Massachusetts Millionaire's Tax Apportionment Calculator 2026

By Shyraz Habib, AKCalc  |  Last updated: July 13, 2026  |  Reviewed & fact-checked by AKCalc Financial Team

Quick Answer: The 2026 MA millionaire's tax threshold is $1,107,750. The 4% surtax applies only to apportioned MA taxable income above this threshold — not your total income. For nonresidents/part-year residents, apportioned income = total income × (MA factor ÷ total factor). Use the calculator below for your exact numbers.

Estimate your 2026 Massachusetts millionaire's tax liability with our free apportionment calculator. Updated for the $1,107,750 surtax threshold.

Step 1: Residency Status
Step 2: Income & Filing Status
$
Enter your total gross income from all sources
$
Enter your total itemized deductions or standard deduction
Step 3: Apportionment Information

Select your apportionment basis and enter the required values.

Use this if your income is tied to days worked (salaried, hourly).

Estimates only: Results are for informational purposes and do not constitute tax advice. Tax laws may change. Always consult a qualified tax professional or the Massachusetts DOR for your specific situation.

✓ Free & Private — All calculations done in your browser. No data stored. Updated for the 2026 $1,107,750 surtax threshold.

Quick Reference: 2026 Massachusetts Millionaire's Tax

Key numbers you need to know — verified against Massachusetts DOR data

Tax Element 2026 Value Source
Surtax Threshold $1,107,750 DOR TIR 23-12
Surtax Rate 4% M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4
Regular MA Income Tax Rate 5% MA General Laws
Combined Rate (surtaxable income) 9% 5% + 4%
Long-Term Capital Gains Rate (surtaxable) 12.5% 8.5% + 4%
Apportionment Basis When to Use Formula
Working Days Salaried/hourly workers with multi-state workdays MA Days ÷ Total Days
Mileage Trucking, delivery, transportation businesses MA Miles ÷ Total Miles
Sales Sales commissions, multi-state customer businesses MA Sales ÷ Total Sales
Residency Status Form Required Apportionment Required? Surtax Applies?
Full-Year Resident Form 1 ❌ No ✅ Yes (on all income)
Part-Year Resident Form 1-NR/PY ✅ Yes ✅ Yes (on apportioned income)
Nonresident Form 1-NR/PY ✅ Yes ✅ Yes (on MA-source income)
✓ VERIFIED All data sourced from Massachusetts Department of Revenue (DOR) — TIR 23-12, M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4. Updated for tax year 2026.

What Is the Massachusetts Millionaire's Tax?

The Massachusetts millionaire's tax is a 4% surtax on taxable income exceeding $1,107,750 for the 2026 tax year. It applies in addition to Massachusetts' flat 5% income tax, creating a combined 9% rate on income above the threshold. The tax was established by the Fair Share Amendment, which Massachusetts voters approved in November 2022.

The surtax applies to all Massachusetts taxable income, including wages, salaries, business income, capital gains, interest, dividends, and other taxable income.

It is calculated after all deductions and exemptions have been applied to your Massachusetts taxable income — not before.

📌 Key Point: The $1,107,750 threshold is adjusted annually for inflation. In 2023, the threshold was $1,000,000. It increased to $1,053,750 in 2024 and $1,083,150 in 2025. Always confirm the current year's threshold before filing.

Who Pays the 4% Surtax?

The surtax applies to:

  • Full-year residents: All Massachusetts taxable income over $1,107,750
  • Part-year residents: Massachusetts-source income earned during the residency period over $1,107,750 (after apportionment)
  • Nonresidents: Massachusetts-source income over $1,107,750 (after apportionment)

The surtax does not apply to:

  • Income below the $1,107,750 threshold
  • Retirement income (pensions, Social Security, 401k distributions) — subject to regular 5% tax only
  • Income earned outside Massachusetts by nonresidents

⚠️ Important: The 4% surtax is calculated on the excess over $1,107,750 — not the entire income. For example, if your MA taxable income is $1,200,000, the surtax applies only to the $92,250 over the threshold, not the full $1,200,000.

