With a budget deal headed to his desk for a signature Gov. Ned Lamont is quick to point out it won’t increase income or sales tax rates, or reduce aid to cities and towns.

But a series of tax increases and expansions in other areas, as well as postponed tax cuts and credits total about $340 million. The new taxes and fees amount to less than $180 million in a $21 billion budget. Here’s where you’ll notice those hikes:

The sales tax on digital downloads — things like e-books and movies downloaded from Amazon — will increase from 1 percent to 6.35 percent, bringing in $27.5 million in the first year and $37.1 million in the second.

Prepared foods such as restaurant meals will be subject to a 1 percent tax, generating $48.3 million for the state in the first year of the biennial budget and $65.8 million in the second year.

The sales tax will be expanded to include parking, dry-cleaning and laundry services, and interior design services. That’s far less than Lamont had hoped for. He’d originally proposed expanding the sales tax to all services. The sales tax expansion will generate an additional $11.8 million in the first year and $24.4 million in the second year.

The budget will also lower the threshold to collect online retail sales tax — out-of-state sellers are considered a retailer for Connecticut sales and use tax purposes after 200 or more retail sales and $250,000 in gross receipts in a 12-month period. The change lowers the threshold in gross receipts to $100,000. The change is expected grow online sales tax receipts by $1.5 million in the first year and $2 million in the second.

The largest single increase is a reduction in a tax credit available to partnerships and small corporations, netting the state about $50 million. The tax credit was created in 2018 after all “pass-through” companies — those that pass profits to their owners rather than pay corporate taxes — were charged 6.99 percent on profits, and their owners were exempted from the state income tax. All of these business owners save on federal taxes in the switch, and the new budget removes about one-quarter of that savings by reducing the income tax credit.

A mandated occupancy tax on short-term rentals operated through online platforms such as Airbnb is expected to generate $1.5 million in the first year and $2 million in the second year of the budget.

In 2020, homeowners moving out of state and selling their house for more than $2.5 million will pay a new mansion tax, which increases the conveyance rate to 2.25 percent on those real estate sales. The change will generate $6.3 million in the second year of the budget.

The budget cancels a plan to eliminate the corporate surcharge tax, which will generate $60 million in the first year and $37.5 million in the second.

In a tax cut, the $250 “business entity tax” paid by all companies every other year is ended, saving businesses about $25 million a year.

The annual filing fee for LLC’s and LLP’s will increase in 2020, bringing in an additional $12 million to the state.

A tax on E-cigarette liquid at wholesale will generate $1.9 million in the first year and $2.5 million in the second.

The excise tax on alcohol will increase, bringing in an additional $3.8 million in the first year and $5 million in the second year.

A surcharge of 10 cents on disposable plastic bags will bring in $27.7 million in the first year and $26.8 million in the second year. An outright ban will go into effect in two years.

The fee for ridesharing services like Uber and Lyft will increase from 25 cents to 30 cents per ride, generating $4.5 million in the first year and $4.6 million in the second year.

The vehicle trade-in fee will increase, bringing in $7.4 million in the first year and $9.8 million in the second.

Repealing an income tax credit for STEM graduates will bring in $3.9 million in the first year and $7.0 million in the second year.

Some Republicans, including Rep. Themis Klarides, R-Derby, the House Republican leader, have called the tax increase $1.7 billion. That figure includes a resumption of a hospital tax that was scheduled to end this year, worth $516 million. Under that arrangement the hospitals receive most of the money back in the form of a Medicaid reimbursement — so it doesn’t act like a tax — and the state benefits from the federal Medicaid payments.

The $1.7 billion figure is also based on a two-year budget, so it doubles any tax changes that continue in the second year.

Hearst Columnist Dan Haar contributed to this story.

kkrasselt@hearstmediact.com; 203-842-2563; @kaitlynkrasselt