Corporate Tax Rate Report – WalletHub Study
Monday, September 26th, 2022
With President Biden’s latest tax plan proposing increasing the corporate tax rate to 28%, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released its latest Corporate Tax Rate Report and expert commentary.
The report provides an in-depth analysis of the 2021 federal, state and international tax rates paid by the S&P 100 companies, the largest and most established businesses in the U.S.
Companies Paying the Highest Taxes |
Companies Paying the Lowest Taxes |
1. The Kraft Heinz Co. (40.05%) |
1. Charter Communications Inc. (-16.72%) |
2. ConocoPhillips (36.45%) |
2. Oracle Corp. (-5.75%) |
3. Altria Group Inc. (35.28%) |
3. PayPal Holdings Inc. (-1.71%) |
4. Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. (33.43%) |
4. Ford Motor Co. (-0.73%) |
5. Comcast Corp. (27.54%) |
5. Broadcom Inc. (0.43%) |
6. Chevron Corp. (27.50%) |
6. The Walt Disney Co. (0.98%) |
7. Mondelez International Inc. (27.24%) |
7. NVIDIA Corporation (1.90%) |
8. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (25.44%) |
8. International Business Machines Corp. (2.56%) |
9. Gilead Sciences Inc. (25.09%) |
9. Duke Energy Corp. (5.10%) |
10. BlackRock Inc. (25.01%) |
10. Salesforce.com, Inc. (5.74%) |
Key Stats
- The overall tax rate that S&P 100 companies pay, around 18 percent, is about two percentage points lower than they paid in 2020.
- S&P 100 companies pay roughly 20 percent lower rates on U.S. taxes than international taxes.
- Some tech companies, including Oracle Corp. and Adobe Inc., are still paying more than 4 percent lower rates abroad, continuing the trend from 2013 through 2019.
- Four S&P 100 companies are actually paying a negative overall tax rate and are therefore due a discrete net tax benefit: Charter Communications Inc., Oracle Corp., PayPal Holdings Inc., and Ford Motor Co.
- Among the remaining companies that owe taxes, Broadcom Inc., The Walt Disney Co., NVIDIA Corporation, International Business Machines Corp., and Duke Energy Corp. pay the lowest rates.
- The average S&P 100 company pays a 42 percent lower tax rate than the top 1 percent of consumers.
For the full S&P 100 Tax Rate report, please visit:
https://wallethub.com/edu/