Where Does the Revenue Go?

Revenue from the millionaire's tax is constitutionally dedicated to education and transportation. The Fair Share Amendment requires that all surtax revenue be used for:

  • Public education: K-12 schools, higher education, and early education
  • Transportation infrastructure: Roads, bridges, public transit, and rail improvements

The Massachusetts Department of Revenue administers the surtax and provides annual reports on revenue collection and allocation.

How Apportionment Works for Nonresidents & Part-Year Residents

The formula: Apportioned MA income = Total income × (MA factor ÷ Total factor). Your MA taxable income = Apportioned income − Apportioned deductions. The 4% surtax applies only to MA taxable income above $1,107,750.

Apportionment is the process of determining how much of your total income is taxable by Massachusetts when you have income from both Massachusetts and other states.

It applies to nonresidents and part-year residents — not to full-year residents, who are taxed on all income regardless of source.

Massachusetts uses a formula based on an income percent that represents your Massachusetts-source income as a portion of your total income. The formula has three steps:

  1. Calculate the income percent: Divide your Massachusetts factor (working days, miles, or sales) by your total factor
  2. Apportion income and deductions: Multiply your total income and total deductions by the income percent
  3. Calculate tax: Apply the 5% regular tax and the 4% surtax (if applicable) to the apportioned taxable income

Who Needs to Apportion?

You need to apportion your income if you are a:

  • Nonresident: You live outside Massachusetts but earn Massachusetts-source income (wages from MA employer, MA rental property, MA business income)
  • Part-year resident: You moved into or out of Massachusetts during the tax year and earned income both inside and outside the state

For part-year residents of other states, see our Georgia Part-Year Resident Income Tax Proration Calculator. If your move involved New York City, the NYC Part-Year Resident Tax Calculator can help estimate your NYC liability.

Full-year residents do not apportion their income. They file Form 1 and report all income from all sources, regardless of where it was earned.

💡 Filing Tip: Nonresidents and part-year residents file Form 1-NR/PY (Nonresident / Part-Year Resident Tax Return). The Nonresident Apportionment Worksheet (Lines 13a-13g) is where you calculate your apportioned income.

The Three Apportionment Methods

Massachusetts allows three methods to calculate your income percent. You must choose the method that best reflects your Massachusetts-source income.

1. Working Days Basis

Formula: Income Percent = Massachusetts working days ÷ Total working days

Use when: Your income is tied to days worked — salaried or hourly employees, consultants billing by the hour

Example: 150 MA days ÷ 240 total days = 62.5% income percent

2. Mileage Basis

Formula: Income Percent = Massachusetts miles ÷ Total miles

Use when: Your income is tied to miles driven — trucking, delivery services, transportation businesses

Example: 12,000 MA miles ÷ 30,000 total miles = 40% income percent

3. Sales Basis

Formula: Income Percent = Massachusetts sales ÷ Total sales

Use when: Your income is from sales commissions or you have a business with multi-state customers

Example: $500,000 MA sales ÷ $1,500,000 total sales = 33.3% income percent

🔍 Need help choosing? The calculator above lets you test each method to see which one minimizes your tax liability.

The Deduction & Exemption Ratio (Line 14)

After calculating your apportioned income, you must also apportion your deductions. The same income percent used for income also applies to deductions. This prevents double-counting deductions from outside Massachusetts.

Formula: Apportioned deductions = Total deductions × Income percent

Then, your Massachusetts taxable income is:

MA Taxable Income = Apportioned Income − Apportioned Deductions

Once you have your Massachusetts taxable income, the surtax calculation is:

Surtax = max(0, MA Taxable Income − $1,107,750) × 4%

✅ Important: The surtax applies to apportioned Massachusetts taxable income — not your total income. This is a common misunderstanding that can lead to significant tax overpayments.

