Tax-Equivalent Yield Calculator 2026: Municipal Bond & Fixed Income Workbench

Deploy a fiduciary-grade fixed income modeling engine to underwrite your 2026 bond allocations. Calculate your exact Tax-Equivalent Yield (TEY) by comparing in-state (double tax-free) and out-of-state municipal bonds against fully taxable corporate debt and state-tax-exempt US Treasuries. Accurately model multi-layered tax drag, including local municipal taxes, the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT), and Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) exposure on private activity bonds to maximize your absolute after-tax return.

Tax-equivalent yield In-state vs out-of-state muni Treasury vs corporate NIIT realism Local tax impact AMT warning layer
1Core Tax-Equivalent Yield Inputs
%
Assumes federal tax-exempt and state tax-exempt in your home state.
%
Usually federal tax-exempt but state-taxable in your home state.
%
Treasury interest is generally exempt from state and local income tax.
%
Used to compare after-tax yield against muni choices.
2Tax Profile & High-Income Realism
%
Primary federal tax rate used for taxable alternatives.
%
State tax affects taxable bonds and many out-of-state muni scenarios.
%
Useful for city-tax or local-tax jurisdictions.
Adds Net Investment Income Tax to taxable alternatives.
3Exception & Decision Layer
Triggers a warning that tax treatment may be less favorable.
Used for more practical wording in the recommendation.
$
Used to estimate annual after-tax income dollars.
Lets the calculator test state-specific muni advantage.
This workbench closes major SERP gaps by comparing multiple bond types side by side, incorporating NIIT and local tax drag, and warning users about AMT and state-specific muni assumptions instead of only showing one tax-equivalent yield number.
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Enter muni, Treasury, and taxable bond yields along with your tax profile to compare tax-equivalent yield, after-tax yield, and estimated annual after-tax income across multiple fixed-income options.

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Navigating Tax-Exempt Yields & Fixed Income Arbitrage Mechanics

Three inputs groups, one clear bond verdict — here’s what happens under the hood.

1

Establish Baseline Yields (In-State Munis, Treasuries, Corporates)

Input the stated yields for each bond type — in-state muni, out-of-state muni, US Treasury, and taxable corporate. These are the pre-tax coupon or YTM rates you see quoted in the market.

💡 Use the current quoted yield-to-maturity, not the coupon rate printed on older bonds.
2

Define Statutory Tax Drag (Federal, State, & Local Domicile)

Add your federal marginal rate, state rate, local rate, and toggle NIIT on or off. The calculator stacks all applicable taxes to find your real combined tax drag on any taxable bond income.

💡 High earners above $200k (single) / $250k (MFJ) should toggle NIIT on — it adds 3.8% to investment income.
3

Apply the 3.8% NIIT Surcharge & Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Flags

Flag AMT risk if you’re holding private activity bonds. Select your investor type and investment amount. The home-state advantage toggle controls whether your state exempts in-state muni interest.

💡 Most states exempt their own bonds from state income tax — but not all. Check your state’s rules before disabling the home-state toggle.
4

Tax-Equivalent Yield is Calculated

The formula divides the muni yield by (1 − combined tax rate) to find what taxable yield would leave you with the same after-tax income. This is the core TEY formula used by every major bond desk.

💡 TEY = Muni Yield ÷ (1 − Marginal Tax Rate). A higher tax rate means a bigger TEY advantage for munis.
5

After-Tax Yields are Compared

Every bond type is converted to its true after-tax yield using the full tax drag stack — not just federal rate. Treasuries get state-tax relief. Munis get AMT adjustment if flagged. Corporates take the full hit.

💡 This is why a 5.8% corporate and a 3.85% muni can end up nearly equal after taxes for someone in a 37%+ bracket.
6

Read Your Verdict & Download

The color-coded banner tells you which bond wins under your exact tax profile. The bar chart shows after-tax yield side by side. Use the PDF export to save your comparison for your advisor or tax preparer.

💡 Share the WhatsApp link to quickly show your financial planner the scenario you modeled.

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2025 – 2026 Federal Tax Brackets — Bond Investor Quick Reference

Use the correct marginal rate for the most accurate tax-equivalent yield result.

Tax Rate Single Filer Income Married Filing Jointly NIIT Applies? Muni Advantage Typical TEY Multiplier
10% $0 – $11,925 $0 – $23,850 No Minimal 1.11×
12% $11,926 – $48,475 $23,851 – $96,950 No Low 1.14×
22% $48,476 – $103,350 $96,951 – $206,700 No Moderate 1.28×
24% $103,351 – $197,300 $206,701 – $394,600 No Moderate 1.32×
32% $197,301 – $250,525 $394,601 – $501,050 No Strong 1.47×
35% $250,526 – $626,350 $501,051 – $751,600 Yes (+3.8%) Very Strong 1.60×
37% Over $626,350 Over $751,600 Yes (+3.8%) Maximum 1.65×
⚠️ Marginal rate only. Always enter your marginal (top bracket) rate — not your effective average rate — for accurate TEY math. NIIT applies when modified AGI exceeds $200k (single) or $250k (MFJ). Brackets reflect 2025 IRS inflation adjustments.

