Tax Year 2026 · Filed 2027State-revenue-department verifiedNo state income tax

Washington tax deadlines 2026

Last updated May 14, 2026

  • Washington: No state wage income tax. Washington imposes a Business & Occupation (B&O) tax on gross receipts (rates 0.13%-3.3% by activity), plus a 7% Capital Gains Tax on long-term gains over $250K (upheld 2023).
  • Washington Capital Gains Tax: 7% on long-term capital gains exceeding $250K annual threshold (excludes real estate, retirement accounts, qualified family business sales). Filed via Form CG.
  • Washington B&O tax — gross receipts tax with rates varying by NAICS classification. Service businesses pay 1.5%, retailers 0.471%, wholesalers 0.484%, manufacturers 0.484%.

Washington state income tax

Washington does not impose an individual or wage income tax. Federal individual deadlines still apply to Washington residents — see the federal section below.

Authoritative source

Federal individual income tax (Form 1040)

Filing deadline

April 15, 2027

Extension deadline

October 15, 2027

Quarterly payments

Q1 2026

Jan 1 – Mar 31, 2026

April 15, 2026

Q2 2026

Apr 1 – May 31, 2026

June 15, 2026

Q3 2026

Jun 1 – Aug 31, 2026

September 15, 2026

Q4 2026

Sep 1 – Dec 31, 2026

January 15, 2027

Penalty summary

Failure-to-file: 5%/month up to 25%. Failure-to-pay: 0.5%/month. Interest accrues on unpaid balances.

Authoritative source

Federal S-corp & partnership (Form 1120-S / 1065)

Filing deadline

March 16, 2027

Extension deadline

September 15, 2027

Authoritative source

Federal C-corporation (Form 1120, calendar year)

Filing deadline

April 15, 2027

Extension deadline

October 15, 2027

Authoritative source

Federal payroll (Form 941)

Quarterly payments

Q1 941

Jan – Mar 2026 wages

April 30, 2026

Q2 941

Apr – Jun 2026 wages

July 31, 2026

Q3 941

Jul – Sep 2026 wages

November 2, 2026

Q4 941

Oct – Dec 2026 wages

February 1, 2027
Authoritative source

Authoritative resources

File these Washington returns with confidence

TaxScout's tax form library walks through every IRS form CPA firms file for Washington clients — who must file, key fields, common mistakes, and step-by-step instructions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Washington-specific and federal questions for tax year 2026.

Yes. Washington's 7% Capital Gains Tax on long-term gains exceeding $250K was upheld as constitutional by the WA Supreme Court in March 2023 (Quinn v. State). The tax is structured as an excise tax (not income tax) on the act of selling/transferring long-term capital assets. Standard exclusions: real estate, retirement accounts (401k, IRA, pensions), qualified family-owned small businesses, and assets held in certain trusts. Form CG is due April 15.

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