Ohio variant. This is a Ohio-specific version of the Stock Sale Capital Gains Tax Estimator, using pre-defined local figures (tax rates, median home and income values, and typical regional costs). For the full formula, methodology, and FAQ, open the main Stock Sale Capital Gains Tax Estimator.
Most states tax capital gains as ordinary income. In Ohio, that means a top rate of 3.5% on gains.
Capital gains tax in Ohio
Federally, long-term gains are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on income, plus a possible 3.8% net investment income tax. Ohio then taxes the same gains as ordinary income at up to 3.5%.
Short-term gains (assets held under a year) are taxed as ordinary income at both levels - usually the most expensive outcome.
About taxes and housing in Ohio
Ohio levies a graduated income tax with a top marginal rate in the mid-3% range, and many municipalities add local income taxes.
Ohio's effective property tax rate is relatively high near 1.6%, while median home values remain affordable around $220,000.
Ohio's economy is diversified across manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and logistics, with major metros in Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati.
Worked example: $50,000 long-term gain
A $50,000 long-term gain: federal 15% = $7,500, plus Ohio state tax up to 3.5% = $1,750, for a combined bill near $9,250.
Quick reference
- State income tax: 2.75-3.5% across 2 brackets
- State sales tax: 5.75% (plus 1.49% avg local)
- Median home value: $220,000
- Median household income: $67,769
- Effective property tax rate: 1.59%
- Avg auto insurance: $1,023/yr
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Ohio tax capital gains?
Yes - Ohio taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 3.5%.
What's the difference between short and long-term gains?
Assets held over a year get preferential long-term federal rates (0/15/20%); shorter holds are taxed as ordinary income.