Iowa (IA) · State tax: 3.8% · Property tax: 1.50% · Median home (ZHVI): $215,000
College costs in Iowa vary significantly between in-state public, out-of-state, and private institutions. The cost of living index of 88.769 affects room, board, and living expenses. Iowa's 3.8% state income tax may offer education-related deductions or credits.
Median income and COL frame affordability for the scholarship calculator in Iowa. Every row cites a primary public dataset. Numbers reflect the most recent vintage available; refresh cadence is documented in the methodology.
The Scholarship Calculator runs a well-known formula (principal × rate, discounted cash flow, amortization, or equivalent) client-side and layers on Iowa's tax and cost-of-living inputs. State-specific numbers — brackets, exemptions, and averages — come from public federal / state datasets cited in the sources section.
Same formula, different inputs. Each city name links to its own pSEO page where the calculator is pre-filled with local medians.
| City | Median home | Median rent | HUD FMR 2BR | Median income |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Des Moines, IA | $290,940 | $1,268/mo | $1,175/mo | $84,209 |
| Cedar Rapids, IA | $236,652 | $1,231/mo | $1,125/mo | $77,084 |
| Davenport, IA | $165,000 | $850/mo | $775/mo | $71,925 |
Sources: Zillow ZHVI + ZORI[1], HUD FMR[2], Census ACS[3], Freddie Mac PMMS[4].
Moving one state over changes the scholarship numbers. Compare median home value (Zillow ZHVI), top marginal income tax rate, effective property tax rate, and the BEA all-items Regional Price Parity across Iowa and its border states.
| State | Median home | Top inc tax | Prop tax rate | RPP (US=100) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iowa (this page) | $215,000 | 3.80% | 1.50% | 88.8 |
| Illinois side-by-side | $275,000 | 4.95% | 2.23% | 98.8 |
| see Minnesota | $335,000 | 9.85% | 1.12% | 98.3 |
| Missouri | $245,000 | 4.70% | 0.97% | 91.1 |
| Nebraska equivalent | $265,000 | 5.20% | 1.73% | 90.3 |
Sources: Zillow ZHVI[1], state Departments of Revenue / Tax Foundation[2], Tax Foundation property taxes[3], BEA Regional Price Parities[4].
These calculators share inputs with the scholarship formula, so pair them to pressure-test your answer from multiple angles.
| Metric | Iowa | National Avg | IL | MN | MO |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $215,000 | $420,000 | $315,000 | $425,000 | $295,000 |
| Property Tax Rate | 1.5% | 1.07% | 0.85% | 1.12% | 0.97% |
| State Income Tax | 3.8% | 4.6%* | 4.95% | 9.85% | 5.3% |
| Avg Insurance Cost | $1,670/yr | $1,544/yr | $1,440/yr | $1,320/yr | $1,440/yr |
| Cost of Living Index | 88.769 | 100 | 104 | 105 | 90 |
| Household Income — p25 | $45,807 | $41,401 | $41,110 | $49,800 | $40,004 |
| Household Income — p50 (median) | $85,000 | $83,592 | $84,105 | $92,473 | $78,941 |
| Household Income — p75 | $135,696 | $153,000 | $158,064 | $158,112 | $137,432 |
*Average of states that levy an income tax. 2026 estimates. Iowa recently dropped its top income tax rate from 8.53% to a flat 3.9% and exempted all retirement income.[3] Income percentiles from DQYDJ/Census CPS 2024[4].
Track take-home pay: 3.8% state income tax plus federal + FICA reduces gross wages by roughly 29% in Iowa.
Anchor savings goals to the Iowa cost of living index (88.769). A national 20% savings rate needs adjustment up or down depending on local expense floors.
Use tax-advantaged accounts first: 401(k), HSA, IRA. Contributions to pre-tax accounts save 3.8% at the state level plus your federal marginal rate.
Every number on this page reads from the same CalcFi data repository used by the Live Data pages below — the figures stay consistent.
