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Wyoming Tax Tables

Wyoming Tax Tables provide a complete reference of how state income tax is calculated for each supported year. These tables summarise the official rules issued by the Wyoming Department of Revenue and present them in a clear structure that matches the calculations used in our Wyoming Tax Calculator. They are useful for checking withholdings, estimating liability, reviewing historical tax years and understanding how state policy shapes taxable income.

Quick Access Tools

Tax Years

Select a tax year to view the official Wyoming tax rates and rules used in our calculators. Each page shows the brackets or flat tax rate, deduction amounts, credit structures, withholding guidance and any year-specific updates published by the Wyoming Department of Revenue. You can also access the matching Wyoming Tax Calculator for precise calculations for that year.

How Wyoming Calculates Income Tax

Wyoming uses a progressive tax system where income is divided into brackets and each portion is taxed at its marginal rate. These rules determine how wages and other taxable income are assessed for Wyoming returns, with updated tables released each year to reflect legislation and inflation changes. For a broader explanation of how tax tables work, see our Tax Tables guide.

What Is Contained in the Wyoming Tax Tables?

Each tax-year page provides a structured summary of the components Wyoming uses to calculate individual income tax. While details vary by year, the state tax tables generally include the following elements:

  • Retirement income rules including partial or full exemptions for pensions or Social Security.

Together, these elements provide a transparent breakdown of how Wyoming calculates tax for each year. This structure helps taxpayers review year-to-year changes, employers validate payroll withholding and financial planners analyse how Wyoming’s rules differ from federal requirements. All values shown in our Wyoming Tax Tables match the official figures published by the state.

Frequently Asked Questions

Capital gains this year—how do they affect me in Wyoming?

Model via Schedule D. Gains shift federal AGI and tax which drive your net.

Where do interest/dividends get entered?

Enter totals via Schedule B; they flow into federal AGI.

Should I choose Roth or Traditional this year?

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

Why is Wyoming take-home often higher than in other states?

Because there’s no state income tax on wages. Federal and FICA/Medicare still apply, so pre-tax planning remains valuable.

Child & Dependent Care—where to add it?

Use Form 2441 for the federal credit, then incorporate the outcome here.

Important Notes

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