Courtesy District, Measured.

Via Shutterstock

Statehood protesters have set up on the Mall, activists launched a campaign to raise the minimum wage, a group is planning to rally tonight at the Capitol to “petition Congress to exempt D.C. residents from federal income tax until voting representation is granted.” It’s Tax Day, if you haven’t noticed.

So, exactly how much is it costing us?

District residents pay an average of $19,540 per homeowning household and $16,847 per non-homeowning household in taxes, according to NerdWallet. For homeowners, that makes the District the ninth most expensive large U.S. city to live in tax-wise, at 29 percent of income. Arlingtonians, whose median household income is $102,501, came in at number two—paying nearly 38 percent of their income in taxes.

If you’re just looking at state and local taxes, Washingtonians actually have it better than all of our neighboring jurisdictions. District, Measured, D.C.’s Office of Revenue Analysis blog, found that a household with an income of $75,000 in D.C., for example, paid between 9 and 25 percent less than seven nearby cities and counties in 2013. D.C.’s local tax burden was lower than the rest of the region for all other income levels they measured ($25,000; $50,000; $75,000; $100,000; and $150,000), as well.

Via District, Measured.

Meanwhile, District, Measured, also took a look at 2012 data to get a senseof how much money we’re getting back after filing said taxes. D.C. refunds averaged $990 and federal refunds averaged $2,933 that year.

They broke it down further by income level.

Still haven’t paid yours? D.C.’s Office for Tax and Revenue is staying open late tonight to help out the procrastinators.