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Bond Type Comparison at a Glance

Four bond structures, four different tax treatments — know the rules before you compare yields.

Type 01
In-State Municipal Bond
Federal taxExempt ✓
State tax (home)Usually Exempt ✓
Local taxVaries
NIITNot Applied ✓
AMT riskLow (GO bonds)
Best for35%+ bracket
General obligation munis issued by your home state offer the broadest triple tax exemption. Revenue bonds carry slightly higher AMT exposure.
Type 02
Out-of-State Muni Bond
Federal taxExempt ✓
State tax (home)Usually Taxable ✗
Local taxUsually Taxable ✗
NIITNot Applied ✓
AMT riskModerate
Best forNo-tax states
Florida, Texas, or Nevada residents pay no state income tax, so out-of-state munis carry zero state-tax penalty — ideal diversification without the usual drag.
Type 03
US Treasury Bond / Note
Federal taxFully Taxable ✗
State taxExempt ✓
Local taxExempt ✓
NIITApplied ✗
AMT riskNone ✓
Best forHigh-state-tax states
Investors in California (13.3%), New York (10.9%), or New Jersey (10.75%) see Treasuries perform significantly better than a plain federal rate would suggest.
Type 04
Taxable Corporate Bond
Federal taxFully Taxable ✗
State taxFully Taxable ✗
Local taxFully Taxable ✗
NIITApplied ✗
AMT riskStandard
Best forTax-sheltered accounts
Hold high-yield corporates inside a 401(k), IRA, or other tax-deferred account to neutralize all three layers of tax drag and keep the full coupon working for you.

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Systemic Yield Modeling: Comparative Bond Case Studies

Actual investor profiles across five states — see exactly how tax layers change which bond wins.

