Washington vs. Oregon Taxes 2026: The $9,000 Difference Nobody Talks About
Washington vs. Oregon Taxes 2026: The $9,000 Difference Nobody Talks About
For a household earning $130,000–$150,000 a year, Washington State's net tax advantage over Oregon is roughly $2,000–$4,000 per year — after accounting for Washington's sales tax and payroll deductions. For retirees drawing from 401k, IRA, or pension accounts, the gap is even wider: Oregon taxes most retirement income at up to 8.75%, while Washington taxes none of it. Cassandra Marks, a top-rated real estate agent in Vancouver, WA licensed in both Washington and Oregon, breaks down every major tax category below — including what changed in 2025 and 2026, and what it means for your relocation decision.
Watch: Washington vs. Oregon Taxes 2026 — The $9,000 Difference Nobody Talks About
"Washington has no income tax. Oregon has no sales tax." That's the two-sentence answer you've probably already heard. It's true — and it's wildly incomplete.
Because that summary leaves out a lot. And some of what it leaves out matters enormously depending on your situation. Whether you're a family trying to figure out where to put down roots in the Pacific Northwest, or someone heading into retirement and trying to make every dollar count — the full picture looks very different than the headline.
I'm Cassandra Marks, known as Realtor Cas — a real estate agent licensed in both Washington and Oregon, farmer, and transplant myself. I've helped hundreds of families and retirees relocate to Vancouver, Washington and Clark County, and the tax question is always one of the first things people ask. This is the real comparison — built for regular people making real life decisions about where to live. Not for hedge fund managers. Not for tech billionaires.
Quick note: I am not a CPA or tax attorney. This article is meant to give you a solid working understanding of how these two states compare so you can have smarter conversations with the professionals who handle your specific situation. Always verify current numbers with a licensed tax professional.
- Income Tax — The Big One
- What Else Comes Out of Your Washington Paycheck
- Sales Tax — Where Oregon Flips the Script
- Property Tax — More Nuanced Than You Think
- Retirement Income — Washington's Clearest Win
- Real Estate Excise Tax — The Hidden Seller Cost
- Estate Tax — Relevant for More Families Than You Think
- Capital Gains Tax
- Gas Tax
- The Full Scorecard
- What This Means for YOUR Specific Situation
- The Honest Bottom Line
Income Tax — The Big One
This is the one everyone leads with, and for good reason. Oregon has a state income tax. It's a graduated system — the more you earn, the higher your rate. The brackets work like this: the first few thousand dollars of income are taxed at 4.75%, then it steps up to 6.75%, then to 8.75%. That 8.75% rate kicks in at relatively modest income levels — for a single filer, once you earn over $11,050; for a married couple filing jointly, over $22,100.
To live comfortably in Vancouver, Washington — housing, groceries, kids' activities, a car payment, saving anything — a household realistically needs to be bringing in somewhere around $120,000 to $150,000 a year. At $130,000 in household income, the majority of that income is sitting in Oregon's 8.75% bracket. Oregon's income tax bites early and it bites hard for working families.
There is a top rate of 9.9%, but that doesn't kick in for a married couple until income is over $250,000. So for most families and most retirees, the rate you're actually living in is that 8.75% bracket.
Washington: Zero State Income Tax
Washington has no state income tax. Zero. Your paycheck is not touched by the state. You don't file a state income tax return. A household earning $130,000 in Oregon is probably paying somewhere in the range of $7,500 to $9,000 a year in state income tax. In Washington, that same household pays zero. That's money that stays in your pocket — for your mortgage, for your kids' activities, for building up your retirement savings. If you're thinking about buying a home in Vancouver, WA, that difference in take-home pay compounds fast when you're saving for a down payment.
What About Retirees?
Oregon does have one notable carve-out: Social Security income is not taxed in Oregon. That's a genuine benefit. But if your retirement income comes from a 401k, an IRA, a pension, or investment distributions, Oregon taxes all of that as regular income at those same rates. So if you're drawing $50,000 a year from your retirement accounts, expect to pay Oregon state income tax on it.
Washington taxes none of it. Not Social Security. Not your 401k. Not your pension. Not your IRA withdrawals. If it's retirement income, Washington leaves it alone entirely. This is one of the biggest reasons so many people choose to retire in Vancouver, Washington rather than stay in Oregon.
