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Fridley, Minnesota Local Income Tax 2026

Quick answer: Fridley does NOT have a city income tax. Only Minnesota state income tax (5.35%–9.85% progressive) and federal apply.

Updated April 2026 · Source: Minnesota Department of Revenue, IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32

TL;DR for Fridley residents

  • City income tax: ❌ None. Fridley doesn't have one.
  • Anoka County income tax: ❌ None. MN counties don't levy income tax.
  • Minnesota state income tax: ✅ 5.35%–9.85% progressive (applies)
  • Federal income tax: ✅ 10%–37% progressive (applies)
  • Property tax (Anoka County): ✅ ~1.07% effective rate
  • Sales tax: ✅ 6.875% (state only, no city/county add-on in Fridley)

Minnesota state income tax brackets (apply to Fridley)

Single filer

RateIncome
5.35%$0$32,570
6.80%$32,571$106,990
7.85%$106,991$198,630
9.85%$198,631

Married Filing Jointly

RateIncome
5.35%$0$47,620
6.80%$47,621$189,180
7.85%$189,181$330,410
9.85%$330,411

Effective tax burden examples for Fridley residents (single filer)

IncomeMN taxMN effective rate
$40,000$2,2485.62%
$60,000$3,6086.01%
$80,000$4,9686.21%
$100,000$6,3286.33%
$150,000$10,1796.79%
$200,000$14,1327.07%

Approximations before deductions/credits. Use the calculator for your exact MN withholding including standard deduction (~$14,575 single 2026), Working Family Credit, and Property Tax Refund eligibility.

Frequently asked questions

Does Fridley, Minnesota have a local income tax?

No. Fridley, Minnesota does NOT have a city income tax. Minnesota state law generally prohibits cities from levying their own income tax — only the state and federal governments tax income for Fridley residents. Some Minnesota cities have payroll/wage taxes via separate authorities, but Fridley does not. Property tax, sales tax, and Anoka County taxes do apply.

What state income tax does Fridley pay?

Fridley residents pay Minnesota state income tax with progressive brackets (4 tiers in 2026): 5.35%, 6.80%, 7.85%, and 9.85% on income above $198,630 (single) or $330,410 (MFJ). Minnesota has the 5th-highest top state income tax rate in the US after California, Hawaii, New York, and New Jersey.

What is the Minnesota state withholding for someone working in Fridley?

Minnesota state withholding follows MN withholding tables published annually by the Department of Revenue. For 2026, a single filer with one allowance earning $5,000 biweekly would have approximately $300 in state withholding (~6%). Employers should use Form W-4MN to determine MN-specific withholding (separate from federal W-4 since 2020). Fridley employers withhold the standard MN amount — no city add-on.

What's the total tax burden for someone earning $80,000 living in Fridley?

On $80,000 single-filer in Fridley, MN: Federal tax ~$10,500 (after $15,000 standard deduction, brackets to 22%); Minnesota state tax ~$4,000 (after MN standard deduction ~$14,575); FICA ~$6,120 (7.65% employee share). Total tax burden: ~$20,620 or 25.8% effective rate. Take-home approximately $59,380 annually or $4,948/month. No Fridley city tax adds to this.

What credits/deductions can Fridley residents claim on Minnesota state taxes?

Key MN credits for Fridley residents: Working Family Credit (refundable, similar to federal EITC, up to $2,225); Child & Dependent Care Credit; K-12 Education Credit (up to $1,500 per student); Property Tax Refund (separate from state return — file Form M1PR); Minnesota Homestead Credit Refund; Long-Term Care Insurance Credit; Marriage Credit; Senior Citizens' Property Tax Deferral (for 65+).

What does Fridley have other than income tax that affects total cost?

Fridley/Anoka County 2026 tax burden beyond state income tax: Property tax effective rate 1.07% (Anoka County average) — on a $300k home, ~$3,210/year. Minnesota state sales tax 6.875% + Anoka County 0% = 6.875% (Fridley does not add city sales tax). Vehicle registration, fuel tax (state $0.286/gal), and cigarette/alcohol excise taxes apply normally. No estate tax for estates under $3M (federal exemption $14M).

Are there any cities in Minnesota that DO have local income tax?

No Minnesota cities have a true local income tax. Minnesota state law generally prohibits it. The Twin Cities (Minneapolis, St. Paul) have considered it occasionally but state law would need to change. Some Minnesota cities have local sales taxes (Minneapolis 0.5%, St. Paul 0.5%, Duluth 1%) but never income taxes. So Fridley is normal — no city income tax is the rule, not the exception, in Minnesota.

How does Fridley compare to neighboring Brooklyn Center or Coon Rapids on taxes?

All four cities (Fridley, Brooklyn Center, Coon Rapids, Spring Lake Park) have NO local income tax — same Minnesota state tax structure applies to all. The differences come from property tax rates (Brooklyn Center ~1.40%, Fridley ~1.07%, Coon Rapids ~1.13%, varying by district) and city service fees. For income tax purposes, they're identical. School district choice matters more for total tax burden than which of these cities you live in.

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