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Synonyms and antonyms of Types of tax and taxation in American Thesaurus

Types of tax and taxation

back tax (noun)

tax that you owed at an earlier time but did not pay

capital gains tax (noun)

a tax that a person or company pays on the profit you get from selling property or from money you have invested

capitation (noun)

a tax or payment in which the same amount of money is paid by each person

CGT (abbreviation)

British capital gains tax

corporate tax (noun)

American a tax that companies pay on their profits

corporation tax (noun)

British corporate tax

customs (noun)

the taxes that you pay on goods that you bring into a country

death tax (noun)

American inheritance tax

direct tax (noun)

a tax collected directly from a person or organization instead of as part of the price of a product or service

double Irish (noun)

a way of avoiding tax used by some large corporations, which involves moving the company’s income to a country with lower tax rates than the one where it does most of its business. Usually income is transferred to a branch of the company based in Ireland, and from there to another Irish company based in a country where there is no corporation tax.

Dutch sandwich (noun)

a way of avoiding tax used by some large corporations, which is similar to the double Irish, but involves sending income via a third country such as the Netherlands in order to further reduce the tax that has to be paid

duty (noun)

economics a tax that you must pay on something, especially something that you bring into one country from another country

estate tax (noun)

American a tax paid in the U.S. on the money and property that are left when someone dies

federal tax (noun)

American a tax that people pay to the national government of the U.S.

GST (noun)

Goods and Services Tax: a tax that in some countries forms part of the price of some things that you buy

hidden tax (noun)

an indirect tax

income tax (noun)

a tax based on your income that you pay to the IRS once a year or every three months

indirect tax (noun)

a tax on goods and services rather than on income

indirect taxation (noun)

the practice of taxing goods and services rather than income

inheritance tax (noun)

tax that you pay on the money or property that you get from someone who has died

mansion tax (noun)

a tax that has to be paid by anyone who owns or sells a house that is worth a very large amount of money

poll tax (noun)

an amount of money collected as a tax from every adult citizen of a particular country

progressive tax (noun)

a tax system in which people who earn a lot of money pay a larger percentage of their income in tax than people who earn less

property tax (noun)

a tax that you pay based on the value of the land and buildings you own

regressive tax (noun)

a tax system in which poor people pay a bigger percentage of their income than rich people

road tax (noun)

money that people in some countries must pay if they want to drive their vehicles on public roads

sales tax (noun)

a tax that is added to the basic price of something you buy

stamp duty (noun)

a tax that people in the U.K. pay on some official documents, especially when they are buying a house

supertax (noun)

surtax

surtax (noun)

an additional tax on something on which you already pay tax, especially a high income

tariff (noun)

a tax that a government charges on goods that enter or leave their country

taxation (noun)

the system that a government uses for collecting money from people in the form of taxes

taxation (noun)

the money that a government collects from people from taxes

tithe (noun)

a tax that people paid to the church in the past

VAT (noun)

value added tax: a tax on goods and services

windfall tax (noun)

an extra amount of tax that the government charges a company that makes a lot of money unexpectedly

withholding tax (noun)

part of a person’s salary that an employer gives to the government as payment of that person’s taxes