Step-by-Step: How to Use This Calculator

This calculator estimates your 2026 Massachusetts tax liability, including the 4% millionaire's surtax, based on your residency status and apportionment method. Follow these steps:

1

Select Your Residency Status

Choose from Full-Year Resident, Part-Year Resident, or Nonresident. This determines whether you need to apportion your income.

  • Full-year: You lived in MA all year — no apportionment needed
  • Part-year: You moved in or out of MA during 2026 — apportionment required
  • Nonresident: You live outside MA but have MA-source income — apportionment required
2

Enter Your Income & Filing Details

Enter your total income from all sources, your filing status, and your total deductions (itemized or standard).

  • Total income: Wages, business income, capital gains, interest, dividends, etc.
  • Filing status: Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, or Head of Household
  • Deductions: Itemized deductions or the MA standard deduction
3

Choose Your Apportionment Basis (if applicable)

If you selected Part-Year Resident or Nonresident, choose your apportionment basis:

  • Working Days: Enter MA working days and total working days
  • Mileage: Enter MA miles and total miles driven
  • Sales: Enter MA sales and total sales
4

Click "Calculate Your Massachusetts Tax"

The calculator will display:

  • Apportioned MA Income — your MA-source income after apportionment
  • MA Taxable Income — apportioned income minus apportioned deductions
  • MA Tax (5%) — regular MA income tax
  • Surtax (4%) — surtax on income over $1,107,750
  • Total MA Tax — your complete MA tax liability
  • Effective Tax Rate — your overall tax rate on total income

💡 Tip: You can change any input and click "Calculate" again to see how different scenarios affect your tax liability. The calculator shows a full breakdown of the math so you can verify every step.

⚠️ Important: This calculator provides estimates only. Massachusetts tax law is complex, and individual circumstances may require professional review. Always consult a CPA or tax professional before filing.

Choosing Your Apportionment Basis

Massachusetts allows three apportionment methods. Choosing the right basis is critical because it directly affects your income percent and, therefore, your tax liability. The wrong choice can cost you thousands in unnecessary taxes.

Comparison of the Three Methods

Method Best For Key Input Common Mistakes
Working Days Salaried/hourly employees, consultants, remote workers Days worked in MA vs. total days Using calendar days instead of working days
Mileage Trucking, delivery, transportation businesses Miles driven in MA vs. total miles Counting personal miles or out-of-state business miles
Sales Sales commissions, multi-state businesses Sales in MA vs. total sales Using gross sales instead of net sales

Decision Criteria: Which Basis Should You Choose?

Ask yourself these questions to determine the right method:

❓ Is your income tied to hours or days worked?

If yes → use Working Days. This applies to salaried employees, hourly workers, and consultants who bill by the hour. Most taxpayers use this method.

❓ Is your income tied to miles driven?

If yes → use Mileage. This applies to truck drivers, delivery services, and other transportation businesses where income is directly proportional to distance.

❓ Is your income from sales or commissions?

If yes → use Sales. This applies to sales representatives, brokers, and businesses with multi-state customers where income is proportional to sales volume.

🔍 Pro Tip: Some taxpayers qualify for more than one method. You can use the calculator above to test each method and see which one minimizes your tax liability. The Massachusetts DOR permits you to choose the method that most accurately reflects your MA-source income.

Special Apportionment Methods

Some taxpayers must use special apportionment methods:

  • Self-employed individuals: Use a 3-factor formula (property, payroll, sales) — see 830 CMR 62.5A.1
  • Entertainers and athletes: Apportion based on performances or events in Massachusetts
  • Partners (K-1): Apportion based on partnership income sourced to Massachusetts
  • S-Corp shareholders (SK-1): Apportion based on S-Corp income sourced to Massachusetts

If you fall into one of these categories, consult the Massachusetts DOR guidelines or speak with a tax professional. The calculator above uses the standard working days, mileage, and sales methods — special methods may require additional adjustments.

✅ Quick Tip: For most salaried employees with a hybrid or remote work schedule, the working days basis is the correct choice. Keep a log of your workdays in Massachusetts vs. other states to support your calculation.