1 High-Earning Tech Employee — San Francisco, California
📍 Profile: Software engineer earning $420,000/year. Single filer. Invests $500,000 in fixed income inside a taxable brokerage account. California resident subject to the state’s top marginal rate.
Federal Rate
37%
CA State Rate
13.3%
NIIT
3.8%
Combined Drag
54.1%
Verdict: In-State CA Muni Wins by a Wide Margin. At 54.1% combined tax drag, a 3.9% California GO bond has a TEY of 8.49% — far exceeding a 5.8% corporate bond’s after-tax return of 2.66%. The state + federal + NIIT stack makes tax-exempt income extraordinarily valuable here.
Bond TypeStated YieldAfter-Tax YieldAnnual Income ($500k)
CA In-State Muni (GO)3.90%3.90%$19,500
Out-of-State Muni4.20%3.64%$18,200
US Treasury (10-yr)4.55%2.36%$11,800
Corporate Bond (IG)5.80%2.66%$13,300
TEY of CA Muni = 3.90% ÷ (1 − 0.541) = 8.49%
Any taxable bond must yield more than 8.49% to beat this CA muni after taxes. No investment-grade option currently clears that bar.
37% federal bracket CA 13.3% state tax NIIT applies TEY: 8.49% $500k investment In-state muni wins
2 Retired Couple — Naples, Florida (No State Income Tax)
📍 Profile: Retired couple, MFJ, $280,000 combined income from pensions and RMDs. No Florida state income tax. $400,000 to invest. Evaluating bonds for steady retirement income in a taxable account.
Federal Rate
24%
FL State Rate
0%
NIIT
3.8%
Combined Drag
27.8%
Verdict: Treasury Bond Is Competitive — Run the Full Math. With no state income tax, Florida retirees lose the biggest muni advantage. At only 27.8% combined drag, a 4.55% Treasury delivers an after-tax yield of 3.29% — nearly matching a 3.85% in-state (national) muni at 3.85%. The corporate bond at 5.80% yields 4.19% after taxes, making it the actual winner here inside a tax-sheltered account.
Bond TypeStated YieldAfter-Tax YieldAnnual Income ($400k)
National Muni Fund3.85%3.85%$15,400
Out-of-State Muni4.20%4.20%$16,800
US Treasury (10-yr)4.55%3.29%$13,160
Corporate Bond (IG)5.80%4.19%*$16,760*
TEY of National Muni = 3.85% ÷ (1 − 0.278) = 5.33%
*Corporate best held inside a Roth IRA or 401(k) to avoid NIIT. Out-of-state munis are surprisingly strong in FL because there is zero state penalty.
24% federal bracket FL 0% state tax NIIT near threshold TEY: 5.33% $400k investment No-tax state dynamics
3 Small Business Owner — New York City, New York
📍 Profile: LLC owner, MFJ, $610,000 net business income after deductions. Subject to federal 37%, New York State 10.9%, and New York City 3.876% local tax. Investing $750,000 in fixed income. NIIT applies.
Federal Rate
37%
NY State Rate
10.9%
NYC Local
3.876%
Combined Drag
55.58%
Verdict: NYC “Triple Tax-Exempt” Muni Is the Clear Winner. NYC-issued GO bonds are exempt from federal, NY state, and NYC local income tax — the rarest tax advantage in US bond markets. At 55.58% total drag, even a 3.75% NYC muni has a TEY of 8.44%. No investment-grade taxable bond comes close in a taxable account.
Bond TypeStated YieldAfter-Tax YieldAnnual Income ($750k)
NYC Triple-Exempt Muni3.75%3.75%$28,125
NY State GO Muni3.90%3.68%$27,600
US Treasury (10-yr)4.55%2.34%$17,550
Corporate Bond (IG)5.80%2.58%$19,350
TEY of NYC Muni = 3.75% ÷ (1 − 0.5558) = 8.44%
NY State munis lose the local tax exemption, reducing their after-tax yield slightly vs. NYC-specific issues. Always check whether a bond is city-issued or state-issued before buying.
37% federal bracket NYC triple-exempt 3.876% local tax TEY: 8.44% $750k investment Strongest muni case
4 Mid-Career Physician — Austin, Texas (No State Tax, High Federal Bracket)
📍 Profile: Employed hospitalist physician, single filer, $310,000 W-2 income. Texas has zero state income tax. $300,000 to invest in taxable brokerage. NIIT applies. Evaluating whether munis still make sense without a state-tax benefit.
Federal Rate
35%
TX State Rate
0%
NIIT
3.8%
Combined Drag
38.8%
Verdict: Munis Are Competitive But Not Dominant. Without a state-tax boost, a 3.85% national muni has a TEY of only 6.29% — above the 5.8% corporate yield, but by a narrower margin than high-state-tax peers. A 4.20% out-of-state muni (with no state penalty in TX) pushes the TEY to 6.86%, making it the stronger muni choice here. Corporates held inside a 401(k) still deserve consideration.
Bond TypeStated YieldAfter-Tax YieldAnnual Income ($300k)
National Muni Fund3.85%3.85%$11,550
Out-of-State Muni4.20%4.20%$12,600
US Treasury (10-yr)4.55%2.78%$8,340
Corporate Bond (IG)5.80%3.55%$10,650
TEY of Out-of-State Muni = 4.20% ÷ (1 − 0.388) = 6.86%
In TX, there is no penalty for buying out-of-state munis vs. in-state ones — making national diversification in muni portfolios completely free of state-tax cost.
35% federal bracket TX 0% state tax NIIT applies TEY: 6.86% $300k investment Out-of-state muni wins
5 Early-Career Professional — Chicago, Illinois (Moderate Bracket)
📍 Profile: Marketing director, single filer, $95,000 salary. Illinois flat state income tax of 4.95%. $50,000 to invest. Below NIIT threshold. Wondering whether munis make sense at a lower income level at all.
Federal Rate
22%
IL State Rate
4.95%
NIIT
N/A
Combined Drag
26.95%
Verdict: Taxable Corporate Bond Wins — Munis Are Overpriced for This Bracket. At only 26.95% combined drag, the TEY of a 3.85% IL muni is just 5.27% — below the 5.80% corporate yield’s after-tax result of 4.24%. For investors in the 22% bracket, the muni market does not price in enough yield premium to overcome its lower coupon. A diversified bond ETF or CD ladder likely delivers better net returns at this income level.
Bond TypeStated YieldAfter-Tax YieldAnnual Income ($50k)
IL In-State Muni3.85%3.85%$1,925
Out-of-State Muni4.20%3.07%$1,535
US Treasury (10-yr)4.55%3.32%$1,660
Corporate Bond (IG)5.80%4.24%$2,120
TEY of IL Muni = 3.85% ÷ (1 − 0.2695) = 5.27%
The corporate bond’s 5.80% stated yield still clears the 5.27% TEY bar — meaning the taxable bond wins after taxes. Corporates should be held inside a Roth IRA or 401(k) to fully shelter gains.
22% federal bracket IL 4.95% flat tax No NIIT TEY: 5.27% $50k investment Corporate bond wins
All 5 Scenarios at a Glance
Investor Profile State Fed Rate State Rate NIIT Total Drag Muni TEY Winner
Tech Employee CA 37% 13.3% Yes 54.1% 8.49% In-State Muni
Retired Couple FL 24% 0% Near 27.8% 5.33% Corporate (IRA)
Business Owner NYC 37% 10.9% + 3.876% Yes 55.58% 8.44% NYC Triple-Exempt
Physician TX 35% 0% Yes 38.8% 6.86% Out-of-State Muni
Young Professional IL 22% 4.95% No 26.95% 5.27% Corporate Wins
⚠️ All yields based on representative market rates as of early 2025. Actual bond yields change daily. These examples are for educational illustration only and do not constitute investment advice. Always consult a qualified tax advisor or financial planner before making bond investment decisions.

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Fiduciary Directives: Optimizing Your Fixed Income Allocation

Shortcuts and real-world tricks to avoid the most common TEY mistakes US investors make.