Home Prices by State
Zillow ZHVI across all 50 states
Property Tax by State
Effective rate × ZHVI = annual bill
Household Income by State
FRED real median + percentile bands
Cost of Living by State
BEA RPP all-items + housing
No-Income-Tax States
Full list + trade-offs
Current Interest Rates
Treasury curve + PMMS + FDIC
CalcFi pSEO pages combine three inputs: (1) the calculator formula itself, which runs client-side so no inputs leave your browser; (2) state-level financial constants from primary public datasets; and (3) national benchmarks for comparison. The Iowa page uses the property tax rate (1.5%), median home price ($215,000), and 3.8% state income tax from the sources listed below.
Refresh cadence:state tax brackets and minimum wage rates are reviewed annually after each state's legislative session. Property tax, median home price, insurance, and cost-of-living figures are reviewed annually against the primary sources. Income percentiles are refreshed when the Census CPS/IPUMS releases update (typically September). Page-level dateModified matches the last editorial review date, shown above.
Known limits: statewide averages mask large intra-state variance — county-level property tax and metro-level home prices differ significantly from the figures shown. For the most precise calculations, cross-check the output against your actual county assessor and the latest federal/state tax tables at filing time.
Use Scholarship Calculator for any city in Iowa.
Every number on this page cites a primary public dataset. Last reviewed (auto-bumped by the next ISR refresh after an ETL run).
CalcFi does not sell data. If you spot an error, email hello@calcfi.app with the URL and the correct figure.
Estimate merit and need-based scholarship amounts with Pell Grant eligibility and gap analysis.
Auto-updated · Verified daily against IRS, Fed & Treasury sources
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Parents of a 5-year-old want to fully fund 4 years at Ohio State University (current cost ~$31,000/year in-state including room/board). They're opening a 529 plan today.
Takeaway: Ohio's 529 (CollegeAdvantage) provides a state tax deduction up to $4,000/yr per beneficiary — worth ~$190/yr at Ohio's 4.75% rate. If the child gets a scholarship, up to $10,000 can be rolled to a Roth IRA penalty-free under 2024 SECURE Act rules.
Using general 2-3% inflation to project future tuition underestimates costs. Published tuition at 4-year public universities has increased at roughly 4-5% annually for 20 years. Private schools run 3-4%. A $30,000/year school today costs ~$50,000/year in 13 years at 4% education inflation.
All 529 plans offer age-based portfolios that shift toward bonds as college approaches. Expense ratios vary from 0.05% (Utah's my529) to 0.9%+ in some state plans. You can use any state's 529 regardless of where your child attends college — your own state's plan is only worth it if it offers a state tax deduction.
Parent-owned 529 assets count as 5.64% toward Expected Family Contribution (EFC) in FAFSA. Student-owned assets count as 20%. High 529 balances reduce need-based aid dollar-for-dollar above your EFC threshold. For families close to aid cutoffs, this interaction matters significantly.
Tuition gets the attention, but room and board at a typical residential university adds $12,000-$18,000/year. Total cost of attendance including books and personal expenses runs $32,000-$80,000/year depending on institution type. Make sure your projection uses total COA, not tuition alone.
Based on your inputs
$34,436 over 4 years
| Merit-Based Estimate | $5,500 |
|---|---|
| Need-Based Estimate | $2,000 |
| Pell Grant | $1,109 |
| Total Annual Aid | $8,609 |
| 4-Year Total Aid | $34,436 |
| Estimated Annual Gap | $14,961 |
| 4-Year Gap | $59,844 |
| Monthly Loan Payment (if gap financed) | $649/mo |
Analyze 3+ calcs to unlock your Financial Picture dashboard (cross-analysis of all your numbers).
Scholarships represent the most desirable form of college funding — free money that never needs to be repaid. Over $46 billion in scholarships and grants are awarded to American college students annually, from sources ranging from the federal government and colleges themselves to private foundations, corporations, and community organizations.
Despite this massive pool of available funding, billions of dollars in scholarships go unclaimed each year. The reason is not a shortage of eligible students but a shortage of applicants. Many scholarships receive only 10-50 applications, making the odds far better than students assume. The key to maximizing scholarship funding is a systematic, broad-based application strategy that matches your specific strengths to available awards.
Scholarships fall into several categories, each with different criteria and application processes:
Institutional merit scholarships: Awarded directly by colleges based on academic credentials. These are the largest and most common scholarships, ranging from $2,000/year to full tuition. Most are automatic — you're considered when you apply for admission, based on GPA and test scores. No separate application needed.