💡 One More Thing Worth Knowing
Washington just passed its first personal income tax in nearly 90 years — a 9.9% tax on household income above $1 million, taking effect in 2028. For the vast majority of families and retirees, that threshold doesn't directly affect you. But the precedent matters for long-term planning. I've covered this in full in a separate article on Washington's new income tax SB 6346 and what it means for Vancouver WA residents.
What Else Comes Out of Your Washington Paycheck?
This is something people don't think to ask until they get their first paycheck in Washington and wonder why it's not as big as they expected. Washington has no income tax — that's true. But there are two other payroll deductions that come out of every Washington worker's paycheck. It's something I cover in every Buyer Discovery Session for people moving to Vancouver, WA from out of state.
Washington CARES Act — Long-Term Care
This went into effect in 2023 and costs 0.58% of your gross wages, with no cap on earnings. For a household earning $130,000 a year, that's about $754 coming out annually. At $150,000, it's $870 a year. In exchange, you're building eligibility for Washington's long-term care benefit program — but many people, especially those who already have their own long-term care insurance or who are older and may not collect, feel like this is just another payroll deduction.
Paid Family and Medical Leave
This went into effect in 2019. The total contribution rate is 1.13% of your gross wages — employees typically pay about 0.88% and employers cover the rest. There is a wage cap: contributions stop once your earnings hit $184,500 for the year. For a household earning $130,000, the employee share comes to roughly $1,144 a year. In return, Washington workers get up to 12 weeks of paid family or medical leave — a genuine benefit, especially for families with young kids.
The Practical Math
For a household earning $130,000 to $150,000 in Washington, between the CARES Act and Paid Family Leave, you're looking at roughly $1,900 to $2,200 per year in payroll deductions that don't exist in most other states — including Oregon. That doesn't erase Washington's income tax advantage — that same household would pay $7,500 to $9,000 a year in Oregon income tax — but it does take a bite out of the headline "zero tax" picture. The net advantage still clearly favors Washington, but now you know the real number.
💡 Note for Retirees
If you're fully retired and not earning wages, the CARES Act and Paid Family Leave deductions don't apply to you at all. Washington's retirement income advantage is completely unaffected. See the full retirement affordability breakdown for Vancouver, WA for the complete picture, and grab the Retire to Vancouver WA Checklist.
Sales Tax — Where Oregon Flips the Script
Oregon has no sales tax. None. Zero. You walk into a store, buy a television, buy a car, buy your groceries, buy furniture for your new house — and there's nothing added at the register. Oregon is one of only five states in the country that can say that.
Washington has a sales tax. The base state rate is 6.5%, but local cities and counties layer their own rates on top. In Vancouver, Washington — where a lot of my clients end up after moving from Portland to Vancouver — the combined sales tax rate is 8.8%. So when you spend $100 in Vancouver, you're spending about $108.80 out the door.
What This Costs a Typical Family
A family at the $130,000–$150,000 income level is likely spending somewhere around $3,000 to $3,500 a month on taxable goods and services — groceries beyond the exempt basics, clothing for growing kids, household items, eating out, activities. At Vancouver's 8.8% rate, that works out to roughly $3,200 to $3,700 a year going to sales tax.
The Cross-River Strategy
Here's what a lot of Vancouver residents actually do: you're 15 minutes from Portland. For big purchases — cars, appliances, electronics, furniture — a lot of Clark County residents drive across the river and make those purchases in Oregon. No sales tax on a $40,000 car saves you $3,500. People do this, and it's completely legal. This is one of the practical day-to-day advantages of living in Vancouver's neighborhoods close to the bridge. The sales tax gap isn't as painful as it looks on paper if you're strategic about it — but it's still a real cost for everyday purchases you're not going to drive to Portland for.
Property Tax — More Nuanced Than You Think
Property taxes in both states are real, and neither one is free. Washington's statewide effective rate averages around 0.79% to 1.0% of assessed value. In Clark County, the effective rate is around 0.92%. On a $550,000 home in the Vancouver area, you're looking at roughly $5,000 to $5,500 a year in property taxes before any voter-approved levies are added. Check the Vancouver market snapshot to see current home price ranges, or the Camas market snapshot if you're considering that area.
Oregon's effective rate is slightly lower on average, around 0.77%. But the bigger advantage Oregon has isn't the rate — it's the stability.
