A tax atlas for 206 countries
Income, corporate, VAT and wealth tax rates, country by country — cited and dated.
468 verified data points across income, corporate, VAT and wealth tax, each cited to its own primary source. The map below plots the broadest series — statutory corporate tax across 201 countries.
- 0–10%
- 10–20%
- 20–30%
- 30–40%
- 40–50%
- No data
- Countries tracked
- 206
- Verified data points
- 468
- Taxes tracked
- 6
- Last updated
- July 2026
Browse by tax
- Income Tax
Top statutory rate on personal income, surcharges included.
37 countries - Corporate Tax
Combined statutory rate on corporate profit.
201 countries - VAT
Standard rate on most goods and services.
37 countries - Capital Gains Tax
Tax on the profit from selling assets such as shares or property.
No data yet - Crypto Tax
How gains and income from digital assets are taxed.
No data yet - Wealth Tax
Annual tax on a person’s net wealth, where one exists.
193 countries
Browse by country
- Corporate25.6%
- Income43.7%
- Corporate25%
- Income45%
- Corporate30.1%
- Income47.5%
- Corporate36.1%
- Income55.4%
- Corporate17%
- Corporate9%
- Corporate29.7%
- Income55.9%
- Corporate30%
- Income47%
All 206 countries, A to Z
Popular comparisons
Frequently asked questions
What is this site?
A reference of headline tax rates across 206 countries: income, corporate, VAT and wealth tax today — wealth tax verified for 193 countries, 11 of which levy one — with capital gains and crypto tax tracked for coverage as sources are verified. Corporate tax is the broadest series at 201 countries; income tax and VAT currently cover the 37 countries verifiable against OECD sources. Every rate carries its own citation and as-of date on the page where it appears.
Where does the data come from?
Corporate tax rates come from the Tax Foundation’s Worldwide Corporate Tax Rates dataset, 2025 edition. Top statutory personal income tax rates come from the OECD Tax Database, dated 2025, and standard VAT rates from the OECD Tax Database’s VAT/GST standard rates table, published in its Consumption Tax Trends series, whose most recent edition is dated 2023. Wealth tax has no single cross-country dataset, so it is sourced country by country instead — an official government source where one is fetchable, PWC’s Worldwide Tax Summaries otherwise. We publish a rate only once it can be verified against a primary source.
How often is the data updated?
When a source publishes a new edition, the dataset is re-ingested and the as-of dates move with it. Between editions the figures do not change: every rate stays dated to the vintage of the source it was verified against, rather than to the day a page was built, so nothing looks fresher than its data.
What does “headline rate” mean?
The single statutory rate a country is most often quoted by: the top personal income tax bracket, the combined statutory corporate rate, or the standard VAT rate. It is the rate set by law — not the effective rate a given person or company actually pays after brackets, deductions, credits and special regimes, which is usually lower.
Is this tax advice?
No. This site is an informational reference compiled from public sources — not tax, legal or financial advice. Rates change, and individual circumstances differ; verify anything you plan to act on with official sources or a qualified adviser.