Institutional need-based grants: Determined by FAFSA results and the college's own financial aid formula. These can be substantial at wealthy private colleges — Harvard, for example, covers full tuition for families earning under $85,000 and charges nothing for families under $75,000.
External scholarships: Offered by private organizations, foundations, corporations, and community groups. These require separate applications and are the ones most students need to actively seek. Award amounts range from $500 to $50,000+, with most falling in the $1,000-$5,000 range.
Institutional merit scholarships follow predictable patterns based on academic credentials. Understanding these tiers helps you target schools where your profile maximizes aid:
Tier 1 — Automatic awards (GPA 3.0-3.4, SAT 1100-1199):
Award range: $1,000-$3,000/year. Available at most state universities and many private colleges. These keep tuition manageable but don't transform the cost picture. Typically renewable if you maintain a 2.5-3.0 GPA in college.
Tier 2 — Competitive awards (GPA 3.5-3.7, SAT 1200-1349):
Award range: $3,000-$8,000/year. Available at state universities and mid-tier private colleges. At many schools, these represent the"sweet spot" where merit aid meaningfully reduces cost. May require maintaining a 3.0-3.2 college GPA for renewal.
Tier 3 — Presidential/Dean's (GPA 3.8-3.9, SAT 1350-1449):
Award range: $8,000-$15,000/year. These are selective awards often requiring a supplemental application, interview, or essay. Available at state flagship universities and competitive private colleges. May come with honors program enrollment and other perks.
Tier 4 — Full-tuition/full-ride (GPA 3.9+, SAT 1450+):
Award range: $15,000-$30,000+/year (full tuition) or full cost of attendance ($25,000-$60,000+/year). Highly competitive, often requiring interviews, campus visits, and extensive essays. Examples include the University of Alabama's Presidential Scholarship, University of Oklahoma's National Merit packages, and Tulsa University's full-ride programs.
National Merit Scholars (PSAT 1460+):
National Merit Semifinalists and Finalists receive: National Merit Scholarship ($2,500 one-time), corporate-sponsored scholarships ($500-$10,000/year), and college-sponsored scholarships (the most valuable — some schools offer full rides to National Merit Finalists who enroll).
The scholarship search should cast a wide net across multiple categories:
Your college's financial aid office: Start here. Every college has institutional scholarships, departmental awards, and donor-funded scholarships. Many are under-applied because students don't know they exist. Schedule an appointment with your financial aid advisor and ask specifically about department-specific and donor-funded scholarships.
Free scholarship databases:
Fastweb: Over 1.5 million scholarships. Creates a profile and matches you to relevant awards.
Scholarships.com: Similar matching system with a large database.
College Board BigFuture: Curated scholarship search integrated with the SAT/FAFSA ecosystem.
Going Merry: Free platform that allows you to apply to multiple scholarships with a single application.
Scholly: App-based search ($2.99) with a smaller but more curated database.
Local and community sources: These are the most overlooked and often least competitive scholarships. Check with:
Rotary clubs, Lions clubs, Elks lodges, and other civic organizations in your community
Your parent's employer (many companies offer dependent scholarships)
Your own employer (Starbucks, Walmart, Amazon, Chipotle, and many others offer employee scholarships)
Religious organizations and houses of worship
Your state's higher education commission
Professional associations in your intended field (engineering, nursing, education, etc.)
Many scholarships are decided primarily on essays, making strong writing the single most leverageable skill in the scholarship process. A compelling essay can compensate for a GPA or test score that falls short of the top tier.
Winning scholarship essay strategies:
Be specific, not generic."I want to help people" is generic."My grandmother's struggle with diabetes in our rural community without a specialist within 60 miles drove me to pursue rural healthcare medicine" is specific, personal, and memorable.
Show, don't tell. Instead of"I'm a hard worker," describe a specific situation where your effort produced a result:"I worked 20 hours per week at the family restaurant while maintaining a 3.8 GPA, which taught me to manage time ruthlessly and prioritize what matters."
Answer the actual question. Sounds obvious, but many applicants write generic personal statements rather than responding to the specific prompt. Re-read the question for each scholarship and tailor your response accordingly.
Develop 3-4 core essays that can be adapted to multiple prompts. Most scholarship essays fall into categories: personal story/overcoming adversity, career goals, community service/leadership, and why this field/school. Write strong versions of each and customize for specific applications.
