Arkansas cell phone taxes among highest in nation

(The Center Square) – Arkansans pay the second-highest percentage for wireless taxes in the country, but federal wireless fees have fallen for the first time since 2017, according to a new report out this week.

Taxes, fees, and government surcharges make up 32.17% of Arkansans’ wireless bills, according to a Tax Foundation report evaluating excise taxes and fees on wireless services.

The largest chunk of that percentage comes from the state-local rate of 21.34%, topped off by the Federal Universal Service Fund (FUSF) rate of 10.83%.

That’s down from the FUSF rate of 12.24% last year and is the first decrease seen since 2017, when the rate fell less than a percentage point from 6.64% to 6.34%, according to the report.

However, the federal rate has approximately doubled over the last two decades from 5.07% in 2003 to the current rate of 10.83%, the report shows.

- Advertisement -

The only state where wireless users pay more than Arkansans in taxes and fees on their bills is Illinois at 33.8%, while Idaho has the lowest wireless taxes at 13.7%.

Though the federal rate went down this year, the report observed a “sizeable” increase in state and local wireless tax rates, which offset the federal rate drop.

An average American household pays about $294 per year in wireless taxes, fees, and government surcharges, which is down from $305 last year, according to the report.

In all, wireless users will pay an estimated $12.6 billion in taxes, fees, and government surcharges this year, the report said. Of that $12.6 billion, $5.3 billion will come in the form of sales taxes and other consumption taxes, $3.8 billion in state and local fees for 911 and 988, which is the suicide hotline, and the final $3.5 billion will come from additional telecommunications-specific taxes, the report said.

The majority of adults depend on wireless as their sole means of communication, with 72% of all adults living in a wireless-only household as of 2022, the report found. Meanwhile, 78% of all low-income adults live in wireless-only households.

The report identified wireless taxes as regressive due to the fact that low-income households spend a greater percentage of their budgets on wireless services than high-income households, and spend a greater percentage of their money on wireless service taxes, according to the report.

- Advertisement -

Other states with the highest wireless fees were Washington, New York, and Nebraska. States with the lowest wireless taxes included Oregon, Montana, Delaware, and Nevada, with Idaho being the lowest.

Hot this week

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Entertainment district benefits don’t outweigh the cost, economists say

(The Center Square) — Weeks later, after more details...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Report: Outgoing FTC chair sought Chinese company’s help in case against Amazon

In the final days of the Biden administration, staff...

Eastern Washington site of de facto EV school bus experiment

(The Center Square) – With cold weather and long...

Ex-speaker’s fate rests with jury as deliberations continue

(The Center Square) – The jury is set to...

Federal employees reportedly told to remove pronouns from email signatures

Federal employees were reportedly informed that they must stop...

Democrats’ gun agenda poised to make it to governor’s desk again

(The Center Square) — Though Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin...

WATCH: Tariffs to start Saturday on Mexico, Canada, China

(The Center Square) – President Donald Trump plans to...

More like this
Related

Report: Outgoing FTC chair sought Chinese company’s help in case against Amazon

In the final days of the Biden administration, staff...

Eastern Washington site of de facto EV school bus experiment

(The Center Square) – With cold weather and long...

Ex-speaker’s fate rests with jury as deliberations continue

(The Center Square) – The jury is set to...

Federal employees reportedly told to remove pronouns from email signatures

Federal employees were reportedly informed that they must stop...