Oregon's Measure 50 — The Stability Advantage
Oregon's constitution, under what's called Measure 50, caps how fast your assessed value can increase — a maximum of 3% per year, no matter what the housing market does. So when home values jump 15% or 20% in a year — which has happened repeatedly in the Portland metro — your Oregon tax bill barely moves. That predictability is enormously valuable, especially for retirees on a fixed income who need to know what their housing costs will be year after year.
Washington's Levy System — What People Don't Realize
Washington doesn't have that same protection. Your property tax bill is built from a stack of individual levies — the state levy, the county levy, the city levy, your school district, your fire district, the library, sometimes a port district. The constitutional cap limits the total of all regular, non-voter-approved levies to 1% of assessed value. But voter-approved levies are exempt from that cap entirely.
Every time your school district needs new buildings, your fire district needs new equipment, or your parks board wants improvements — they put a levy on the ballot. When those pass, your property tax bill goes up. In Clark County specifically, these levies appear regularly and they often pass. It's not unusual for the actual effective rate to be closer to 1.5% or higher in some areas. This is something I walk through in detail during every Vancouver WA Buyer Discovery Session — no surprises at closing.
Retirement Income — Washington's Clearest Win
This is one of the most important comparisons for anyone planning for or entering retirement — and it's where Washington pulls decisively ahead. It's also the single biggest tax reason people choose to retire in Vancouver, Washington rather than stay in Oregon.
Washington taxes zero retirement income. Social Security, pensions, 401k and IRA withdrawals, annuities — none of it. The state simply doesn't tax it.
Oregon taxes most of it. Social Security is exempt — that's a genuine positive. But pension income, 401k distributions, IRA withdrawals? All taxed as regular income at those 4.75% to 8.75% rates.
What This Means in Real Dollars
If you're retired and pulling $40,000 a year from your IRA — a very common scenario for middle-class retirees — in Oregon you're paying somewhere around $2,500 to $3,000 a year in state income tax on that money. Money you already paid federal taxes on when it was growing. Money you saved your entire working life.
In Washington, that same $40,000 in IRA withdrawals: zero state tax. Over a 20-year retirement, at $2,500 a year in Oregon state income tax, you're talking about $50,000 that stays in your pocket in Washington versus going to the state of Oregon. That's the kind of number that changes how you think about whether you can afford to retire in Vancouver, WA.
💡 Thinking About Retiring in Vancouver, WA?
Your Social Security, pension, 401k, and IRA withdrawals are completely untaxed at the state level in Washington. For most retirees, this single difference is worth more than any other tax category combined. Use the Vancouver WA home affordability calculator, grab the Retire to Vancouver WA Checklist, or see how Vancouver's retirees are redefining what retirement looks like. And if you want to run the numbers for your specific situation, reach out directly — I can connect you with local CPAs and financial planners who know both states.
Real Estate Excise Tax — The Hidden Seller Cost in Washington
This one catches people off guard — especially people coming from states that don't have it. It's called the Real Estate Excise Tax, or REET, and it applies when you sell a home in Washington. This is a tax on the total sale price — not just your profit. The seller pays it at closing.
How Washington's REET Works
Washington uses a graduated structure. On the first $525,000 of the sale price, the rate is 1.1%. From $525,000 to $1,525,000, it's 1.28%. Above that it steps up further. And on top of the state rate, most cities and counties in Washington add their own local REET — in Clark County, that's typically an additional 0.5%.
A Real-World Example
Say you buy a home in Vancouver today for $550,000, live there for seven years, and sell it for $650,000. Here's what you owe in REET at closing:
- 1.1% on the first $525,000 — that's $5,775
- 1.28% on the remaining $125,000 — that's $1,600
- Clark County local REET of 0.5% on the full $650,000 — that's $3,250
- Total REET: roughly $10,625 — before agent commission or any other closing costs
Oregon has essentially no real estate transfer tax. You sell your home in Oregon and nothing extra gets taken at closing for a transfer tax. That's a meaningful difference, especially for families who may move several times over the years, or retirees who are downsizing. If you're thinking about deciding whether to sell your home, REET is a real line item in the net proceeds math. I walk through all of it when covering closing on a house in Vancouver, WA.
Estate Tax — Relevant for More Families Than You Think
Both Washington and Oregon have their own state estate taxes, separate from the federal one. Most states don't — these two do. And a lot of people assume estate taxes only affect the very wealthy. That's not quite true when you look at the thresholds — especially in a market like Clark County, where home values have climbed significantly.
