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South Dakota Tax Tables for 2017

The 2017 South Dakota Tax Tables summarise the state-level rules applied to wages, deductions, credits and taxable income. These tables match the rules used by the South Dakota State Tax Calculator 2017.

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South Dakota Tax Tables for 2017

The tables below outline the income tax structure, deduction amounts, state-level credits and payroll-related rules used for South Dakota in 2017. South Dakota applies a flat income tax to this filing status. All taxable income is taxed at the same rate, with no marginal brackets. This table shows the single rate used in calculations. To understand how flat tax tables differ from progressive systems, see our Tax Tables guide.

Single – Flat Income Tax (2017)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Single filers.

Single – Flat Income Tax (2017) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Married filing jointly – Flat Income Tax (2017)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Married filing jointly filers.

Married filing jointly – Flat Income Tax (2017) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Married filing separately – Flat Income Tax (2017)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Married filing separately filers.

Married filing separately – Flat Income Tax (2017) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Head of household – Flat Income Tax (2017)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Head of household filers.

Head of household – Flat Income Tax (2017) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Widowed – Flat Income Tax (2017)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Widowed filers.

Widowed – Flat Income Tax (2017) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

South Dakota Standard Deduction(2017)

State-level standard deduction amounts for each filing status.

South Dakota Standard Deduction(2017) – State-specific standard deduction.
Filing StatusAmount
Single$0
Married filing jointly$0
Married filing separately$0
Head of household$0
Widowed$0

South Dakota Tax Tables for Related Years

These related years are often reviewed together for comparing bracket changes, deductions and South Dakota updates:

2015201620182019

Frequently Asked Questions

How do capital gains affect my paycheck in South Dakota?

Capital gains are taxed federally (not by South Dakota). They don’t impact W-2 payroll withholding unless you adjust your W-4 for expected tax.

Is there any benefit to Roth 401(k) in South Dakota?

Roth doesn’t reduce current federal taxable wages; in South Dakota there’s no state income tax now or on distributions. Compare with Roth vs Traditional.

How does overtime affect taxes in South Dakota?

Overtime wages are federally taxable and subject to FICA. South Dakota doesn’t tax wages, so only federal withholding changes with higher pay.

Where do dividends/interest fit?

Model on Schedule B for federal tax. South Dakota doesn’t tax income, so no state impact.

Is my bonus taxed higher in South Dakota?

There’s no South Dakota income tax. Employers may use federal supplemental withholding rates, which can make the bonus check’s withholding look higher.

Important Notes

All calculations are estimates for guidance only. Always review your return and consider professional advice when submitting official filings.