Warren Unveils Ultra‑Millionaire Wealth Tax and 40% Exit Levy
Sen. Elizabeth Warren is introducing the Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act of 2026, a federal wealth-tax bill that would levy a 2% annual tax on household and trust net worth above $50 million and an additional 1% surtax on billionaire wealth. The proposal also includes a 40% “exit tax” on people worth more than $50 million who renounce U.S. citizenship, an explicit attempt to block ultra-rich Americans from dodging the levy by moving abroad. UC Berkeley economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman estimate the measure would raise about $6.2 trillion over 10 years—more than double their projection for Warren’s similar 2021 plan—reflecting the rapid run-up in billionaire fortunes, now pegged at $7.8 trillion for 905 U.S. billionaires. Warren says the revenue could fund cheaper health care, child care, paid leave, and tuition-free community college, while Rep. Pramila Jayapal and other House Democrats are backing a companion bill in a Congress where the measure is unlikely to pass but will sharpen the 2026 fight over inequality and tax fairness. The article notes that, despite strong public polling for higher taxes on the rich and new state-level millionaire taxes in places like Massachusetts and Washington, research shows the 400 wealthiest Americans currently pay lower effective tax rates than the rest of the country, underscoring how far Warren’s plan would push the federal code from its status quo.
📌 Key Facts
- Bill name: Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act of 2026, introduced by Sen. Elizabeth Warren
- Policy: 2% annual tax on net worth above $50 million plus an extra 1% surtax on billionaire wealth
- Exit tax: 40% tax on individuals worth over $50 million who renounce U.S. citizenship
- Revenue estimate: $6.2 trillion over 10 years, per economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman
- Context: 905 U.S. billionaires hold about $7.8 trillion in wealth, up more than 25% in a year
- Support: 10 Democratic Senate co-sponsors and 38 House Democratic co-sponsors; roughly 60% of Americans in a 2025 Pew poll favor higher taxes on households making more than $400,000
📊 Relevant Data
There are over 100,000 ultra-high-net-worth households in the US with financial assets of $50 million or more as of 2025.
US Household Financial Wealth Surpasses $90T — Connect Money
In 2022, the median wealth of White households was $285,000, compared to $44,900 for Black households, $61,600 for Hispanic households, and $536,000 for Asian households, representing significant racial wealth disparities.
Wealth gaps across racial and ethnic groups — Pew Research Center
The effective tax rate for the 400 wealthiest Americans was approximately 24% following the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, lower than the rate for many middle-income earners.
New study says most wealthy got big boost from TCJA — POLITICO
Wealth taxes in Europe have often been repealed; the number of OECD countries with net wealth taxes decreased from 12 in 1990 to 5 in 2023, due to issues like capital flight and high administrative costs.
The High Cost of Wealth Taxes — Tax Foundation
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