Important: Massachusetts Convenience Rule for Remote Workers

Massachusetts enforces a convenience of the employer rule: if you work remotely for a Massachusetts-based employer, your employer's location — not your physical work location — determines the source of your wage income. This means all days worked for a MA employer count as MA working days, even if you performed the work from another state.

How this affects your apportionment: If you are a nonresident working remotely for a Boston company, the convenience rule may require you to treat all your workdays as MA working days, significantly increasing your MA income percent. This applies unless your employer has a bona-fide office in your state that you regularly report to.

If you also have income sourced to New York, note that New York enforces a similar but stricter convenience rule for nonresidents. Our New York Nonresident Earnings Allocation Calculator can help you estimate your NY allocation alongside your MA apportionment.

⚠️ Important: The convenience rule overrides the working days basis for MA-based employers. If you work remotely for a MA company from another state, consult a tax professional to determine your correct apportionment. The calculator above does not automatically apply the convenience rule — you may need to adjust your working days input manually.

Common Apportionment Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using calendar days instead of working days: Only count days you actually worked — not weekends, holidays, or vacation days
  • Failing to apportion deductions: Deductions must be apportioned using the same income percent — this is a common error that overstates your MA taxable income
  • Double-counting income: If you're a part-year resident, avoid double-counting income earned before or after your residency period
  • Using the wrong basis: Choosing a method that doesn't match your income type can lead to an inaccurate income percent
  • Ignoring the surtax: The 4% surtax applies to apportioned income over $1,107,750 — many taxpayers assume it only applies to full-year residents

2026 Threshold Update: $1,107,750

The Massachusetts millionaire's tax threshold for 2026 is $1,107,750 — up from $1,083,150 in 2025, $1,053,750 in 2024, and $1,000,000 in the base year of 2023.

This inflation adjustment is built into the Fair Share Amendment and applies automatically each year.

Why this matters: If you are relying on older information that shows a $1,000,000 threshold, you may be overestimating your tax liability. The higher threshold means more income is exempt from the 4% surtax before the rate applies.

✅ Current for 2026: All calculations on this page use the $1,107,750 threshold — verified against Massachusetts DOR TIR 23-12.

Threshold History (2023–2026)

Tax Year Surtax Threshold Change from Prior Year
2023 $1,000,000 Base year (Fair Share Amendment)
2024 $1,053,750 +5.38%
2025 $1,083,150 +2.79%
2026 $1,107,750 +2.27%

📌 How the adjustment works: The threshold is adjusted annually using the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the Boston metropolitan area. The Massachusetts Department of Revenue publishes the updated threshold in Technical Information Releases each year.

⚠️ Pending legislation: The Fair Share Amendment has faced legal challenges and proposed modifications since its passage in 2022. While the 4% surtax remains in effect for 2026, future changes to the threshold, rate, or applicability are possible. Monitor the MA DOR website for updates. The calculator reflects current 2026 law only.

What This Means for Your 2026 Filing

  • More income is exempt: The $1,107,750 threshold means you can earn more before the 4% surtax applies
  • Estimated payments: If you're making estimated tax payments for 2026, use the new threshold to avoid overpaying
  • Planning opportunities: If your income is near the threshold, consider strategies to stay below it (e.g., deferring income, maximizing deductions)
  • No retroactive changes: The threshold applies only to the 2026 tax year — prior years have their own thresholds

Always verify the current year's threshold before filing. The calculator above uses the verified 2026 threshold of $1,107,750.

Real-World Scenarios

These examples show how the Massachusetts millionaire's tax apportionment works in practice. Each scenario walks through the calculation step by step using the verified 2026 threshold of $1,107,750.

Scenario 1: New Hampshire Resident Working in Massachusetts

Profile: Lives in NH, works 3 days per week in MA for a Boston employer. Annual income of $1,200,000.