Junior year (11th grade):
September-December: Take the PSAT (National Merit qualifying test). Begin researching scholarships.
January-March: Take the SAT/ACT for the first time. Start a scholarship spreadsheet tracking deadlines, requirements, and status.
April-June: Retake SAT/ACT if needed. Begin drafting core essays. Request letters of recommendation from teachers and counselors (give them summer to write thoughtful letters).
Senior year (12th grade):
August-September: Finalize college list. Identify institutional merit scholarships at each target school. Apply to early-deadline scholarships.
October-December: File FAFSA (opens October 1). Submit early-action/early-decision college applications. Major scholarship deadlines (Coca-Cola, Gates, Elks, many corporate programs).
January-March: Regular-decision college applications. Continue scholarship applications. Complete CSS Profile for private colleges requiring it.
April-May: Compare financial aid award letters. Negotiate aid if needed (yes, you can negotiate — politely present competing offers). Accept enrollment deposit by May 1.
First-generation college students: Numerous scholarships target students who are the first in their family to attend college. The Dell Scholars Program ($20,000), QuestBridge (full-ride partnerships with 50+ colleges), and first-gen-specific awards at many universities provide significant funding.
STEM students: Science, technology, engineering, and math fields have abundant scholarship funding from corporations (Google, Microsoft, Intel), professional organizations (IEEE, ACM, SWE), and government programs (NSF, NASA). STEM scholarships average $3,000-$10,000/year and are less competitive per dollar than general scholarships.
Student athletes: NCAA Division I and II schools offer athletic scholarships ranging from partial awards to full rides. Division I revenue sports (football, basketball) offer full scholarships; other sports may offer partial. Division III does not offer athletic scholarships but may provide generous merit aid. Contact coaches directly and create an athletic resume with video highlights.
Underrepresented minorities: Many scholarships target specific racial and ethnic groups underrepresented in higher education. The Gates Millennium Scholars Program, Hispanic Scholarship Fund, UNCF, and APIASF provide significant funding. These scholarships often consider both merit and financial need.
Not all financial aid is created equal. Understanding the hierarchy of aid types and prioritizing free money over borrowed money is the most important concept in college financial planning.
The optimal order for accepting financial aid:
1. Grants (free, need-based): Pell Grants ($7,395 max), state grants, institutional need-based grants. Never needs repayment. Accept all you're offered.
2. Scholarships (free, merit or need-based): Institutional merit awards, external scholarships. Never needs repayment. Actively seek and apply.
3. Work-study (earned, subsidized employment): Federal work-study jobs at the college. You work for the money, but it doesn't increase your loan burden. Earnings have favorable financial aid treatment in future FAFSA calculations.
4. Federal subsidized loans (low-cost borrowing): Interest doesn't accrue while in school. Fixed interest rate set by Congress (currently 5.50%). Income-driven repayment options and potential forgiveness programs available.
5. Federal unsubsidized loans (moderate borrowing): Interest accrues from day one. Same federal protections as subsidized loans. Consider paying interest while in school ($50-$100/month) to avoid capitalization.
6. Parent PLUS loans (expensive borrowing): Higher interest rate (8.05%). Fewer repayment options than student loans. Parents, not students, are responsible.
7. Private student loans (last resort): Variable interest rates (4-14%). No income-driven repayment. No forgiveness programs. Require credit check and often a cosigner.
Pell Grant:
The cornerstone of federal student aid. Available to undergraduate students with demonstrated financial need. Maximum award: $7,395/year for 2025-2026. Eligibility is determined by FAFSA results, primarily based on family income and size.
Approximate Pell Grant by family income (family of four):
Under $30,000: Full Pell ($7,395/year)
$30,000-$45,000: $4,000-$6,500/year
$45,000-$60,000: $1,500-$4,000/year
$60,000-$90,000: $0-$1,500/year (depends on assets, family size, and other factors)
Over $90,000: Generally not eligible, though exceptions exist for larger families or unusual circumstances
Pell Grants can be used at any accredited institution — community colleges, state universities, or private colleges. Students receive up to 12 semesters (6 years) of Pell Grant funding over their lifetime.
Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG):
Additional need-based grant of $100-$4,000/year for students with exceptional financial need (typically Pell Grant recipients). Funding is limited and distributed on a first-come, first-served basis at each institution. Another reason to file FAFSA early.
