allocation issues
One of the easiest ways to misuse a state tax calculator is to assume a full-year resident pattern when your actual situation is more complex. Moves across state lines, remote work in multiple states, part-year residency, military situations, and pass-through income can all create allocation questions that a simple annual estimate cannot fully resolve. That does not make the calculator useless. It means you should use it as a baseline and then layer real filing facts on top.
A practical method is to run the clean baseline first, then note which pieces may need adjustment: residency period, income sourced outside the state, credits for taxes paid elsewhere, or state-specific deductions and additions. That keeps the estimate honest. You preserve the planning value of the tool while avoiding the common mistake of treating a simplified state tax result as a complete return model.
Withholding and quarterly-payment strategy
Good tax control comes from adjusting early, not reacting late. If withholding is too low, the best time to fix it is when there are still enough pay periods left in the year to spread out the correction. If you have self-employment income or irregular income, quarterly payment planning may matter just as much as paycheck withholding. In both cases, the estimate on this page gives you a working target that helps turn vague concern into a concrete action plan.
Re-running the calculation after a raise, job change, marital-status change, or large side-income event is one of the simplest high-value habits in personal finance. It lets you see whether the state portion changed meaningfully and whether the federal and payroll lines moved with it. When those three pieces stay visible together, take-home decisions become far easier to manage with discipline rather than guesswork.
Using state, federal, and payroll tools together
State tax calculators become stronger when they are part of a small tool chain. Start with the state estimate for location-specific burden, compare that with a federal estimate for bracket impact, then use a paycheck-level model to see how annual assumptions convert into real per-pay cash flow. That workflow is especially useful when you are comparing jobs, deciding how much house payment is realistic, or trying to understand why take-home pay changed even though gross salary barely moved.
The key is separating the lines before you combine them. Federal tax answers one question, payroll tax answers another, and state tax adds a location-specific layer that can materially affect your net income. Once you understand those pieces independently, the total result becomes easier to explain, update, and trust. That is the point of using a state calculator well: not only to produce a number, but to build a better decision framework around that number.
Keep the research moving with FICA Tax Calculator, VAT Calculator, GST Calculator, and Federal Income Tax Calculator.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Calculators
FICA Tax Calculator
Calculate Social Security and Medicare taxes with 2026 thresholds.
Use FICA Tax CalculatorVAT Calculator
Add VAT, remove VAT, reverse VAT, compare country presets, and build bulk VAT breakdowns.
Use VAT CalculatorGST Calculator
Calculate India GST slabs with CGST/SGST or IGST split and optional Canada GST/HST province mode.
Use GST CalculatorFederal Income Tax Calculator
Estimate federal taxes with bracket-by-bracket detail.
Use Federal Income Tax CalculatorRelated Guides

Form 1040 Deadline 2026
Use this for the April 15 Form 1040 filing and payment deadline, October 15 extension date, late-filing cleanup, and 1040-specific checklist.
Read guide
Form 4868 Deadline 2026
Use this for individual tax extension timing, the April 15 Form 4868 request deadline, October 15 extended filing date, payment estimates, online extension methods, and proof of filing.
Read guide
Form 7004 Extension Deadline 2026
Use this for business extension due dates, March 16 and April 15 Form 7004 deadlines, September 15 and October 15 extended filing dates, e-file rules, and no-extension-to-pay cleanup.
Read guide
Form 2553 Deadline 2026
Use this for S corporation election timing, the March 16 calendar-year deadline, 2 months and 15 days rule, shareholder consent, LLC S elections, late-election relief, and Form 1120-S follow-through.
Read guideSources & References
- 1.Virginia Tax - Quick Reference: Form 760 Tax Year 2025(Accessed May 2026)
- 2.Virginia Tax - Deductions(Accessed May 2026)
- 3.Virginia Tax - Exemptions(Accessed May 2026)