1 Always Stack All Tax Layers — Federal, State, Local, and NIIT

Most quick-and-dirty TEY calculators quietly assume you pay federal tax only. In the real US tax system, high-income investors often face federal, state, local, and Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) — and each additional layer dramatically increases the muni advantage.

Pro move: Use your full combined tax drag when computing TEY. If you are in a 37% federal bracket, 10% state, 3% local, and 3.8% NIIT, your true drag is over 50%, not 37%. A 3.8% muni suddenly has a TEY well above 7.5%, which most investment-grade taxable bonds cannot match in a taxable account.
Don’t forget to flip the NIIT toggle in the calculator when your modified AGI crosses the $200k (single) or $250k (MFJ) threshold — that single 3.8% layer often determines whether munis handily beat corporates or merely tie them.
Federal + state + local NIIT realism True tax drag
2 Match Maturity and Credit Quality Before Comparing Yields

A 3-year AA muni should not be compared to a 15-year BBB corporate. Duration and credit risk drive yield as much as taxes do. To get a meaningful TEY, you need to match bonds that live in the same part of the risk spectrum.

Pro move: First, line up bonds with similar maturity and rating (e.g., AA 10‑year vs. AA 10‑year). Then plug their yields into this workbench. If you want more yield, adjust both bonds up the risk curve together instead of mixing a safe muni with a high-yield corporate.
If a BBB corporate is out-yielding an AA muni by 250–300 basis points, remember that part of that spread is credit risk, not free income. TEY only levels the tax playing field; it does not cancel default risk.
Match duration Match ratings Risk-adjusted TEY
3 Use Munis in Taxable Accounts, Taxables in IRAs and 401(k)s

One of the most powerful yet simple allocation tricks is to put each bond type in the account where its tax treatment shines. Many investors accidentally reverse this — stuffing munis into IRAs and corporates into taxable accounts — and lose thousands of dollars in avoidable taxes over a decade.

Pro move: Use this calculator to identify which bond wins after tax in a taxable account. Then, reserve your taxable brokerage for munis and Treasuries, and reserve your IRAs/401(k)s for higher-yielding corporates. You are effectively “asset-locating” yield where the IRS takes the smallest bite.
A high‑yield corporate at 7% inside a Roth IRA can deliver a better net result than a 4% muni in taxable for many mid-bracket investors. TEY tells you which bond wins in taxable — asset location tells you where each winner should live.
Asset location Tax-sheltered yield Brokerage vs IRA
4 Watch the Muni-to-Treasury Ratio for Timing Opportunities

Professional bond desks constantly watch the muni-to-Treasury ratio — the muni yield divided by the yield of a same‑maturity Treasury. This ratio tells you when munis are cheap or expensive relative to a risk‑free benchmark, before tax.

Pro move: As a rough rule of thumb, ratios below ~80% suggest munis are rich and Treasuries may be the better deal, while ratios above 90–100% flag unusually attractive muni pricing. During stress periods, muni yields sometimes spike above Treasuries even before tax benefits — a prime moment for high‑bracket investors to lock in outsized TEYs.
When you see the 10‑year muni/Treasury ratio spike, plug the updated yields into this calculator. You may find TEYs temporarily jump a full percentage point or more, especially in high-tax states, offering a rare entry point.
Muni/Treasury ratio Entry timing Market dislocations
5 Look Beyond TEY: Cash-Flow Needs, AMT Flags, and Social Security

Tax-equivalent yield is powerful, but it is still only one lens. Real-world planning means layering TEY on top of your cash‑flow needs, AMT exposure, and how extra income affects other parts of your tax return — especially Social Security taxation for retirees.

Pro move: Use TEY to narrow the field to 2–3 best candidates. Then ask: Does this bond’s cash flow line up with my spending? Does any private activity exposure push me into AMT? Does more taxable interest cause up to 85% of my Social Security to be taxed? The “best” TEY on paper is not always the best fit for your household plan.
Before moving a large portfolio into munis, run this calculator, then speak with a CPA or fiduciary advisor. The goal isn’t just the highest TEY — it’s the highest after‑tax, after‑interaction income that still fits your risk tolerance and retirement roadmap.
Cash-flow needs AMT caution Social Security impact

Fiduciary FAQ: Muni Funds, Capital Gains & Bond Laddering

Straight answers to the questions bond investors ask most about tax-equivalent yield.

What exactly is tax-equivalent yield, and why does it matter?
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Tax-equivalent yield (TEY) is the pre-tax yield a taxable bond would need to pay in order to give you the same after-tax return as a tax-exempt municipal bond. It matters because raw yield numbers are misleading across bond types — a 3.85% muni and a 5.80% corporate are not directly comparable until you strip out the taxes each one triggers. The formula is simple: TEY = Muni Yield ÷ (1 − Your Marginal Tax Rate). Once you calculate TEY, you can compare apples to apples.