Inputs: Total income: $1,200,000 MA working days: 150 (3 days × 50 weeks) Total working days: 240 (5 days × 48 weeks, excluding holidays) Deductions: $25,000 (itemized) Calculation: Income percent: 150 ÷ 240 = 62.5% Apportioned MA income: $1,200,000 × 62.5% = $750,000 Apportioned deductions: $25,000 × 62.5% = $15,625 MA taxable income: $750,000 − $15,625 = $734,375 Tax: MA tax (5%): $734,375 × 5% = $36,719 Surtaxable income: $734,375 − $1,107,750 = $0 (below threshold) Surtax: $0 Total MA Tax: $36,719 Effective rate: 3.06%

Key takeaway: Despite earning $1.2M total, the NH resident pays no surtax because apportioned MA income ($734,375) is below the $1,107,750 threshold.

Scenario 2: Part-Year Resident — Moved to Massachusetts Mid-Year

Profile: Moved from Florida to Massachusetts on July 1, 2026. Annual income of $1,300,000 earned evenly throughout the year.

Inputs: Total income: $1,300,000 MA residency days: 184 (July 1 to December 31) Total days: 365 Working days in MA: 90 (during residency period) Total working days: 240 Deductions: $30,000 Calculation: Income percent: 90 ÷ 240 = 37.5% Apportioned MA income: $1,300,000 × 37.5% = $487,500 Apportioned deductions: $30,000 × 37.5% = $11,250 MA taxable income: $487,500 − $11,250 = $476,250 Tax: MA tax (5%): $476,250 × 5% = $23,813 Surtaxable income: $476,250 − $1,107,750 = $0 (below threshold) Surtax: $0 Total MA Tax: $23,813 Effective rate: 1.83%

Key takeaway: Part-year residency significantly reduces MA tax exposure. Even with $1.3M total income, only income earned during the MA residency period is taxable.

Scenario 3: Nonresident with Massachusetts Investment Income

Profile: Lives in New York, owns rental property in Boston. Total income of $2,000,000, of which $500,000 is MA-source rental income.

Inputs: Total income: $2,000,000 MA source income: $500,000 (25% of total) Income percent: $500,000 ÷ $2,000,000 = 25% Deductions: $50,000 (total) Calculation: Apportioned MA income: $2,000,000 × 25% = $500,000 Apportioned deductions: $50,000 × 25% = $12,500 MA taxable income: $500,000 − $12,500 = $487,500 Tax: MA tax (5%): $487,500 × 5% = $24,375 Surtaxable income: $487,500 − $1,107,750 = $0 (below threshold) Surtax: $0 Total MA Tax: $24,375 Effective rate on MA income: 4.88%

Key takeaway: Only MA-source income counts toward the threshold. Even with $2M total income, the nonresident's surtaxable income is based on the $500,000 MA-source income — well below the threshold.

Scenario 4: Remote Worker with Occasional Massachusetts Office Visits

Profile: Lives in Rhode Island, works remotely for a Boston company, visits the MA office 1 day per month. Annual income of $900,000.

Inputs: Total income: $900,000 MA working days: 12 (1 day × 12 months) Total working days: 240 Deductions: $20,000 Calculation: Income percent: 12 ÷ 240 = 5% Apportioned MA income: $900,000 × 5% = $45,000 Apportioned deductions: $20,000 × 5% = $1,000 MA taxable income: $45,000 − $1,000 = $44,000 Tax: MA tax (5%): $44,000 × 5% = $2,200 Surtaxable income: $44,000 − $1,107,750 = $0 (below threshold) Surtax: $0 Total MA Tax: $2,200 Effective rate: 0.24%

Key takeaway: Remote workers pay MA tax only on days physically worked in Massachusetts. Occasional office visits result in minimal MA tax exposure.

💡 Want to see your own scenario? Use the calculator at the top of the page to enter your specific numbers and get an instant estimate.

