To promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national sales tax to be administered primarily by the States.
Analysis under review: This bill has generated analysis that may be too generic or incomplete. Clause-level evidence remains available below.
Summary
What This Bill Does
The FairTax Act completely eliminates federal income taxes, payroll taxes (Social Security and Medicare withholding), and estate/gift taxes. In their place, it creates a 23% national sales tax on all goods and services purchased for personal consumption. The tax would be collected primarily by state governments under federal oversight.
Who Benefits and How
High-income earners and wealthy individuals benefit significantly as they no longer pay progressive income taxes or estate taxes, and only pay sales tax on what they consume rather than what they earn. Businesses benefit from eliminated corporate income taxes, simplified compliance (no more withholding), and tax-free business-to-business purchases.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Low and middle-income consumers face a higher effective tax rate since they spend most of their income on consumption. While a monthly prebate (Family Consumption Allowance) offsets taxes on poverty-level spending, consumption above that threshold is fully taxed. State governments bear new administrative responsibilities for collecting federal taxes. The IRS is largely phased out.
Key Provisions
- Repeals all federal income, payroll, estate, and gift taxes effective January 1, 2025
- Imposes 23% sales tax on all goods and services for personal consumption
- Provides monthly prebate payments to all families equal to sales tax on poverty-level spending
- Exempts business-to-business purchases and exports from taxation
- Shifts tax collection to state governments with a 0.25% administration fee
- Automatically sunsets if the 16th Amendment is not repealed within 7 years
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
This bill replaces the entire federal income tax, payroll tax, and estate/gift tax system with a 23% national sales tax on consumption of goods and services, administered primarily by state governments.
Key Policy Areas
Tax Policy, Federal Administration, Social Security, Consumer Protection
Primary Purpose
This bill replaces the entire federal income tax, payroll tax, and estate/gift tax system with a 23% national sales tax on consumption of goods and services, administered primarily by state governments.
Policy Domains
Title I - Repeal of Income Tax, Payroll Tax, and Estate/Gift Tax
Identified Gains
- High-income earners
- Wealthy estates
- Corporations
- Business owners
Identified Costs
- IRS employees
- Tax preparers specializing in income tax
Title II - Sales Tax (Subtitle A of New Internal Revenue Code)
Identified Gains
- Businesses making B2B purchases
- Exporters
- State governments receiving administration fees
- Savers and investors
Identified Costs
- Consumers
- Retailers collecting tax
- Service providers
- Financial institutions
Title IV - Sunset of Sales Tax
Identified Gains
- Advocates of constitutional tax reform
Identified Costs
- Congress facing constitutional deadline
Title III - Other Matters
Identified Gains
- Social Security recipients through indexed benefits
Identified Costs
- IRS workforce facing phase-out
- Employers with new reporting requirements
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
IntroducedMr. Carter of Georgia (for himself, Mr. Clyde, Mr. Duncan, …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
All qualified families, All taxpayers, Delinquent taxpayers
Positive-direction: All qualified families, All taxpayers, Individual income taxpayers, Lawful U.S. residents with Social Security numbers, Married couples, Qualified families receiving prebates, Taxpayers, Taxpayers contesting assessments, Taxpayers facing collection actions, Taxpayers in disputes, Taxpayers in disputes with government, Taxpayers needing payment extensions, Taxpayers owed refunds, Taxpayers prevailing in disputes, Taxpayers unable to pay full amount
Negative-direction: Delinquent taxpayers, Fraudulent rebate claimants, Late-paying taxpayers
All businesses selling taxable property or services, All employers, Businesses converting property to business use
Businesses using accrual accounting faces effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: Businesses converting property to business use, Businesses making B2B purchases, Businesses with intermediate purchases, Businesses with uncollected receivables, Corporations paying corporate income tax, Employers withholding payroll taxes, Equipment lessees
Negative-direction: All businesses selling taxable property or services, All employers, Businesses with mixed-use property, Non-compliant sellers, Persons subject to audit, U.S. businesses paying foreign providers
All registered sellers, All sellers providing receipts, Businesses holding inventory at transition
Positive-direction: Businesses holding inventory at transition, Registered sellers, Registered sellers filing timely reports, Registered sellers with overpayments, Sellers with proper documentation
Negative-direction: All registered sellers, All sellers providing receipts, Interstate sellers, Large sellers requiring segregated accounts, Retailers and sellers
Congress, Department of the Treasury, Federal government agencies
Positive-direction: State and federal tax collectors
Negative-direction: Congress, Department of the Treasury, Federal government agencies, Government enterprises like transit and utilities, IRS administrators, IRS employees, Social Security Administration
Banks and credit unions, Financial institutions, Financial institutions calculating taxable amounts
Positive-direction: Financial institutions with bad loans, Insurance policyholders receiving payouts, Investors
Negative-direction: Banks and credit unions, Financial institutions, Financial institutions calculating taxable amounts, Insurance companies, U.S. financial institutions with foreign customers
State and local governments, State governments with sales taxes, State tax administering authorities
State tax administrators faces effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: State governments with sales taxes, State tax agencies, State tax authorities
Negative-direction: State and local governments, State tax administering authorities, State tax collection agencies
Family-owned businesses, Small businesses, Small businesses affected by regulations
Positive-direction: Family-owned businesses, Small businesses, Small businesses converting personal property to business use
Negative-direction: Small businesses affected by regulations
Estate planning attorneys, Tax attorneys and accountants, Tax preparation industry
Positive-direction: Tax attorneys and accountants
Negative-direction: Estate planning attorneys, Tax preparation industry, Tax professionals
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "the_secretary"
- → Secretary of the Treasury
- "sales_tax_administering_authority"
- → State agency designated to collect sales tax, or Secretary if state is not administering
- "the_secretary"
- → Secretary of the Treasury
Note: Section numbers in Title II refer to new IRC 2023 created by this Act, distinct from current IRC sections
Key Definitions
Terms defined in this bill
One or more family members sharing a common residence, including spouses and descendants.
Services by financial intermediaries facilitating transactions, taxed on interest spread.
Purchased by person in trade or business for resale, production, or other bona fide business purposes.
Government entity selling property or services to public and receiving more than 50% of outlays from such sales.
A firm is affiliated with another if 1 firm owns 50 percent or more of the voting shares in a corporation.
Payments for taxable property or services, including Federal taxes imposed by this title.
Any natural person, and any corporation, partnership, LLC, trust, estate, government, agency, organization, or other legal entity.
Any household employing domestic servants, and any government except for government enterprises.
Any property (excluding intangible and used property), and any service (including financial intermediation).
Property on which tax has been collected and no credit allowed, or property held for non-business purpose on Dec 31, 2024.
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology