California Income Tax 101: Rates, Deductions, Recent Changes, and What to Do If You Owe the FTB | Wynn Tax Solutions

California Income Tax 101: Rates, Deductions, Recent Changes, and What to Do If You Owe the FTB

California Income Tax 101: Rates, Deductions, Recent Changes, and What to Do If You Owe the FTB

Quick note: This is general information, not tax or legal advice. Your filing outcome and any debt relief options depend on your facts, documentation, and compliance status.

Who handles California income tax?

California personal income tax is administered by the Franchise Tax Board (FTB). Even if you’re used to dealing with the IRS, California is a separate system with separate notices, separate payment options, and separate collection tools.

If you live in California, you’ll generally file a resident return (Form 540). If you moved in/out or worked part-year, you may need a nonresident/part-year return instead. Residency and source rules can change what California taxes — and what credits you may need (for example, if another state also taxes the same income).

How much is California income tax? (The “percent owed” question)

California uses a progressive tax system. That means different portions of your taxable income are taxed at different rates — not one flat rate across everything.

For most taxpayers, California marginal rates range from 1% up to 12.3%, depending on income and filing status. In addition, higher-income taxpayers may also face an extra 1% tax on taxable income over $1,000,000 (now referred to as the Behavioral Health Services Tax on current-year forms/instructions).

Practical takeaway: If you’re a W-2 employee, your withholding usually covers most of this automatically. If you’re a 1099 contractor, have multiple jobs, or have investment/side income, it’s much easier to under-withhold and end up owing at filing time.

Biggest deduction decision in California: Standard deduction vs. itemizing

California lets you take the standard deduction or itemize (whichever is larger for you). The standard deduction is smaller than the federal standard deduction, so this choice can matter more than people expect.

For the 2025 tax year (filed in 2026), the California standard deduction amounts shown in the Form 540 booklet are:

  • $5,706 — Single or Married/RDP filing separately

  • $11,412 — Married/RDP filing jointly, Head of household, or Qualifying surviving spouse/RDP

If you itemize, California generally starts with the same broad categories you’re used to (charitable contributions, certain medical expenses, mortgage interest, etc.), but California can apply its own adjustments and limits — so the clean way to do it is to follow the Schedule CA (540) instructions and be consistent with documentation.

Major California credits and deductions people miss

Credits are powerful because they reduce tax dollar-for-dollar. Here are a few common California items that come up a lot in real life:

  • California Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC): A refundable credit for eligible taxpayers with wage income earned in CA and/or net self-employment earnings under the program thresholds (you don’t always need a child to qualify).

  • Young Child Tax Credit (YCTC): A refundable credit connected to California EITC eligibility for households with a qualifying child under age 6.

  • Child and Dependent Care Expenses Credit (nonrefundable): For qualifying care expenses (with California-specific requirements and income limits).

  • Renter’s Credit (nonrefundable): If you paid rent for at least 6 months on a CA principal residence and meet the AGI limits.

  • Other State Tax Credit: If you paid net income tax to another state (or U.S. possession) on income that California also taxes, California may offer a credit to reduce double-tax pain.

Practical tip: Most “surprise balances due” are caused by missing income (a late 1099, side income, brokerage activity) or under-withholding/underpaying estimated taxes — not by one small missed deduction.

If you owe California tax: pay in full vs. payment plan vs. other options

If you owe the FTB, the best move is to get organized and make a plan quickly. Generally, you’ll be deciding between:

  • Paying in full (fastest way to stop the meter on added costs)

  • Setting up a payment plan (installment agreement) if you can’t pay all at once

  • Exploring relief options if your finances don’t support full payment now or in the foreseeable future

California also expects you to stay compliant going forward — meaning future returns filed on time, and future taxes paid/withheld properly — even while you’re resolving a past balance.

How California (FTB) collects tax debt

California can be very aggressive once a balance is established and notices are ignored. The FTB’s published collections guidance makes it clear that unpaid balances can lead to actions such as:

  • Wage garnishment (earnings withholding orders)

  • Bank levies / orders to withhold (taking money from bank accounts or other financial assets)

  • State tax liens recorded/ filed against property

  • Seizure of property in serious cases

California liens are also a big deal because the FTB states it has an automatic statutory lien when you owe, and it may record/file a Notice of State Tax Lien if the situation isn’t resolved. Once recorded, it becomes public record and can follow you for years.

In addition, California can sometimes collect delinquent state income tax by offsetting certain payments — including intercepting a federal tax refund to pay a past-due California income tax balance.

Bottom line: if you have an FTB balance, assume the problem gets more expensive and more disruptive the longer it sits.

Repayment and relief programs California taxpayers should know

1) Payment plans (installment agreements)

For many people, the first step is simply getting on an installment agreement. The FTB states that personal payment plans can typically run 3 to 5 years and may take time to process. There’s also usually a setup fee, and eligibility requirements (including being filed up for recent years and being within certain balance limits).

Important nuance: if you’re already facing active collection actions (like a wage garnishment or bank levy), you may not be able to self-serve online and may need to call and/or provide additional financial documentation.

2) Offer in Compromise (OIC) — settling for less in the right cases

California’s Offer in Compromise program is designed for situations where the state believes it may not be able to collect the full amount within a reasonable time. The FTB emphasizes that eligibility depends on your ability to pay, assets, and current/future income and expenses, and that you must be filed and agree with the balance before applying.

Reality check: an OIC is documentation-heavy. The best offers are built on a clean, provable financial picture — not wishful thinking.

3) Penalty relief (including one-time penalty abatement)

If a big chunk of your bill is penalties, California may offer ways to request relief. One of the most practical tools for many individuals is California’s one-time timeliness penalty abatement program, which has eligibility rules and can be requested through MyFTB, in writing, or by phone (depending on your situation).

This can be especially meaningful when the taxpayer is otherwise compliant and has taken steps to pay the underlying tax or get into a current payment arrangement.

Recent California income tax changes worth knowing

California makes updates every year — some big, some narrow. A few notable items that show up in recent official Form 540 guidance include:

  • Behavioral Health Services Tax naming update (formerly referred to as the Mental Health Services Tax) and guidance for taxpayers over the $1M threshold.

  • Net Operating Loss (NOL) deduction suspension for certain taxpayers for specific years (relevant to business owners and higher-income filers).

  • Business credit limitation for certain years (again, more relevant to business owners and higher-income situations).

  • Expanded/continued refundable credits tied to California EITC (including the Young Child Tax Credit), with specific eligibility rules.

  • One-time timeliness penalty abatement option (for qualifying individuals), which can matter when you’re trying to clean up a late filing or late payment situation.

Practical takeaway: Even if your income is “about the same,” changes in withholding, credits, deductions, and California-specific rules can change the outcome. Reviewing your prior-year return and your current-year documents before filing is the easiest way to avoid surprises.

How Wynn Tax Solutions can help

If you owe California income tax, have unfiled years, or received an FTB notice and you’re not sure what comes next, Wynn Tax Solutions can help you get clarity and build a plan. We help clients get organized, evaluate payment and relief options, and (when authorized) communicate with tax agencies on your behalf.

Next step: If you’re dealing with a California balance due or collections notices, don’t wait for the situation to escalate. The earlier you address it, the more options you typically have.