Estimated Tax Payment Guidance

If your Massachusetts tax liability exceeds $500 after withholding, you may need to make quarterly estimated tax payments. This is especially common for nonresidents with MA-source income who have no MA withholding. For 2026, estimated tax payments are due:

  • Q1 (Jan 15): April 15, 2026
  • Q2 (Apr 15): June 15, 2026
  • Q3 (Jun 15): September 15, 2026
  • Q4 (Sep 15): January 15, 2027

Use the calculator above to estimate your total MA tax, then divide by 4 to determine your quarterly payment amount. File Form 1-ES (MA Estimated Income Tax Payment) with the Massachusetts DOR. Underpayment penalties apply if you fail to make timely payments.

Mixed-Residency Marriages

If you are married filing jointly and one spouse is a Massachusetts resident while the other is a nonresident or part-year resident, special rules apply.

How it works: The resident spouse reports all income from all sources. The nonresident or part-year resident spouse apportions only their MA-source income. The combined apportioned income determines whether the $1,107,750 surtax threshold is exceeded.

File Form 1-NR/PY with a mixed-residency worksheet. Consult a CPA for guidance on your specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the Massachusetts millionaire's tax apportionment, answered.

The Massachusetts millionaire's tax threshold for 2026 is $1,107,750. This is the inflation-adjusted threshold for the 4% surtax on taxable income exceeding this amount. The threshold increased from $1,083,150 in 2025, $1,053,750 in 2024, and $1,000,000 in 2023. All calculations on this page use the verified 2026 threshold.
The 4% surtax is calculated on the portion of Massachusetts taxable income that exceeds the $1,107,750 threshold. The formula is: Surtax Due = max(0, MA Taxable Income − $1,107,750) × 0.04. The regular 5% MA income tax applies first, then the 4% surtax on the excess amount. For example, if your MA taxable income is $1,200,000, the surtax applies only to $92,250, resulting in a $3,690 surtax.
No. Full-year Massachusetts residents must report all income from all sources and do not apportion their income. The 4% surtax applies to Massachusetts taxable income exceeding $1,107,750 from all sources. Apportionment is only for nonresidents and part-year residents who have income from both inside and outside Massachusetts.
Part-year residents apportion income based on the working days (or miles/sales) during their Massachusetts residency period. The formula is: Income Percent = MA Working Days ÷ Total Working Days. This percent is applied to total income to determine Massachusetts taxable income, which is then subject to the 5% regular tax and the 4% surtax if it exceeds $1,107,750. The calculator above handles this automatically — just select "Part-Year Resident" and enter your residency dates.
No. Massachusetts wages shown on Form W-2 cannot be apportioned. Wages for services performed in Massachusetts are considered Massachusetts source income and must be fully reported. Only non-wage income and certain other types of income can be apportioned using the working days, mileage, or sales basis. If you work remotely, your employer's withholding may need adjustment — consult a tax professional.
The working days basis apportions income based on the ratio of working days in Massachusetts to total working days. Formula: Income Percent = MA Working Days ÷ Total Working Days. Use this method when income is tied to days worked, such as hourly or salaried wages. This is the most common apportionment method. Only count days you actually worked — weekends, holidays, and vacation days are not included.
The mileage basis apportions income based on the ratio of miles driven in Massachusetts to total miles driven. Formula: Income Percent = MA Miles ÷ Total Miles. Use this method when income is tied to miles driven, such as for trucking, delivery, or transportation businesses. Only count business miles — personal miles are not included in the calculation.
The sales basis apportions income based on the ratio of sales in Massachusetts to total sales. Formula: Income Percent = MA Sales ÷ Total Sales. Use this method when income is from sales commissions or when the business has multi-state customers. This method is often used by businesses with sales operations in multiple states. Use net sales (after returns and allowances), not gross sales.
Yes. Nonresidents with Massachusetts source income are subject to both the 5% regular Massachusetts income tax and the 4% surtax if their apportioned Massachusetts taxable income exceeds $1,107,750. Nonresidents must file Form 1-NR/PY and use the Nonresident Apportionment Worksheet (Lines 13a-13g) to determine their Massachusetts taxable income. Only MA-source income counts toward the threshold.
The 4% surtax applies to the portion of apportioned Massachusetts taxable income that exceeds the $1,107,750 threshold. First, calculate your Massachusetts taxable income using the apportionment formula. Then, subtract the $1,107,750 threshold. The excess is taxed at 4%. The regular 5% tax applies to the entire Massachusetts taxable income. This means the surtax is calculated on apportioned income — not total income.
The 2026 inflation-adjusted threshold is $1,107,750. This is up from $1,083,150 in 2025, $1,053,750 in 2024, and $1,000,000 in 2023. The threshold is adjusted annually using the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for the Boston metropolitan area. Always confirm the current year's threshold before filing — the calculator above uses the verified 2026 threshold.
Yes, if you are a nonresident or part-year resident with Massachusetts source income. Form 1-NR/PY (Nonresident / Part-Year Resident Tax Return) is used to file Massachusetts income tax. The Nonresident Apportionment Worksheet (Lines 13a-13g) within Form 1-NR/PY calculates your apportioned income and determines if the 4% surtax applies based on the $1,107,750 threshold. Full-year residents file Form 1 and do not need to apportion.

