A comprehensive report by the Federation for Immigration Reform (FAIR) breaks down the cost of illegal immigration to U.S. taxpayers: $115.89 billion annually.
Based on the most recent data reported in 2017, The Fiscal Burden of Illegal Immigrants examines the fiscal impact of illegal aliens in federal and state budgets. It also highlights which U.S. citizens pay the most: Californians, Texans and Floridians.
The estimated cost to California taxpayers for more than six million illegal aliens and their children is over $23 billion.
The estimated cost to Texans for the more than four million illegal aliens and their children is nearly $11 billion.
The more than two million illegal aliens and their children cost Florida taxpayers more than $6 billion.
The rest of the top 10 states reporting the highest cost to taxpayers are New York, New Jersey, Illinois, Georgia, North Carolina, Arizona and Virginia.
“Illegal aliens are net consumers of taxpayer-funded services and the limited taxes paid by some segments of the illegal alien population are, in no way, significant enough to offset the growing financial burdens [they] impose on U.S. taxpayers,” the report states.
The report calculates taxpayer burden by adding total federal, state and local expenditures, and adding total federal, state and local taxes paid by illegal aliens. It relies on federal, state and local tax and resident demographics data, and outlines its proportional calculations and methodology.
For example, using a 2010 Social Security Administration report that estimated illegal aliens paid a total of $13 billion into the fund annually, FAIR calculated by percentages of payments and dollar amounts paid that illegal aliens also contributed $5.9 billion toward Medicare.
Its examination of federal budget money spent on illegal immigration was roughly $46 billion, with some state budgets spending an estimated $89 billion annually, FAIR calculates.
The annual bill of $135 billion equates to more than $8,000 per illegal alien and dependent per year. While some illegal aliens do pay certain taxes, the report states, many employers pay them lower wages, or in cash, and do not deduct their wages from payroll taxes, with most of their income unlikely being reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), FAIR states. Due to these varying factors, FAIR argues federal, state and local governments are not collecting enough taxes from illegal aliens to cover the costs of federal benefits they receive.
FAIR estimates that illegal aliens pay nearly $19 billion in combined state, local, and federal taxes, or 14% of the amount expended annually on them.
FAIR now estimates that there are approximately 12.5 million illegal alien residents based on available data from the Department of Homeland Security, other federal and state government agencies, and research compiled by think tanks, universities and other research organizations.
The total national illegal alien estimate includes roughly 11 million adults, of whom 350,000 receive Temporary Protective Status (mostly Central Americans), and 730,000 DACA recipients.
The 10 states with the largest estimated illegal alien populations account for nearly three-fourths (73.7%) of the national total. They are, according to FAIR, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Texas and Washington.