Should I use my effective tax rate or my marginal tax rate for TEY?
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Always use your marginal tax rate — the rate that applies to the next dollar of income you earn. Because bond interest is ordinary income that sits on top of all your other income, every dollar of new interest is taxed at your highest bracket. Using your effective (average) rate would significantly understate the actual tax cost and make taxable bonds look more competitive than they truly are for your situation.

What is NIIT and when does it apply to bond income?
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The Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) is a 3.8% federal surtax on investment income — including interest from taxable bonds — for taxpayers whose modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly). It does not apply to municipal bond interest. This means high earners need to add 3.8% to their effective federal drag on any taxable bond, making the TEY advantage of munis meaningfully larger than the headline federal bracket alone would suggest.

What is AMT risk for municipal bonds?
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Certain private activity bonds (PABs) — munis issued to fund privately-used projects like airports, sports stadiums, or certain hospital expansions — generate interest that is subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). If you hold these bonds and are subject to the AMT, part of your muni interest becomes taxable, reducing the expected tax advantage. General obligation (GO) bonds issued directly by states or municipalities for public purposes carry no AMT risk and are fully tax-exempt for most investors.

At what tax bracket do municipal bonds start to make sense?
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The general rule of thumb is that munis become competitive at the 24% federal bracket and above, and become significantly advantageous at 32% and higher. Below 24%, taxable bonds typically win on an after-tax basis because the muni yield discount isn’t worth the trade-off. However, the state income tax layer changes this calculation considerably — an investor in a 9–13% state tax bracket may find munis competitive even at the 22% federal bracket once combined tax drag is fully stacked.

Why are US Treasuries sometimes better than munis in high-tax states?
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Treasury interest is exempt from all state and local income taxes by federal law, but is still subject to federal income tax. In states with high income tax rates — California (up to 13.3%), New York (up to 10.9%), New Jersey (up to 10.75%) — the state-tax exemption on Treasuries is extremely valuable. When Treasury yields are elevated relative to muni yields, an investor in a high-tax state might find that the Treasury’s state exemption more than compensates for its lack of federal exemption. This calculator captures that comparison precisely.

Should I hold municipal bonds inside my IRA or 401(k)?
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Generally no — this is one of the most common bond investing mistakes. Tax-deferred accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s already shelter all income from taxes until withdrawal. Placing tax-exempt munis inside these accounts wastes their tax advantage entirely, because you already aren’t paying annual taxes on the income. The smart structure is: hold munis in taxable brokerage accounts where their tax exemption provides real after-tax value, and reserve your tax-deferred space for higher-yielding taxable bonds like corporates and Treasuries.

How is the annual after-tax income figure in this calculator calculated?
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The calculator multiplies your investment amount by the after-tax yield for each bond type. For example, if your in-state muni after-tax yield is 3.61% and you invest $250,000, the estimated annual after-tax income is $9,025. This number lets you compare actual dollars across bond types rather than abstract percentages — which is how most investors actually make portfolio decisions. Note that this is an estimate based on current yields, not a guarantee of future income.

What is the muni-to-Treasury ratio and how do I use it?
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The muni-to-Treasury ratio compares the yield of a municipal bond to the yield of a Treasury of the same maturity, expressed as a percentage. A ratio of 80% means the muni yields 80 cents for every dollar the Treasury yields. Historically, ratios below 80% suggest munis are expensive relative to Treasuries, while ratios above 90–100% indicate munis are cheap and offer strong after-tax value even for moderate-bracket investors. Watching this ratio helps you time muni purchases and recognize when the tax advantage is especially pronounced.

Does state of residence really change which bond wins after taxes?
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Yes — dramatically. Consider two investors both in the 35% federal bracket. One lives in Texas (0% state income tax) and the other in California (13.3% top rate). The Texan’s combined tax drag on a corporate bond is roughly 38.8% (35% + 3.8% NIIT). The Californian’s drag is 52.1% (35% + 13.3% + 3.8%). That difference makes a 4% in-state California muni worth a taxable-equivalent of roughly 8.35% for the California investor — while the same bond is worth only 6.54% to the Texan. State tax is the single biggest variable most online TEY calculators ignore.

What is “de minimis” tax treatment and does it affect muni bonds?
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The de minimis rule is a rarely discussed trap for muni bond buyers on the secondary market. If you buy a muni bond at a discount that is more than 0.25% per year remaining to maturity, the entire discount (the difference between your purchase price and par) is taxed as ordinary income at maturity — not as tax-free income or even a capital gain. For example, buying a 10-year muni at more than 2.5 points below par triggers ordinary income treatment. This can quietly eliminate most of the expected tax benefit if you’re purchasing discounted munis in the secondary market.

How does the local income tax input affect my results?
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Many investors overlook local income taxes entirely, but they can be meaningful — New York City levies up to 3.876%, Philadelphia 3.75%, and Detroit 2.4%. Local taxes apply to most taxable bond income and often to out-of-state munis. In-state munis issued by your own city or county are sometimes exempt from local tax too, though this varies. Adding your local rate into this calculator can shift the after-tax yield comparison by a full percentage point in high-local-tax cities, making in-state munis even more attractive than federal-only TEY calculations show.