Oregon's estate tax starts at $1 million. Rates run from 10% to 16% on the taxable portion above that threshold. Washington's estate tax starts at $3 million — a higher threshold, which is good news for most middle-class families.
Why This Matters for Middle-Class Families in the PNW
In the Pacific Northwest, $1 million or $3 million in estate value is not as rare as it sounds. If you own a home worth $600,000, have $500,000 in retirement accounts, and have some life insurance — you're not far from Oregon's threshold. Add a few more years of home appreciation and you might cross it.
A Specific Scenario
- In Oregon: a $3.5 million estate crosses the $1 million threshold by $2.5 million. Graduated rates from 10% to 16% mean a total estate tax bill of potentially $250,000 to $350,000.
- In Washington: that same estate is only $500,000 above the $3 million exemption. Washington's estate tax on that overage: likely $40,000 to $60,000.
That is a massive difference — potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars more going to the state in Oregon versus Washington, on the exact same estate, just because of where you lived. For retirees who have worked their whole lives to leave something for their kids or grandkids, this is one of the most significant financial differences between these two states. It's part of why estate planning is a real conversation when I help people explore Portland vs. Vancouver for retirement.
Capital Gains Tax
Oregon taxes capital gains as regular income — no special rate, no separate category. If you sell a rental property, a second home, or stocks held in a taxable brokerage account, those gains get added to your ordinary income and taxed at whatever bracket you're in. For most middle-class earners in Oregon, that means up to 8.75%.
Washington has a dedicated capital gains tax at 7%, but with an important carve-out: the first $278,000 in gains each year is completely exempt. So if you sell your primary home and your total gain is under $278,000, you owe nothing in Washington state capital gains tax. For many families, that exemption covers the sale entirely. This is one of the factors worth understanding before pricing your Vancouver home for sale.
What Retirees Need to Understand
Withdrawals from your IRA, 401k, or pension are not capital gains — those are ordinary income, and Washington doesn't tax ordinary income at all. So your retirement account distributions are completely untouched by this tax. Where capital gains becomes relevant is if you're selling a rental property, a second home, or have a taxable brokerage account with significant unrealized gains.
In 2025, Washington added a new upper tier — gains above $1 million are now taxed at 9.9%. That's more relevant for large investment property sales and business sales than for the typical family home. This is also covered in detail in my full SB 6346 breakdown.
Gas Tax
Washington's gas tax is now 55.4 cents per gallon — one of the highest in the country — after increases that took effect in 2025. Oregon's gas tax is around 40 cents per gallon. For the average driver putting 12,000 to 15,000 miles a year on their car, this works out to maybe $100 to $150 a year in extra gas taxes in Washington.
The legislature also built in a 2% automatic annual increase going forward — no new vote required. The gap between Washington and Oregon on gas taxes will keep widening year after year unless the law changes.
And if you drive or plan to drive an electric vehicle: Washington is phasing in a road usage charge of around 2.5 cents per mile starting in 2026. At 15,000 miles a year, that's about $375 annually — worth factoring in whether you're buying new construction in Vancouver, WA or an existing home. Oregon does not yet have an equivalent mandatory program.
The Full Scorecard
For a family earning $130,000 to $150,000 a year, Washington's income tax advantage will typically outweigh Oregon's sales tax and payroll deductions combined. That net difference lands somewhere in the range of $2,000 to $4,000 a year in Washington's favor. Not a life-changing number on its own — but real money that adds up year after year. For a retiree drawing from retirement accounts, Washington is almost always the stronger choice from a pure tax standpoint.
What Does This Mean for You?
If You're a Family Relocating to the Pacific Northwest
The honest bottom line math for a household earning $130,000 to $150,000 a year — which is what it realistically takes to live comfortably in the Vancouver area:
- In Oregon: roughly $7,500 to $9,000 a year in state income tax
- In Washington: zero income tax — but roughly $3,200 to $3,700 a year in sales tax on everyday purchases, plus about $1,900 to $2,200 in CARES Act and Paid Family Leave payroll deductions
- Net advantage of Washington over Oregon: roughly $2,000 to $4,000 a year — after accounting for all of Washington's costs
And that's before the cross-river shopping strategy. If your family makes even a handful of major purchases in Oregon each year — a car, appliances, electronics — you can widen that gap further. Property taxes are broadly comparable, though Oregon gives you more predictability year over year. Schools vary significantly — do your homework on specific school district boundaries, because that matters a lot for families with kids. That's something I walk through in every Buyer Discovery Session.
