Revised August 15, 2007

Utah Corporate Income Tax Statistics: 2003

Prepared by Tom Williams with the assistance of Tom Young

General Information

  • About the Data – Please read this to understand the tables
  • An overview – Who Pays?
  • A Historical Glance
    The figure and chart reveal how corporate taxes have evolved relative to both the sales and personal income taxes, the other major taxes. On the figure, the three lines proceeding from the lower left to the upper right show the amount of sales, income, and corporate taxes collected. The amount of each tax is shown on the left scale. The line starting in the upper left and falling to the lower right shows corporate collections as a share of the three major taxes listed on the table. Note that in the early years data is in five year increments and becomes yearly after 1990.
  • 2003 Corporate Tax Form
  • A Western State Comparison

2003 Data

We only report data by three income groups because the number of sectors and more income groups together would produce a number of cells with to few observations to reveal.The "no income" group contains those corporations with income less than or equal to zero. The "positive income" group is those with income greater than zero but who still have an income so low they only pay a minimum tax. (Generally below $2,000, but it can be higher if the minimum tax is a multiple of $100 becasue the filing group contains more than one corporation.) The "taxable income" group is the remainder, those who are subject to the 5% coporate income tax.

Tax Credits

Credits on these pages are reported in two ways. The amount reported on the form is designated as "claimed." But often times taxpayers will not have enough taxes to use the full credit, in which case we only report as “allowed” the amount that can be used. It should be noted in some cases that taxpayers will only claim the amount allowed, so the claimed amount may be lower than the amount earned.

Apportionment Data