Frequently Asked Questions — Florida Tax Calculator
Quick answers about Florida taxes and how our calculator works. Click a question to expand the answer.
No — Florida does not levy a state income tax on wages or salaries. That means the calculator shows **$0** state income tax for Florida and focuses on federal tax, sales tax, and property tax estimates.
Enter your annual income, pre-tax retirement contributions (401(k), IRA), itemized deductions, and the number of state personal exemptions. Choose Florida as the state — the tool will estimate federal taxes, FICA, sales tax (annual), and property tax.
Florida has a **state sales tax (6%)** plus local county surtaxes that vary. The calculator uses an average local + state rate to estimate annual sales tax based on your monthly spending — for precise local rates use a ZIP-to-tax API.
Florida’s property taxes are collected by local counties and vary widely. Our calculator includes a conservative average estimate for property tax to show total tax burden — replace the estimate with your county’s rate for exact numbers.
Yes. Florida residents still owe federal income tax and FICA (Social Security & Medicare) on earned income. Florida’s lack of a state income tax does not affect federal tax liability.
Florida does not tax retirement income such as Social Security or most pensions. However, some retirement-related income may be subject to federal tax — the calculator treats retirement contributions as pre-tax for federal taxable income.
The tool provides **estimates** using simplified rules and average rates. It is great for quick planning but not a replacement for official tax filing. For exact liability, use official guidance or consult a tax professional.
Yes — the calculator uses a default average sales rate. If you want exact local sales tax, I can add a ZIP-to-rate lookup (requires a small API key) or a manual field so users can enter the local sales tax percentage.