State Profile
Wyoming Military Spending 2026
Wyoming taxpayers contributed $1.9B to the FY2026 defense budget. See per-capita cost, 2 bases, top contractors, and Iran war share.
Tax-Share Rank
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Per-Capita Rank
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FY2025 Contracts
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Wyoming contributed an estimated $1.9B to the federal government's FY2026 national defense budget under the primary tax-share method, ranking 50th nationally out of fifty states. Spread across a resident population of 588,753, that works out to roughly $3K per resident — approximately $327 above the $3K national average used across MilitarySpend's US budget coverage. As one of the smaller tax-base jurisdictions, Wyoming's absolute dollar contribution looks modest, but the per-resident burden still tracks the same national defense top line as every other state.
The core methodological tension on this page is simple, and it is worth naming up front: tax-share and population-share land in the same band. Wyoming's tax-share contribution is 0.2%, while its population share is 0.2%. High-income states usually look larger under the tax-share model because federal individual income-tax receipts are concentrated more heavily than population; lower-income states tend to look smaller for the mirror-image reason. In concrete terms, Wyoming pays in more than its population alone would imply — the 9085248653.3% gap between tax share and population share is the numeric fingerprint of that over-contribution. Showing both figures side by side instead of picking one makes the gap inspectable rather than burying it in a footnote, and it lets readers decide which denominator matches their own question about fairness.
Since the Iran war began on February 28, 2026, Wyoming's tax-share allocation implies $55.34M in Pentagon strike and standby costs through the April 21 snapshot. Measured the other way, against population share, the same snapshot attributes $52.68M to the state — a difference that reflects the same tax-versus-headcount gap described above, just applied to a smaller and more recent cost pool. Neither figure is a bill that lands in a mailbox; both are accounting projections built from the public Pentagon cost snapshots the site tracks daily.
Wyoming's military footprint is not just a budget abstraction. The state hosts 2 publicly tracked installations, led here by F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Camp Guernsey, Wyoming Air National Guard, and carries about 3,200 active-duty personnel per DMDC workforce reporting. That combination makes the state's Pentagon exposure both fiscal and local-labor-market driven: base payroll, on-post contracting, family housing allowances, and military healthcare all flow through the same communities that surround those installations.
Prime contract activity fills in the industrial side of the story. This snapshot attributes $83M in FY2025 DoD prime awards to Wyoming, with Northrop Grumman and Boeing leading the top-vendor list and capturing roughly 0.0% of national prime-contract dollars. Contract rankings do not perfectly track tax-share rankings: some states over-index because they host shipyards, missile plants, test ranges, depots, or systems-integration hubs, while others mostly show up on the taxpayer side of the ledger without a comparable manufacturing base.
The fiscal lens matters because the tax-share model is sensitive to income distribution. A state whose residents earn 0.2% of federal individual income-tax receipts but house 0.2% of the population will, by construction, look different under the two denominators. That is not a bug in the numbers — it is the actual structure of how the federal government collects revenue, and it is why per-capita comparisons alone can flatter or penalize a state depending on whether its median household income is above or below the national median. The page surfaces both views so that the reader, not the site, picks the frame.
Regionally, Wyoming sits within the Mountain West bloc, which shapes how its defense economics compare to nearby states. Neighboring states in the same region typically share similar labor markets, base-structure patterns, and contracting supply chains, so Wyoming's ranks on tax share, per-capita cost, and contract volume are most usefully read against that regional peer group rather than against the national extremes. The regional-neighbors section below this narrative lines up those peers explicitly, making it easier to see which parts of Wyoming's profile are region-typical and which are genuinely state-specific.
Pulling the threads together, Wyoming's distinctive profile is the interaction of its tax burden (0.2% of federal individual income tax), its industrial base ($83M in FY2025 prime awards), and its installation footprint (2 sites and 3,200 active-duty personnel). No single one of those numbers explains the state's relationship with the Pentagon; read together, they describe a defense-economic posture that the rest of this page breaks down chart by chart.
Live Conflict Allocation
Wyoming's live share of Operation Epic Fury
This ticker scales the live national war-cost model by Wyoming's federal income-tax share, currently 0.2%. Day 98 is in the ceasefire standby phase.
Snapshot on Apr 21: $55.34M
Allocation Method
Tax-share headline, population-share cross-check
Wyoming's tax-share estimate lands above its population-share benchmark, so readers can see both the revenue-weighted headline and the simpler population-weighted comparison side by side.
tax-share and population-share land in the same band.
Primary: IRS Tax Share
$1.9B
0.2%
Wyoming is estimated to fund $55.34M of the Iran war through the Apr 21 snapshot under the same allocation logic.
Secondary: Population Share
$1.8B
0.2%
Population share implies $52.68M of war cost. The gap versus the tax-share view shows how much Wyoming over- or under-indexes on federal income-tax payments.
Caveat: Federal individual income tax funds general revenue, which funds discretionary spending including defense alongside corporate tax, payroll tax, and deficit financing. Individual income tax is the clearest state-attributable proxy, but it overweights high-income states. Population share is shown alongside it as a second benchmark.
Per Resident Lens
Per-capita defense burden in Wyoming
Defense allocation per resident, compared to the US average and the top-5 per-capita states. Vertical dashed line marks the national average.
Wyoming
$3,212
vs US avg
+11%
Military Footprint
Bases, stations, and active-duty presence
Wyoming has 2 publicly tracked military installations in this snapshot and roughly 3,200active-duty personnel assigned in-state.
F.E. Warren Air Force Base
Camp Guernsey
Wyoming Air National Guard
Industrial Exposure
Top FY2025 prime contractors in Wyoming
Largest recipients of DoD prime contract obligations booked in-state, reported from USAspending aggregate data. Per-contractor dollar shares are pending the live API pull and are not displayed as fabricated splits.
