Pennsylvania’s individual income tax revenue reached $4.4 billion in Q1, 2025

Patrick M. Browne, Secretary at Pennsylvania Department of Revenue
Patrick M. Browne, Secretary at Pennsylvania Department of Revenue
0Comments

Pennsylvania collected $4.4 billion in individual income taxes during the first quarter of 2025, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Quarterly Summary of State and Local Taxes.

Individual income taxes are based on net personal income and taxes imposed on such income as dividends, interest and income from intangibles.

Overall, Pennsylvania collected $15.4 billion in combined tax revenues in the first quarter of 2025.

In fiscal year 2024, the U.S. government collected nearly $5.1 trillion in tax revenue, with individual income taxes as the largest contributor, followed by payroll and corporate taxes. The IRS also collected $98 billion in enforcement revenue and distributed $553 billion in refunds and other outlays.

In addition to detailed tax revenue data from each state, the Quarterly Summary of State and Local Government Tax Revenue includes an estimate of state and local government tax revenue at a national level.

The Census Bureau cautions that it sets the tax classifications among the survey categories, and they may differ from the classifications set by the state governments.

Q1, 2025 Pennsylvania Tax Collections
Type of Tax Amount (millions)
Sales and Gross Receipts Taxes $8,382
Individual Income Taxes $4,374
Other Income Taxes $882

Information in this article was obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Quarterly Summary of State and Local Taxes. The source data can be found here.



Related

Bud Cook, Pennsylvania State Representative for the 50th District

Cook votes yes on bill to separate public and private school playoffs

Rep. Bud Cook voted in favor of separating playoffs for public and private schools in Pennsylvania high school sports. The bill aims at promoting fairness among student athletes by addressing recruitment advantages held by some schools.

State Rep. Jill N. Cooper

House to consider bill for invisible disability designation on driver’s licenses

Rep. Jill N. Cooper announced upcoming consideration of legislation allowing invisible disability designations on Pennsylvania IDs. Additional updates include digital vehicle registration options and local community events.

Mike Kelly, U.S. Representative for Pennsylvania

U.S. Representative Kelly on IRS whistleblower reform: ‘This vote is a win for the American taxpayer and the American worker’

U.S. Representative Mike Kelly announced that his bipartisan bill strengthening incentives in the IRS Whistleblower Awards Program passed in the House with broad support on April 28.