How Connecticut income tax works
Connecticut taxes individual income with 7 brackets ranging from 2.00% to 6.99%.
Connecticut applies its rate to taxable income, with limited or no standard deduction, so most income is taxed.
Seven brackets up to 6.99%, with personal exemptions instead of a standard deduction.
Connecticut income tax rates for 2026
Only the income that falls inside each bracket is taxed at that bracket's rate — this is how marginal tax works, so your effective rate is always lower than your top bracket.
Your effective rate is the total tax divided by your gross income; your marginal rate is the rate on your next dollar earned. The calculator shows both.
Connecticut taxes capital gains as ordinary income.
Lowering your Connecticut tax bill
Pre-tax contributions to retirement accounts, health savings accounts and other deductions reduce the taxable income this calculator starts from.
Remember this estimate covers CT state income tax only. Federal income tax and payroll taxes apply on top, and this is a planning estimate — verify with the Connecticut Department of Revenue Services (portal.ct.gov/drs) or a tax professional.
Frequently asked questions
How much is Connecticut state income tax?
Connecticut uses progressive brackets from 2.00% to 6.99%.
What is the difference between effective and marginal rate?
Your marginal rate is the rate on your last dollar of income; your effective rate is your total tax divided by total income, which is lower because of brackets and deductions.
Does this include federal tax?
No. This calculator estimates CT state income tax only. Federal income tax and payroll taxes are separate and apply on top.
How are capital gains taxed in Connecticut?
Connecticut taxes capital gains as ordinary income.