Can I use this calculator for muni bond funds (ETFs or mutual funds)?
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Yes, with one important caveat. Most national muni bond funds — like iShares MUB or Vanguard’s VWITX — hold bonds from multiple states. The fund’s 30-day SEC yield is generally federal tax-exempt, but the state-tax treatment depends on the percentage of the fund’s income derived from your home state’s bonds. If less than a threshold percentage (often 50%) comes from your state, some states won’t grant the state-tax exemption on any of the income. Check the fund’s annual tax letter for the state-by-state breakdown, or use a single-state muni fund if state-tax exemption is a priority.

What happens to muni bond prices when interest rates rise?
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Like all fixed-income securities, muni bond prices move inversely to interest rates. When rates rise, existing bond prices fall because new bonds are issued at higher yields, making older lower-coupon bonds less valuable. A bond with a 10-year duration loses roughly 10% of its market value for every 1% rise in yields. This price risk is especially relevant if you might need to sell before maturity. If you’re a buy-and-hold investor, price fluctuations don’t affect your locked-in yield — but if you need liquidity, rising rates can turn a tax-efficient income strategy into an unexpected capital loss.

Are Social Security benefits affected by muni bond interest income?
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This is a critical planning point that many retirees miss. Although muni bond interest is not included in your taxable income, it is included in the IRS’s “combined income” formula used to determine what percentage of your Social Security benefits get taxed. Combined income = adjusted gross income + nontaxable interest + half of Social Security benefits. Earning large amounts of muni income can push retirees over the $25,000 (single) or $32,000 (MFJ) thresholds that cause up to 85% of Social Security benefits to become taxable — creating an indirect tax cost from “tax-free” bonds.

What is bond tax-loss harvesting and can I do it with munis?
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Tax-loss harvesting means selling a bond that has declined in value to realize a capital loss, then buying a similar (but not “substantially identical”) bond to maintain your portfolio exposure. Those losses can offset capital gains or up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year, with excess losses carrying forward indefinitely. Muni bonds can be harvested just like any other bond — sell a California GO bond at a loss and immediately replace it with a different California GO bond of similar maturity to stay invested while banking the tax deduction. Just be careful to avoid the wash-sale rule, which disallows losses if you repurchase the same or substantially identical security within 30 days.

How do I interpret a negative TEY gap versus the corporate yield?
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When the TEY gap vs. corporate yield is negative, it means the muni’s tax-equivalent yield is lower than the taxable corporate bond’s headline yield. In plain terms, the corporate bond still wins after taxes at your current tax rate. This typically happens when your combined tax rate is below 30%, when the corporate yield spread over munis is unusually wide, or when you’re comparing lower-quality munis to investment-grade corporates. A positive TEY gap means the muni clears the taxable benchmark — the higher the positive number, the stronger the case for holding munis in a taxable account.

What is the difference between a GO bond and a revenue bond for tax purposes?
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Both general obligation (GO) bonds and revenue bonds are generally federal-tax-exempt, but they differ in credit backing and AMT risk. GO bonds are backed by the full taxing power of the issuing government — they’re considered safer and almost never trigger AMT. Revenue bonds are repaid solely from a specific income stream (like toll revenue, hospital fees, or utility payments). Some revenue bonds issued for private-use purposes qualify as private activity bonds, which means their interest may be an AMT preference item. Before buying any revenue bond, check the official statement to confirm whether it is AMT-exempt or AMT-subject.

How does inflation affect the real return on municipal bonds?
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Inflation erodes the purchasing power of any fixed coupon payment. A muni paying 3.85% when inflation runs at 3.5% delivers a real after-tax return of just 0.35% — nearly nothing. Unlike TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities), standard munis offer no inflation adjustment. This is why muni bonds are generally best suited as a tax-efficient income tool for investors already in high brackets, rather than a total-return strategy. When real yields are deeply negative — meaning inflation exceeds the muni yield — even tax-free income loses ground to the cost of living over time.

What does “callable” mean and how does it affect muni yield calculations?
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A callable bond gives the issuer the right to redeem (pay off) the bond before its stated maturity date, usually after a lockout period of 5–10 years. Most muni bonds are callable. This matters for yield calculations because if rates fall, issuers will call in their high-coupon bonds and reissue at lower rates — which means you get your principal back early and must reinvest at a lower yield. Always compare yield to call (YTC) alongside yield to maturity (YTM) for callable munis. When a bond trades at a premium (above par), the yield to call is typically the more conservative and realistic figure to use.

How do I compare a muni bond fund’s 30-day SEC yield to an individual bond’s yield?
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A fund’s 30-day SEC yield is a standardized, annualized figure that reflects net investment income earned over the past 30 days — it’s the most apples-to-apples number to use for fund comparisons, and it’s the right input for this calculator. It already reflects the fund’s expense ratio drag. For individual bonds, use the yield to maturity (YTM) rather than the coupon rate, especially if the bond trades at a premium or discount to par. One additional difference: fund yields fluctuate daily as the portfolio is rebalanced, while a held-to-maturity individual bond locks in your yield at purchase.