Methodology: How This Calculator Works

This calculator uses the official Massachusetts apportionment formula as defined in M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4 and detailed in DOR Directive 23-1 and TIR 23-12. All calculations are performed in your browser — no data is sent to any server.

Data Sources

  • 2026 Surtax Threshold: $1,107,750 — Massachusetts DOR TIR 23-12
  • Surtax Rate: 4% — Fair Share Amendment, M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4
  • Regular MA Income Tax Rate: 5% — Massachusetts General Laws
  • Apportionment Formula: Nonresident Apportionment Worksheet (Lines 13a-13g), Form 1-NR/PY
  • Apportionment Methods: Working days, mileage, sales — as defined in 830 CMR 62.5A.1

Calculation Logic

The calculator follows these steps in sequence:

  1. Determine residency status: Full-year resident, part-year resident, or nonresident
  2. Calculate income percent: Based on selected basis (working days, miles, or sales)
  3. Apportion income: Total income × Income percent
  4. Apportion deductions: Total deductions × Income percent
  5. Calculate MA taxable income: Apportioned income − Apportioned deductions
  6. Calculate regular tax: MA taxable income × 5%
  7. Calculate surtax: max(0, MA taxable income − $1,107,750) × 4%
  8. Calculate total tax: Regular tax + Surtax
  9. Calculate effective rate: (Total tax ÷ Total income) × 100

Limitations

  • This calculator provides estimates only for educational and planning purposes
  • It does not constitute official tax advice or a binding tax determination
  • Special apportionment methods (self-employed 3-factor, entertainers, partners, S-corps) are not included
  • The calculator assumes income is earned evenly throughout the working period
  • It does not account for tax credits, tax cap (62F), or other special adjustments
  • Always verify your calculations with a licensed CPA or tax professional

Official References

✅ Updated for 2026: All calculations use the verified $1,107,750 threshold and 4% surtax rate as published by the Massachusetts Department of Revenue.

What To Do Next

1. Verify with a Professional

Review your calculator results with a CPA or EA who specializes in Massachusetts multi-state tax.

2. File Form 1-NR/PY

Download Form 1-NR/PY from the MA DOR and transfer your apportioned income numbers.

3. Make Estimated Payments

If you owe $500+, file Form 1-ES with the MA DOR to avoid underpayment penalties.

4. Explore Related Tools

Visit our Cross Border & Local Apportionment hub for more multi-state tax calculators.

🔒

Private & Secure

All calculations done in your browser. No data stored.

📅

Updated for 2026

$1,107,750 threshold — verified against DOR data.

Verified Formula

Based on M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4 and DOR Directive 23-1.

📊

Full Breakdown

Step-by-step math shows exactly how your tax is calculated.

Disclaimer: This tool is for educational and estimation purposes only. It does not constitute official tax advice. Always consult a licensed CPA or tax professional before filing. Massachusetts Department of Revenue — TIR 23-12 | Fair Share Amendment — M.G.L. Ch. 62, § 4

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