North Carolina is one of 29 states that tax menstrual products but there’s a push to repeal this “pink tax” that women largely pay for these essential items.
If you menstruate, youโre paying North Carolina to do it.
Thatโs because North Carolina considers tampons, pads, and menstrual cups luxury items and, therefore, sticks a state sales tax on it.
Weโre one of 29 states that taxes these โnon-essentialโ products as theyโre classified under the state tax code. North Carolinaโs state sales tax is 4.75%, but can go up to 7.5% in some cities.
โThis tax is discriminatory,โ said state Rep. Julie von Haefen, an Apex Democrat. โWe’re only taxing half the population with these products. Males don’t have to buy them and weโre forced to buy them.โ
Von Haefen wants to see North Carolina ditch its period tax, so she introduced a bill in the state legislature that would stop considering tampons and sanitary pads luxury items. The national advocacy group Period Equity is pushing states to change their laws, and nine states have dropped the sales tax on menstrual products since 2015. (California has temporarily made the products tax-free.)
The amount tampon taxes add annually to North Carolinaโs tax revenue is minimal โ an estimated $8.1 million in state and local taxes, or less than 0.01% of the stateโs total revenue, according to Period Equity and the legislature’s fiscal research division. She believes itโs a bipartisan issue, and that both Democrats and Republicans can find common ground on nixing the tax.
For too many, menstrual products are unaffordable to begin with and cause whatโs referred to as โperiod poverty.โ A 2019 study found more than one in five women canโt afford menstrual hygiene products each month, while another study found a quarter of teenage girls skipped school because they didnโt have access to them. Period products are also not covered by government assistance programs like WIC and SNAP.
โIt really wouldn’t make a big difference to our bottom line in our state budget, but it would make a big difference to the lives of people who struggle to buy these products,โ von Haefen said.
Thereโs also pending legislation in the state Senate that would give $250,000 to NC public school districts to distribute menstrual products to those that need it. That way, girls wouldnโt be compelled to skip school solely because their families canโt afford to buy the products they need during their monthly periods.
If you feel strongly about these measures, then talk to your statement representatives about it, von Haefen said. You can look up who represents you here.
Editor’s note: This version has been corrected from the original to reflect that an estimated $8.1 million from menstrual products are collected each year in state sales tax.


















