Why It Matters
A new analysis from the Utah Taxpayers Association shows that a middle-class Utah family earning roughly $124,000 paid more than $34,000 in combined taxes in 2025, illustrating the cumulative weight of federal, state, and local levies on household budgets. The findings underscore how payroll, sales, and property taxes add up beyond what appears on a paycheck.
What Happened
The Utah Taxpayers Association released its 2026 Beehive Family Report, modeling tax burdens for a fictional family of five living in Salt Lake City. Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Utah State Tax Commission, the report estimated that the household earned $123,716 in 2025 and paid $34,482 in taxes—equivalent to 28 percent of total income or approximately 2.5 hours of every workday.
The organization publishes the report annually to provide transparency about the breadth of taxes paid at all levels of government.
By the Numbers
Social Security and Medicare taxes accounted for the largest share of the family’s burden, totaling $12,239, or 36 percent of all taxes paid. State income taxes came to $3,851, exceeding the $3,263 paid in federal income taxes due to the impact of federal child tax credits. Sales taxes added $3,455 to the total, while property taxes—largely funding the local school district—reached $3,684.
The report also included line items for automobile-related taxes and levies on goods such as cigarettes and alcohol.
Zoom Out
Middle-class families nationwide face similar layered tax structures, with payroll taxes and state and local levies often representing a larger burden than federal income taxes alone. Rising consumer prices and household spending have pushed sales tax collections higher in many states, adding to the cumulative load on household budgets.
What’s Next
The Utah Taxpayers Association uses the annual Beehive Family Report as a reference tool for lawmakers and the public during legislative sessions. The organization advocates for tax transparency and has previously supported efforts to simplify Utah’s tax code and limit growth in government spending.