State grants:
Most states offer need-based and merit-based grants for residents attending in-state colleges. Examples: California's Cal Grant ($5,742-$12,570/year), New York's TAP grant (up to $5,665/year), Texas's TEXAS Grant ($5,000-$10,000/year). Eligibility, amounts, and application processes vary by state. File FAFSA and check your state's higher education website for additional state-specific applications.
Direct Subsidized Loans (best loan option):
Available to undergraduates with demonstrated financial need. The federal government pays interest while you're enrolled at least half-time, during the 6-month grace period after graduation, and during deferment periods. This saves approximately $2,000-$5,000 over the life of the loan compared to unsubsidized loans.
Annual limits: $3,500 (freshman), $4,500 (sophomore), $5,500 (junior/senior). Aggregate limit: $23,000.
Interest rate: 5.50% fixed (2025-2026). No credit check required. No payments while enrolled.
Direct Unsubsidized Loans:
Available to all students regardless of need. Interest accrues from the date of disbursement, even while in school. If you don't pay the interest during school ($25-$50/month per $10,000 borrowed), it capitalizes (adds to the principal balance), increasing your total repayment amount by 10-20%.
Annual limits: $2,000-$7,000 additional (beyond subsidized limits), depending on year and dependency status. Aggregate limit: $31,000 for dependent students, $57,500 for independent.
Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) Plans:
Federal student loans offer income-driven repayment plans that cap monthly payments at 10-20% of discretionary income. After 20-25 years of payments, any remaining balance is forgiven. The SAVE plan (newest IDR option) offers the most favorable terms: 5% of discretionary income for undergraduate loans, with forgiveness after 20 years.
For a borrower earning $45,000 with $30,000 in student loans: standard repayment would be $318/month for 10 years. Under SAVE, payments would be approximately $125/month, with remaining balance forgiven after 20 years.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF):
Borrowers working full-time for qualifying employers (government, nonprofits, education, healthcare) can have remaining federal loan balances forgiven after 120 qualifying monthly payments (10 years) under an IDR plan. This can save $10,000-$100,000+ for borrowers with large loan balances in moderate-income public service careers.
After you apply to colleges and file FAFSA, each school sends a financial aid award letter detailing the aid they're offering. Understanding these letters is critical for comparing the true cost of each school.
A typical award letter includes: Cost of Attendance (COA — the total cost including tuition, room/board, books, personal expenses, and transportation), Expected Family Contribution (EFC — what FAFSA says your family can pay), grants and scholarships (free money), work-study (earned money), and loans (borrowed money).
Critical comparison: Focus on the"net price" — COA minus grants and scholarships only. Do NOT subtract loans or work-study, as those represent money you must repay or earn. A school offering $10,000 in grants and $15,000 in loans is NOT giving you $25,000 in"aid" — it's giving you $10,000 and lending you $15,000.
Negotiating financial aid:
Yes, you can negotiate. If you receive a better offer from a comparable school, contact the financial aid office of your preferred school and share the competing offer. Many schools will match or improve their package. Be polite, factual, and specific. This works best when schools are direct competitors for the same caliber of students.
Also appeal if your financial circumstances have changed since filing FAFSA (job loss, medical expenses, divorce, death). Schools have"professional judgment" authority to adjust your financial aid based on documented special circumstances.
The average student graduates with $28,950 in debt, but this figure is an average — many students graduate with $0 in debt while others accumulate $50,000-$100,000+. Your choices determine where you fall on this spectrum.
High-impact strategies:
1. Choose an affordable school (saves $10,000-$40,000/year)
2. Complete 2 years at community college before transferring (saves $20,000-$80,000)
3. Maximize scholarship applications (potential $2,000-$20,000/year)
4. Work part-time during college ($3,000-$8,000/year)
5. Graduate in 4 years (each extra year costs $20,000-$50,000+)
6. Use 529 savings to replace loans dollar-for-dollar
7. Apply for employer tuition reimbursement if working (many employers offer $3,000-$5,250/year)
Start with your college's financial aid office, then use free databases (Fastweb, Scholarships.com, College Board). Check local organizations (Rotary, Lions, Elks), your parents' employers, professional associations in your field, and state higher education commissions. Apply to 15-25 targeted scholarships.
