Note: Revenue (money paid to the federal government) includes individual, business, estate and excise taxes. Spending (money received by states) covers federal transfers to state and local governments (e.g., Medicaid and food stamps), direct support to individuals (e.g., Social Security), government contracts with businesses, and funding for educational institutions.
While this map and plot are similar to what is on our site, I wanted to make some changes so the static version (the site charts have hover text) would be easier to parse on Reddit. So, I tried something a bit different with the color choices on the range plot, with the goal of creating a visual tie between the states in the map and the states in the plot. Matching the gradient from the map created some accessibility/contrast issues and may have looked too busy, so I just went with solid orange and green. Curious to hear feedback on those design choices!
TatonkaJack on
Wow that map is all over the place.
USAFacts on
Here’s a bit of context for this chart:
In 2023 the United States federal government collected about $4.67 trillion from states and their residents (mostly individual and payroll taxes) and disbursed roughly $4.56 trillion back through programs like Social Security, Medicaid, food stamps and education grants. Nationally that left a $105 billion gap in Washington’s favor—about $314 per person—but it varied by state.
On a total-dollars basis, 19 states were net contributors to the Treasury. New York led the pack, sending roughly $89 billion more than it got back, followed by California ($78 billion) and New Jersey ($70 billion). At the other end, Virginia received about $79 billion more than it paid, with Alabama ($41 billion) and Arizona ($40 billion) close behind.
Putting population into the mix (like in the chart we posted) changes things a bit. Delaware topped the per-capita contributors list, sending $10,505 more to Washington than they received back. Minnesota ($7,605) and New Jersey ($7,456) ranked second and third. At the other end, Alaska saw the largest net per-person with $14,990 coming back, followed by New Mexico ($13,838) and West Virginia ($11,469).
Though it’s not a state, Washington, DC, received $19,748 more per person than it received. More than Alaska, but again, not a state. More than a third of this came from contracts and grants from the Department of Transportation—including Amtrak funding—and Department of Defense funding for the military branches operating in the district.
Almost every red state in the South uses more Federal dollars that they pay to the Federal government
Helpful-Worldliness9 on
why do missouri and nebraska pay more to the federal government that they receive??? The other states are rich and can support themselves but missouri and bebraska i don’t understand
chicagotim1 on
States don’t pay anything to the federal government, citizens who live there do
Easy-Lucky-Free on
I assume VA gets more from the Feds due to all the federal infrastructure in the state? VA doesn’t really match the rest of the states in that the top 10 so I’m a bit curious. Anything I’m missing?
Potato_Octopi on
This excludes what from federal spending? Military and interest payments?
bee-dubya on
Has anyone analyzed this comparing the relative contributions of red vs blue states?
Demonshaker on
Im in NE and was surprised by my states data. I would have expected the welfare farm state to have it the other way. Guessing our military base here has something to do with it?
veryblanduser on
I assume 100% of Apple and Google’s (as an example) fed taxes paid are credited to California in this, since they are headquartered there, correct?
GM would fully be credited to Michigan, etc
Izoliner on
Where are the MAGA supporters with “Go woke, go Broke” “You get what you voted for” etc.?
Top 5 contributors are all Democratic states.
Top 5 receivers besides NM are Republican states.
PoorQwak on
Probably need some tariffs.
evmac1 on
As a Minnesotan, you’re welcome
BoobooTheClone on
Good ole Bible Belt. But not to worry, once they get rid of all transgender athletes and woke people they’ll stop being dirt poor.
16 Comments
Source: IRS, USASpending.gov
Tools: Datawrapper, Illustrator
Note: Revenue (money paid to the federal government) includes individual, business, estate and excise taxes. Spending (money received by states) covers federal transfers to state and local governments (e.g., Medicaid and food stamps), direct support to individuals (e.g., Social Security), government contracts with businesses, and funding for educational institutions.
More data [here](https://usafacts.org/articles/which-states-contribute-the-most-and-least-to-federal-revenue/)
While this map and plot are similar to what is on our site, I wanted to make some changes so the static version (the site charts have hover text) would be easier to parse on Reddit. So, I tried something a bit different with the color choices on the range plot, with the goal of creating a visual tie between the states in the map and the states in the plot. Matching the gradient from the map created some accessibility/contrast issues and may have looked too busy, so I just went with solid orange and green. Curious to hear feedback on those design choices!
Wow that map is all over the place.
Here’s a bit of context for this chart:
In 2023 the United States federal government collected about $4.67 trillion from states and their residents (mostly individual and payroll taxes) and disbursed roughly $4.56 trillion back through programs like Social Security, Medicaid, food stamps and education grants. Nationally that left a $105 billion gap in Washington’s favor—about $314 per person—but it varied by state.
On a total-dollars basis, 19 states were net contributors to the Treasury. New York led the pack, sending roughly $89 billion more than it got back, followed by California ($78 billion) and New Jersey ($70 billion). At the other end, Virginia received about $79 billion more than it paid, with Alabama ($41 billion) and Arizona ($40 billion) close behind.
Putting population into the mix (like in the chart we posted) changes things a bit. Delaware topped the per-capita contributors list, sending $10,505 more to Washington than they received back. Minnesota ($7,605) and New Jersey ($7,456) ranked second and third. At the other end, Alaska saw the largest net per-person with $14,990 coming back, followed by New Mexico ($13,838) and West Virginia ($11,469).
Though it’s not a state, Washington, DC, received $19,748 more per person than it received. More than Alaska, but again, not a state. More than a third of this came from contracts and grants from the Department of Transportation—including Amtrak funding—and Department of Defense funding for the military branches operating in the district.
More data on this topic [here](https://usafacts.org/articles/which-states-contribute-the-most-and-least-to-federal-revenue/), and more data on grants sent to states [here](https://usafacts.org/articles/which-states-rely-the-most-on-federal-aid/).
Top 5 contributors: DE,MN,NJ,WA,MA
Top 5 Receivers: AK,NM,WV,MS,VA
Almost every red state in the South uses more Federal dollars that they pay to the Federal government
why do missouri and nebraska pay more to the federal government that they receive??? The other states are rich and can support themselves but missouri and bebraska i don’t understand
States don’t pay anything to the federal government, citizens who live there do
I assume VA gets more from the Feds due to all the federal infrastructure in the state? VA doesn’t really match the rest of the states in that the top 10 so I’m a bit curious. Anything I’m missing?
This excludes what from federal spending? Military and interest payments?
Has anyone analyzed this comparing the relative contributions of red vs blue states?
Im in NE and was surprised by my states data. I would have expected the welfare farm state to have it the other way. Guessing our military base here has something to do with it?
I assume 100% of Apple and Google’s (as an example) fed taxes paid are credited to California in this, since they are headquartered there, correct?
GM would fully be credited to Michigan, etc
Where are the MAGA supporters with “Go woke, go Broke” “You get what you voted for” etc.?
Top 5 contributors are all Democratic states.
Top 5 receivers besides NM are Republican states.
Probably need some tariffs.
As a Minnesotan, you’re welcome
Good ole Bible Belt. But not to worry, once they get rid of all transgender athletes and woke people they’ll stop being dirt poor.