Total FY2025
$83M
Rank #50
- 01
Northrop Grumman
Primary - 02
Boeing
Secondary
Source: USAspending.gov aggregate FY2025 · Full top-5 breakdown pending live API pull
All 51 Jurisdictions
State military-spending ranking
Sort the table to compare tax-share contribution, per-capita burden, and FY2025 defense contracts. The highlighted row marks the current profile.
| #1 | California | $4K | $40.4B | 15.0% |
| #2 | New York | $5K | $10.4B | 9.0% |
| #3 | Texas | $2K | $67B | 7.5% |
| #4 | Florida | $3K | $27B | 6.8% |
| #5 | Illinois | $3K | $7.7B | 4.1% |
| #6 | New Jersey | $4K | $7.3B | 4.0% |
| #7 | Pennsylvania | $3K | $19.5B | 3.9% |
| #8 | Massachusetts | $6K | $16.9B | 3.8% |
| #9 | Virginia | $4K | $68.5B | 3.1% |
| #10 | Washington | $4K | $8.9B | 3.0% |
| #11 | Ohio | $2K | $7.6B | 2.8% |
| #12 | Georgia | $3K | $7.3B | 2.7% |
| #13 | North Carolina | $2K | $2.8B | 2.6% |
| #14 | Michigan | $2K | $6.9B | 2.4% |
| #15 | Connecticut | $5K | $34.8B | 1.9% |
| #16 | Colorado | $3K | $12.1B | 1.9% |
| #17 | Maryland | $3K | $18.7B | 1.8% |
| #18 | Arizona | $2K | $19.5B | 1.8% |
| #19 | Minnesota | $3K | $2B | 1.8% |
| #20 | Tennessee | $2K | $2.8B | 1.6% |
| #21 | Indiana | $2K | $5.3B | 1.4% |
| #22 | Wisconsin | $2K | $3.7B | 1.4% |
| #23 | Missouri | $2K | $13.1B | 1.3% |
| #24 | Oregon | $3K | $1.1B | 1.1% |
| #25 | South Carolina | $2K | $4B | 1.0% |
| #26 | Utah | $3K | $3.3B | 0.9% |
| #27 | Alabama | $2K | $12.1B | 0.9% |
| #28 | Nevada | $3K | $1.9B | 0.9% |
| #29 | Kentucky | $2K | $8.9B | 0.8% |
| #30 | Louisiana | $2K | $3.5B | 0.8% |
| #31 | Oklahoma | $2K | $4.8B | 0.7% |
| #32 | Iowa | $2K | $2.5B | 0.7% |
| #33 | District of Columbia | $9K | $2.7B | 0.6% |
| #34 | Kansas | $2K | $1.3B | 0.6% |
| #35 | Arkansas | $2K | $359M | 0.5% |
| #36 | Nebraska | $2K | $1.3B | 0.4% |
| #37 | New Hampshire | $3K | $2.6B | 0.4% |
| #38 | Hawaii | $3K | $4B | 0.4% |
| #39 | Idaho | $2K | $479M | 0.4% |
| #40 | New Mexico | $1K | $1B | 0.3% |
| #41 | Maine | $2K | $3.1B | 0.3% |
| #42 | Mississippi | $1K | $7.3B | 0.3% |
| #43 | Delaware | $3K | $139M | 0.3% |
| #44 | Rhode Island | $3K | $425M | 0.3% |
| #45 | West Virginia | $2K | $637M | 0.3% |
| #46 | South Dakota | $3K | $427M | 0.3% |
| #47 | North Dakota | $3K | -$250M | 0.2% |
| #48 | Alaska | $3K | $5.3B | 0.2% |
| #49 | Montana | $2K | $597M | 0.2% |
| #50 | Wyoming | $3K | $83M | 0.2% |
| #51 | Vermont | $2K | $1.3B | 0.1% |
FAQ
Common questions about Wyoming
How much does Wyoming contribute to the US defense budget?
Wyoming contributes an estimated $1.9B to the FY2026 national defense budget under the primary tax-share method. That ranks Wyoming 50th nationally, with a tax-share contribution of 0.2% versus a population-share benchmark of 0.2%.
What did Wyoming taxpayers pay for the Iran war?
Using the same tax-share allocation, Wyoming taxpayers' estimated share of Operation Epic Fury reached $55.34M through April 21, 2026. The population-share benchmark is $52.68M, which helps show whether Wyoming carries a larger or smaller share than its population alone would imply.
How many military bases are in Wyoming?
Wyoming has 2 publicly tracked military installations in this snapshot, anchored by F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Camp Guernsey, Wyoming Air National Guard. We also track roughly $83,000,000 in FY2025 DoD prime contracts and about 3,200 active-duty personnel stationed in the state.
Which defense contractors receive the most money in Wyoming?
The leading prime contractors tied to Wyoming's FY2025 awards in this snapshot are Northrop Grumman and Boeing. Per-contractor dollar shares will follow the live USAspending pull; the state totaled $83,000,000 in prime obligations for the fiscal year.
Regional Comparisons
Nearby state profiles
Sources
IRS SOI Historical Table 5
Federal individual income tax by state (CY2022 filings)
CY2022 filings (pending CY2023 live pull)
Census Population Estimates
Vintage 2025 state population estimates
Vintage 2025
USAspending.gov
FY2025 DoD prime contracts by recipient state
FY2025 final
DoD Base Structure Report
Installations and base structure by state
FY2024
DMDC
Active-duty military personnel by state
Q4 2024
BLS QCEW
Aerospace products and shipbuilding employment by state
Pending live pull
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