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Wisconsin Tax Tables for 2013

The 2013 Wisconsin Tax Tables summarise the state-level rules applied to wages, deductions, credits and taxable income. These tables match the rules used by the Wisconsin State Tax Calculator 2013.

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Wisconsin Tax Tables for 2013

The tables below outline the income tax structure, deduction amounts, state-level credits and payroll-related rules used for Wisconsin in 2013. Wisconsin uses filing-status–specific progressive income tax tables. Income is divided into brackets and each portion is taxed at its marginal rate. The table below shows the full structure for this filing status. For a full explanation of marginal brackets, see our Tax Tables guide.

Single – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013)

Marginal income tax brackets for Single filers in Wisconsin for 2013. Only the portion of income within each bracket is taxed at the stated rate.

Single – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013) – Progressive bracket structure for Single
BracketRangeRate
1$ 0.00 to $ 10,750.004.6%
2$ 10,750.00 to $ 21,490.006.15%
3$ 21,490.00 to $ 161,180.006.5%
4$ 161,180.00 to $ 236,600.006.75%
5$ 236,600.00 and over7.75%

Married filing jointly – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013)

Marginal income tax brackets for Married filing jointly filers in Wisconsin for 2013. Only the portion of income within each bracket is taxed at the stated rate.

Married filing jointly – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013) – Progressive bracket structure for Married filing jointly
BracketRangeRate
1$ 0.00 to $ 14,330.004.6%
2$ 14,330.00 to $ 28,650.006.15%
3$ 28,650.00 to $ 214,910.006.5%
4$ 214,910.00 to $ 315,460.006.75%
5$ 315,460.00 and over7.75%

Married filing separately – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013)

Marginal income tax brackets for Married filing separately filers in Wisconsin for 2013. Only the portion of income within each bracket is taxed at the stated rate.

Married filing separately – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013) – Progressive bracket structure for Married filing separately
BracketRangeRate
1$ 0.00 to $ 7,165.004.6%
2$ 7,165.00 to $ 7,165.006.15%
3$ 7,165.00 to $ 7,165.006.5%
4$ 7,165.00 and over6.75%

Head of household – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013)

Marginal income tax brackets for Head of household filers in Wisconsin for 2013. Only the portion of income within each bracket is taxed at the stated rate.

Head of household – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013) – Progressive bracket structure for Head of household
BracketRangeRate
1$ 0.00 to $ 10,750.004.6%
2$ 10,750.00 to $ 21,490.006.15%
3$ 21,490.00 to $ 161,180.006.5%
4$ 161,180.00 to $ 236,600.006.75%
5$ 236,600.00 and over7.75%

Widowed – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013)

Marginal income tax brackets for Widowed filers in Wisconsin for 2013. Only the portion of income within each bracket is taxed at the stated rate.

Widowed – Progressive Tax Brackets (2013) – Progressive bracket structure for Widowed
BracketRangeRate
1$ 0.00 to $ 14,330.004.6%
2$ 14,330.00 to $ 28,650.006.15%
3$ 28,650.00 to $ 214,910.006.5%
4$ 214,910.00 to $ 315,460.006.75%
5$ 315,460.00 and over7.75%

Wisconsin Standard Deduction(2013)

State-level standard deduction amounts for each filing status.

Wisconsin Standard Deduction(2013) – State-specific standard deduction.
Filing StatusAmount
Single$9,930
Married filing jointly$17,880
Married filing separately$9,930
Head of household$9,930
Widowed$17,880

Wisconsin Payroll Taxes(2013)

Payroll taxes set at the state level, separate from federal FICA.

Wisconsin Payroll Taxes(2013) – State payroll contribution rules.
TaxRateWage Cap
Unemployment Insurance Tax0%No cap

Wisconsin Tax Tables for Related Years

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

2014201520162017

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I choose Roth or Traditional contributions this year?

Traditional boosts take-home now; Roth keeps take-home lower now but withdrawals can be tax-free. Compare in our Roth vs Traditional tool.

Where do interest/dividends feed in?

Enter totals from Schedule B; they adjust AGI and flow through to this WI scenario.

My employer pays semi-monthly—will this match?

Use the semi-monthly frequency and enter your exact pre-/post-tax lines to tighten the match.

Longer guidance: Handling RSUs/stock comp with WI wages

Treat vesting/settlement as wage income (federal/FICA/Medicare) and reflect it here. Later sales belong on Schedule D. Because withholding methods vary, mirror your employer’s supplemental approach for closer paycheck alignment.

Detail: Catch-up contributions near year-end

If eligible, add catch-up (401(k)/IRA) and rerun the WI page. This can lower year-end tax and adjust refund vs balance-due dynamics.

Important Notes

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