What credit rating should I look for in municipal bonds?
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Most individual investors should focus on investment-grade munis rated Baa/BBB or higher by Moody’s, S&P, or Fitch. Bonds rated Aaa/AAA to Aa/AA carry the lowest default risk and are appropriate for capital-preservation portfolios. Higher-yielding high-yield or “junk” munis (rated Ba/BB and below) offer larger spreads but carry meaningful default risk — the higher TEY you calculate may never materialize if the issuer defaults. Historically, muni default rates are far lower than corporate bonds at the same rating, but they do occur, particularly in revenue bonds tied to struggling projects or fiscally stressed municipalities.

How does the step-up in basis rule interact with muni bonds at death?
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When an investor dies holding bonds, their heirs typically receive a step-up in cost basis to the fair market value at the date of death. For taxable bonds like Treasuries or corporates, this eliminates embedded capital gains entirely — so any price appreciation above the original purchase price escapes capital gains tax. For muni bonds, the step-up also applies to any market price appreciation, though the interest income itself was already tax-free. This makes munis held in taxable estates somewhat less advantaged by the step-up than highly appreciated corporate bonds, since much of the muni’s return was already tax-free income rather than unrealized gain.

Is there a breakeven yield spread I can use as a quick rule of thumb?
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Yes. A fast mental shortcut: divide the muni yield by (1 − your federal rate alone) to get a rough TEY, then compare to the taxable yield. If the taxable bond yields less than that TEY, the muni wins; if it yields more, run the full calculation including state, local, and NIIT because the answer may still flip. A more refined rule for 35%+ bracket investors in moderate-tax states: any muni trading within 75–80% of a comparable Treasury yield is likely competitive after state taxes. Below 70%, the muni is probably priced rich and you’d be better served by a Treasury or high-grade corporate in a tax-sheltered account.

How do I handle muni bond interest on my federal tax return?
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Municipal bond interest is reported to you on Form 1099-INT, Box 8 (tax-exempt interest) and Box 13 (if any portion is AMT-related private activity bond interest). You report the total tax-exempt amount on Form 1040, Line 2a — it shows up on your return but is not added to taxable income. However, as noted earlier, it is used in the Social Security combined income formula. If you have PAB interest in Box 13, you must also enter that amount on Form 6251 (AMT) as a preference item. Keep all 1099s from brokerage accounts and fund companies to ensure nothing is missed at filing time.

What is “original issue discount” (OID) on muni bonds and is it taxable?
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Original issue discount (OID) occurs when a bond is issued below its face value — for example, a zero-coupon muni issued at $600 that matures at $1,000. The $400 discount is the OID. For tax-exempt muni bonds, OID that accretes (builds up) over the life of the bond is generally also federal tax-exempt, treated the same as regular muni interest. This is one reason zero-coupon munis are popular in tax-deferred estate strategies — no cash interest is distributed, the full discount accretes tax-free, and the investor receives par at maturity. State tax treatment of muni OID varies, so confirm your state’s rules for out-of-state zero-coupon munis.

How often should I re-run this comparison as market conditions change?
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Bond yields shift daily, and the relative attractiveness of munis vs. Treasuries vs. corporates can change significantly over a single quarter. A good practice is to re-run your TEY comparison at least quarterly, or any time one of the following occurs: the Federal Reserve changes the federal funds rate, your marginal tax bracket changes (job change, business income swing, Roth conversion), you move to a different state, or the muni-to-Treasury ratio crosses a major threshold (like 90% or above). Downloading a PDF from this calculator and saving it with a date stamp makes it easy to compare your current scenario against prior calculations.

What is the difference between taxable munis and tax-exempt munis?
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Not all municipal bonds are tax-exempt. Taxable municipal bonds are issued by state and local governments but do not qualify for federal tax exemption — typically because they fund projects that don’t meet IRS criteria for tax-exempt status, such as pension obligation bonds, economic development bonds, or refunding bonds issued after certain IRS deadlines. Taxable munis generally offer higher yields than tax-exempt munis to compensate investors for the tax liability, and they’re often held in tax-deferred accounts. This calculator focuses on traditional tax-exempt munis — if you’re evaluating taxable munis, treat them the same as corporate bonds in the taxable yield input field.


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Institutional Glossary: Deconstructing Fixed Income Taxation

Every term used in this calculator, defined in plain English.

