New Hampshire has no state sales tax — one of only five states in the US. Some local jurisdictions may still levy their own sales taxes.
Combined Avg Rate
0%
State Rate
None
Avg Local Rate
None
Tax on $100
$0.00
| State Rate | 0% (no state sales tax) | New Hampshire base rate |
| Avg Local Rate | 0% | Average county/city addition |
| Combined Avg Rate | 0.00% | State + average local |
| Tax on $100 | $0.00 | At combined avg rate |
| Est. Annual Tax | $0 | On $30,000 spending, 60% taxable |
New Hampshire is one of five states with no statewide sales tax (alongside Alaska, Delaware, Montana, and New Hampshire, or Oregon depending on local levies). The state collects revenue through other means such as income taxes, property taxes, and business levies. Note that some local governments in New Hampshire may still impose their own sales taxes.
Sales taxes are typically not applied to groceries, prescription drugs, and some other categories in most states. The actual tax you pay may be lower than the calculated estimate if a significant portion of your spending is on exempt items.