Most merit scholarships require 3.0+ GPA. Competitive awards need 3.5+. Full-tuition scholarships typically require 3.8+ GPA with strong test scores (SAT 1350+/ACT 30+). Some scholarships consider factors beyond GPA: community service, leadership, essays, and financial need.
Most scholarships cover tuition only. Full-ride scholarships (the most competitive) cover tuition, room, board, and sometimes books and living expenses. Need-based aid packages are more likely to include room and board allowances.
FAFSA determines eligibility for federal aid (Pell Grants, loans, work-study) based on financial need. Scholarships are separate awards from colleges, organizations, or private donors — they may be merit-based, need-based, or both, and require their own applications.
NCAA Division I and II offer athletic scholarships. Requirements: NCAA eligibility (2.3+ GPA, core course requirements), competitive athletic ability, and coach recruitment. D-I revenue sports offer full scholarships; other sports offer partial. D-III has no athletic scholarships but offers merit aid. Contact coaches directly.
Outside scholarships may reduce your financial aid package. Most colleges reduce loan or work-study amounts first before touching grants. Some schools reduce grants dollar for dollar which effectively redirects your scholarship to the school. Ask each college's financial aid office about their outside scholarship policy before applying.
Start applying during junior year of high school for college scholarships. Most deadlines fall between October and March for the following fall semester. Apply to 15 to 25 scholarships for best results. Continue searching throughout college since many scholarships target current undergraduates not just incoming freshmen.
Scholarship money used for tuition and required fees is tax-free. Money used for room, board, travel, or optional equipment is taxable income. If your scholarship exceeds qualified education expenses, report the excess on your tax return. Graduate student stipends for teaching or research are generally fully taxable.
Apply for 20-30 scholarships minimum to maximize your chances. Smaller local scholarships under $2,500 have less competition and higher success rates. Spread applications across merit-based, need-based, and niche category scholarships for the best overall results.
Scholarships used for tuition and required fees at a degree-granting institution are tax-free. Amounts used for room, board, or other non-qualified expenses are taxable income. Report taxable scholarship amounts on your federal tax return.
Total Aid = Merit + Need-Based + Pell Grant + Special Scholarships
Gap = Average college cost ($23,570) - Total annual aid
Loan Payment = 4-year gap financed at 5.5% over 10 years
Merit based on GPA + test scores + extracurriculars. Need-based on household income.
Every formula on this page traces to a federal agency, central bank, or peer-reviewed institution. We cite the rule-makers, not secondhand blogs.
Found an error in a formula or source? Report it →
Result: Over 4 years: $74,000 in aid — reduces loan burden by ~65%
Sallie Mae 'How America Pays for College 2024' shows scholarship-winning students submit 20–30 applications on average. Winning ~25% is typical. Local scholarships (Rotary, Elks, employer-based) have highest win rates due to lower competition.
Result: Full tuition + room/board at schools like Alabama, Oklahoma, Texas Tech
Many flagship state universities offer auto-renewing full-ride packages for National Merit Finalists. Alabama gives 5 years paid + stipend. This single qualification converts $150k+ of tuition into free education.
Result: Combined $22,895/yr — can cover full in-state public cost
NCES data: 34% of undergrads receive Pell. Must file FAFSA to qualify. Low-income students often receive full-cost coverage at in-state public universities when all need-based grants stack.
Local scholarships (community orgs, employer, religious) have 5–10x higher win rates. Dollar-per-hour-invested, local wins.
Impact: Students applying only to national comps (Coca-Cola, Gates) have <1% win rate. Local comps average 8–15% per Fastweb data.
Niche scholarships have tiny applicant pools. Scholarships for left-handed students, tall people, Zombie Apocalypse essay, duck-call competitions are real and under-subscribed.
Impact: Winning 2 niche $500 scholarships is easier than winning one $1,000 national — and the math is identical.
Per IRS Publication 970, scholarship amounts exceeding qualified education expenses (tuition, fees, books) are taxable as ordinary income.
Impact: A $25k scholarship covering room/board owes federal tax on the R&B portion — ~$3,000–$5,000 tax liability if not planned for.
State-specific rates, taxes, and cost-of-living adjustments
Calculations are for educational purposes only. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized advice.