A. Statewide Tax Framework

Pennsylvania’s Constitution and statutes define which taxes the Commonwealth levies directly, which are shared with counties/municipalities, and which are prohibited. Residents of Allegheny therefore interact with three tax levels:

  1. State taxes (income, sales, corporate).
  2. County/municipal taxes (property, local services, earned income).
  3. School district taxes (property, earned income in some districts).

B. State Taxation – Paid by Allegheny Residents

1. Personal Income Tax (PIT)

2. Sales and Use Tax

3. Corporate Taxes

4. Excise & Sin Taxes


C. Local Taxation (State-Authorized, County/Municipal)

1. Property Taxes

2. Earned Income Tax (EIT)

3. Local Services Tax (LST)

4. Business Privilege & Mercantile Taxes


D. State-to-Local Finance Flows

1. Education Funding

2. Human Services

3. Transportation

4. Revenue Sharing & Grants


E. Oversight & Financial Controls


F. Taxpayer Interaction in Daily Life


G. Fiscal Challenges


Summary

Taxation and finance in Allegheny County are dictated by state authority and frameworks. The Commonwealth collects flat income tax, sales tax (plus a local surcharge), corporate and excise taxes, then redistributes funds through education, Medicaid, transit, and local government aid. Counties, municipalities, and school districts rely heavily on property taxes and local wage taxes authorized by the state. For the average Allegheny resident, the state’s hand is visible in every paycheck, every shopping receipt, every school budget, and every highway project.