TEYTax-Equivalent Yield
The pre-tax yield a taxable bond must pay to match a tax-exempt bond’s after-tax return. Calculated as: Muni Yield ÷ (1 − Marginal Rate).
NIITNet Investment Income Tax
A 3.8% federal surtax on investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains) for high earners above $200k (single) or $250k (MFJ) in modified AGI.
AMTAlternative Minimum Tax
A parallel tax system that limits certain deductions and exemptions. Some municipal bond interest (from private activity bonds) is counted as income under AMT rules.
YTMYield to Maturity
The total annualized return on a bond if held until maturity, factoring in current price, coupon payments, and time to maturity. The most accurate single yield number to compare bonds.
GOGeneral Obligation Bond
A municipal bond backed by the full taxing authority of the issuing government. Considered very low credit risk and typically carries no AMT exposure.
PABPrivate Activity Bond
A municipal bond whose proceeds fund projects with significant private benefit (airports, hospitals, housing). The interest may be subject to AMT for certain investors.
MAGIModified Adjusted Gross Income
Your adjusted gross income with certain deductions added back. Used to determine eligibility for NIIT, IRA contributions, and many other tax thresholds.
DTDTax Drag
The combined percentage of investment return lost to all applicable taxes — federal, state, local, and NIIT. The higher your tax drag, the more valuable tax-exempt bond income becomes.


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SEC/FINRA Compliance, E-E-A-T Standards & Legal Disclaimers

How this calculator is built, what it can and cannot do, and where to verify the tax rules it relies on.

1 Educational Tool — Not Tax, Legal, or Investment Advice

This Municipal Bond Tax-Equivalent Yield & After-Tax Comparison Workbench is designed as a general educational tool. It helps you visualize how federal, state, local, and Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) can change the relative attractiveness of municipal bonds, Treasuries, and taxable corporate bonds. It does not provide personalized tax, legal, or investment advice, and it should not be used as the sole basis for buying or selling any security.

No client relationship is created. Using this calculator or any content on USFinanceCalculators.com does not create a CPA, attorney–client, or investment advisory relationship. Always consult a qualified tax professional, financial planner, or investment adviser who understands your full situation before acting on any result this tool produces.
2 Assumptions, Simplifications, and Data Limitations

To keep the calculator usable, several simplifying assumptions are made. It focuses on typical U.S. federal income tax rules for interest income and high-level state/local tax inputs. It does not model every nuance of the Internal Revenue Code, state tax codes, or future law changes. Real-world tax outcomes depend on factors this tool cannot see, including filing status, deductions, credits, AMT exposure, and the interaction with other income sources like Social Security and capital gains.

Yields and example numbers in this tool and its explanations are illustrative only. They are based on representative market conditions and standard IRS rules in effect for the current tax year but are not live quotes or guarantees of any specific bond’s performance. Tax laws, brackets, NIIT thresholds, and state rules can and do change.
Illustrative yields only Current-year IRS rules Subject to change
3 Independent Sources & Official References

The general tax treatment described here (for example, that most municipal bond interest is exempt from federal income tax but may be taxable at the state or local level) is based on guidance from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and U.S. securities regulators. The IRS explains when interest is taxable or tax-exempt in Topic No. 403, “Interest Received,” and related publications such as Publication 550 on investment income and expenses. SEC and MSRB investor education resources also outline how municipal bonds work, what makes interest tax-exempt, and what disclosure documents investors should review.

For a deeper dive into official rules and investor protections, you can review:

IRS Topic No. 403 — Interest Received (taxable vs. tax-exempt interest, including municipal bonds) [Official IRS]
Investor Bulletin: The Municipal Securities Market on Investor.gov [SEC Office of Investor Education]
Municipal Bond Basics (MSRB Education Center) [Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board]
IRS Topic 403 (Interest) SEC Investor.gov MSRB EMMA & Education
4 Editorial Policy — How We Write and Update Content

All explanatory text surrounding this calculator is written in plain U.S. English with a focus on clarity, accuracy, and investor protection. The goal is to translate complex tax and bond concepts into practical, everyday language without dumbing down the math. Before publishing, examples and narratives are checked against current IRS rules and widely accepted industry practices, and they are periodically reviewed when tax law or market conventions change.

No commissions or product sales. USFinanceCalculators.com does not use this tool to recommend specific bond funds, brokers, or dealers. We do not accept commissions for steering users into particular securities. Revenue, where present, comes from advertising or other clearly labeled sources — not from selling individual bonds or “preferred” products.
We aim to present trade-offs honestly: when taxable corporates or Treasuries win after taxes for certain investors, this tool and its examples say so explicitly. “Tax‑free” is never treated as a magic word; the emphasis is on after‑tax income and risk, not on selling municipal bonds.
5 Responsibility for Your Own Decisions

By using this calculator, you acknowledge that you are responsible for your own investment and tax decisions. Results generated here are estimates based on inputs you provide, and they may not reflect your actual tax liability or future returns. Neither USFinanceCalculators.com nor its authors are liable for losses or missed opportunities that may arise from relying on these calculations or any accompanying commentary.

Use this as a starting point, not an endpoint. Treat the outputs as conversation starters to bring to your CPA, enrolled agent, or fiduciary financial adviser. They can review your full tax return, state residency, AMT exposure, and retirement goals before confirming whether any muni, Treasury, or corporate strategy is appropriate for you.
User responsibility Estimates, not guarantees Consult a professional