In the U.S., taxes account for a higher percentage of the cost of beer than ingredients, labor, and other materials combined. It’s a result of levies collected by several parties. A federal excise tax ranges from $0.11 to $0.58 per gallon of fermented malt beverages based on production, quantity and brewery location. Each state and Washington D.C. also imposes individual excise taxes on beer, and, from there, municipal-level levies and retail sales taxes drive the price up.
Tennessee continued to impose the highest tax on beer in 2025 at $1.29 per gallon, according to data from the tax policy nonprofit Tax Foundation. Alaska and Hawaii recorded the second- and third-highest taxes per gallon at $1.07 and $0.93, respectively, landing them in the same spots as in last year’s report.
After tying for third with Alaska in data from 2024, Kentucky ranked fourth since reducing its tax rate from $0.93 to $0.89 per gallon. D.C. rounded out the top five with a $0.79 charge per gallon.
The Tax Foundation calculated the total tax burden of each state and Washington D.C. by combining their respective excise and sales taxes. Other year-over-year notable changes were Connecticut’s drop from $0.24 to $0.19 per gallon, a three-cent jump in Arkansas and North Dakota, and a two-cent increase in Utah, according to the report.
The table below lists the states with the highest total tax burdens on beer in 2025.
Rank
State
Tax Rate per Gallon
1
Tennessee
$1.29
2
Alaska
$1.07
3
Hawaii
$0.93
4
Kentucky
$0.89
5
Washington D.C.
$0.79
6
South Carolina
$0.77
7
North Carolina
$0.62
8
Maryland
$0.60
9
Alabama
$0.53
10
Florida / Georgia
$0.48
Credit: Tax Foundation
The article The States That Tax Beer the Most (2026) appeared first on VinePair.