Washington wins on the overall tax math for a typical Vancouver-area family. Ready to explore what's available? Browse homes for sale in Vancouver, WA, explore Camas, WA, or check out Hockinson — all popular landing spots for families making the move from Oregon. You can also use the Buyer's Guide to understand the full home buying process, or start with buying a home in Vancouver, WA.
If You're Retiring or Already Retired
Washington is about as good as it gets for retirees from a state tax standpoint. Your Social Security is untaxed. Your pension is untaxed. Your 401k and IRA withdrawals are untaxed. All of it.
Oregon exempts Social Security, which is a genuine positive. But the rest of your retirement income — pension, IRA, 401k — is taxed at up to 8.75% in Oregon. For a retiree pulling $50,000 a year from retirement accounts, that's real money every year, for as long as you live there.
Oregon's property tax predictability under Measure 50 is a genuine advantage for retirees on fixed incomes. But on the overall picture, Washington is the more tax-favorable state for retirement. Learn more about the Portland vs. Vancouver retirement comparison, see how Vancouver's retirees are redefining retirement, or consider right-sizing your home for your current stage of life.
💡 Resources for Retirees Moving to Vancouver, WA
Home affordability calculator · SW Washington Relocation Guide · Retire to Vancouver WA Checklist · Retirement affordability breakdown · Contact Cassandra directly
If You're Coming From California, Arizona, or the East Coast
Both states look strong compared to California, which has a top income tax rate of 13.3%, high sales tax, and high property taxes. If you're leaving a high-income-tax state like California, Washington will feel like an immediate financial relief on your paycheck. Oregon will feel better than California on income tax for middle incomes — but you'll still have a state income tax.
If you're coming from a state with no income tax — Florida, Texas, Nevada — Washington maintains that advantage. Oregon does not. Either way, the pros and cons of living in Vancouver, WA go well beyond taxes — and it's worth exploring the full picture. The Camas, WA guide is also worth a read if you want a quieter, more suburban feel with top-rated schools.
The Honest Truth About These Two States
Washington built its financial reputation on one promise: no income tax. For decades that made it a strong choice for working families and retirees. That core advantage still exists for most people — your paycheck and your retirement income are still protected in Washington at the levels most families and retirees are operating at.
But Washington has been changing. The 2025 tax package added significant costs in other areas. A new income tax — while aimed at higher earners — has been passed and is now being fought in the courts and potentially at the ballot. The direction of travel in Washington's tax policy has been toward more taxation, not less. I've covered all of that in my full SB 6346 breakdown — Washington's New Income Tax and what it means for Vancouver WA residents.
Oregon is consistent but expensive if you earn income. The income tax is real, it hits at modest income levels, and it applies to most retirement income.
- For the typical family: Washington makes more financial sense on the day-to-day income tax math — the net advantage is $2,000–$4,000/year even after sales tax and payroll deductions. Start your search with homes in Vancouver, WA or use the home buying process guide to understand what comes next.
- For the typical retiree: Washington protects your retirement income far better than Oregon does — $50,000 or more over a 20-year retirement stays in your pocket. Read the full retirement affordability breakdown and the right-sizing guide.
- For both groups: do the specific math for your household with a CPA who knows both states. And when you're ready to see what's out there, explore Vancouver's neighborhoods or explore Portland's neighborhoods to find the right fit.
That's the full comparison — Washington versus Oregon taxes, built for real people making real decisions about where to live. If you're actively thinking about relocating to Vancouver, Washington or Clark County and want to talk through what this looks like for your specific situation — reach out. This is what I do every day. I help people understand not just the homes and neighborhoods, but the full picture of what it means to plant roots here, just like I did.
Is Clark County actually the right fit for you? Before you decide, make sure you've read about the 3 Reasons People Are Leaving Vancouver, Washington.
Have Questions About How the Taxes Stack Up for Your Move?
Whether you're relocating from Oregon, planning retirement in Washington, or trying to figure out if the numbers work for your family — I'm here to help you navigate it with honest, complete information.
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Cassandra Marks
Realtor, Licensed in OR & WA | License ID: 201225764
Realtor, Licensed in OR & WA License ID: 201225764
