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Missouri capital gains tax (2026)

Midwest · Taxed as ordinary income · combined top long-term 28.5%

In Missouri, the effective top rate on long-term capital gains is about 4.7%. Added to the federal top long-term rate of 23.8% (20% plus the 3.8% NIIT), the illustrative combined top long-term rate is 28.5% - ranking #23 of 51 states. Top rate 4.7%; capital gains taxed as ordinary income (Missouri enacted a phased deduction for capital gains beginning 2025 - confirm current-year status with the DoR). This is the top-bracket case, not what a typical filer pays, and not tax advice.

Source: Tax Foundation, 2026 state income tax rates. Data as of June 2026.

How Missouri taxes capital gains

Top rate 4.7%; capital gains taxed as ordinary income (Missouri enacted a phased deduction for capital gains beginning 2025 - confirm current-year status with the DoR).

ComponentRate
Federal long-term rate (top)20%
Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)3.8%
Federal subtotal (top long-term)23.8%
Missouri effective top long-term rate4.7%
Combined top long-term rate28.5%

Source: Tax Foundation, 2026 state income tax rates. Data as of June 2026.

The federal subtotal of 23.8% applies only to top-bracket long-term gains; lower-income filers pay 0% or 15% federally. The Missouri figure is the effective top long-term rate.

Worked example

On a $100,000 long-term gain for a top-bracket investor in Missouri: the state takes roughly 4.7% (about $4,700), federal long-term tax is $20,000, and the 3.8% NIIT adds $3,800 - a combined estimate near $28,500, an effective rate close to 28.5%. Lower-income filers pay less federally (15% or 0%).

Estimate only. Use the calculator with your own numbers.

How Missouri ranks

Combined top long-term rate = federal 23.8% + Missouri's effective top long-term rate. Illustration only.
MeasureMissouriRank (1 = highest)
Combined top long-term rate28.5%#23 of 51
State effective top long-term rate4.7%

States with a similar capital gains burden

Missouri and its nearest peers by combined top long-term rate. Source: Tax Foundation, 2026 state income tax rates, 2026.
StateState treatmentCombined top long-term rate
Missouri (this state)Taxed as ordinary income28.5%
West VirginiaTaxed as ordinary income28.62%
NebraskaTaxed as ordinary income28.35%
UtahTaxed as ordinary income28.3%
IllinoisTaxed as ordinary income28.75%
AlabamaTaxed as ordinary income28.8%

Frequently asked questions

Does Missouri tax capital gains?

Yes. Top rate 4.7%; capital gains taxed as ordinary income (Missouri enacted a phased deduction for capital gains beginning 2025 - confirm current-year status with the DoR). On top of the state tax you also owe federal capital gains tax (0/15/20% long-term) and, for higher earners, the 3.8% NIIT.

What is the capital gains tax rate in Missouri in 2026?

Missouri's effective top rate on long-term capital gains is about 4.7%. Combined with the top federal long-term rate of 23.8%, the illustrative combined top rate is 28.5% - the top-bracket case, not what most filers pay.

How does Missouri compare with other states on capital gains?

On the illustrative combined top long-term rate, Missouri ranks #23 of 51 (1 = highest). States are compared on their effective top long-term rate plus the federal 23.8% top. See the rankings for the full picture.

Are short-term capital gains taxed differently in Missouri?

Generally short-term gains are taxed as ordinary Missouri income (the headline rate), while any state preferential rate or exclusion usually applies only to long-term gains. Federally, short-term gains are ordinary income (up to 37%).

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Sources & accuracy

Missouri treatment from Tax Foundation, 2026 state income tax rates and the state revenue department (find Missouri's tax authority). Federal figures from the IRS. Data as of June 2026 for the 2026 tax year. Rates change and special rules have conditions - this is general information, not tax advice. Verify with the official source or a tax professional. See our methodology and disclaimer.

Last updated: 2026-06-21