State income taxes range from 0% to 13.3% depending on where you live. Nine states charge nothing; thirteen have flat rates; the rest use graduated brackets like the federal system. Your state significantly affects your total tax burden — and understanding it is essential, whether you’re filing taxes, comparing job offers, or planning a move.

States With No Income Tax

Nine states don’t tax your earned income at all:

State Income Tax Sales Tax Property Tax (Effective Rate) Other Notable Taxes
Alaska None None (local only) 1.04% Pays residents via PFD (~$1,300/yr)
Florida None 6.0% 0.91% No estate tax
Nevada None 6.85% 0.53% Commerce tax on large businesses
New Hampshire Limited* None 1.86% (highest in US) Interest/dividend tax ending
South Dakota None 4.5% 1.14% No corporate income tax
Tennessee None 7.0% 0.56% High sales tax
Texas None 6.25% 1.60% High property taxes
Washington None 6.5% 0.84% 7% capital gains tax on gains over $270K
Wyoming None 4.0% 0.55% Mineral severance taxes

*New Hampshire taxes interest and dividend income only, and this tax is being phased out (ended after 2024 for most filers).

Important: No income tax ≠ low total tax. Texas has no income tax but charges 1.60% property tax — on a $400,000 home, that’s $6,400/year. Florida has a 6% sales tax that adds up. Always compare total tax burden, not just income tax.

For detailed state guides: Florida Tax Guide | Tennessee Tax Guide | Texas Tax Guide | States With No Income Tax (Full Analysis)

State Income Tax Rates: All 50 States

Flat-Rate States

Thirteen states charge a single flat rate on all taxable income:

State Flat Rate Detailed Guide
Arizona 2.5% Arizona tax guide
Colorado 4.4% Colorado tax guide
Georgia 5.39% (transitioning to flat) Georgia tax guide
Idaho 5.8%
Illinois 4.95% Illinois tax guide
Indiana 3.05% Indiana tax guide
Iowa 3.8% (transitioning) Iowa tax guide
Kentucky 4.0% Kentucky tax guide
Michigan 4.25% Michigan tax guide
Mississippi 5.0%
North Carolina 4.5% North Carolina tax guide
Pennsylvania 3.07% Pennsylvania tax guide
Utah 4.65% Utah tax guide

Flat-rate states are the simplest to calculate: multiply your state taxable income by the rate.

Graduated-Rate States

The remaining states use graduated brackets similar to the federal system. Here are the highest marginal rates:

State Top Rate Kicks In At Brackets Detailed Guide
California 13.3% $1,000,000+ 9 California tax guide
Hawaii 11.0% $200,000+ 12 Hawaii tax guide
New York 10.9% $25,000,000+ 8 New York tax guide
New Jersey 10.75% $1,000,000+ 7 New Jersey tax guide
Oregon 9.9% $125,000+ 4 Oregon tax guide
Minnesota 9.85% $193,240+ 4 Minnesota tax guide
Massachusetts 9.0% $1,000,000+ (surtax) 1+surtax Massachusetts tax guide
Connecticut 6.99% $500,000+ 7 Connecticut tax guide
Wisconsin 7.65% $315,310+ 4 Wisconsin tax guide
Maryland 5.75% $250,000+ (+ local) 8 Maryland tax guide

See the full comparison: State Income Tax Rates (All 50 States) | State Income Tax Brackets

More state guides

State Guide
Alabama Alabama tax guide
Arkansas Arkansas tax guide
Kansas Kansas tax guide
Louisiana Louisiana tax guide
Missouri Missouri tax guide
New Mexico New Mexico tax guide
Ohio Ohio tax guide
Oklahoma Oklahoma tax guide
South Carolina South Carolina tax guide
Virginia Virginia tax guide
Washington State Washington state tax guide

Highest and Lowest Tax States Compared

Highest effective state income tax burden

State Top Rate Median Income Tax Paid* Why So High
California 13.3% ~$3,800 Aggressive progressive brackets
New York 10.9% ~$4,100 NYC adds 3.88% local income tax
New Jersey 10.75% ~$3,200 High rates start at moderate income
Oregon 9.9% ~$3,500 No sales tax; income tax compensates
Minnesota 9.85% ~$3,000 High rates, broad base

Lowest total state tax burden

State Income Tax Sales Tax Property Tax Why Low
Wyoming 0% 4.0% 0.55% Resource revenue
Alaska 0% 0% 1.04% Oil revenue + PFD
Nevada 0% 6.85% 0.53% Tourism/gaming revenue
Florida 0% 6.0% 0.91% Tourism + population growth
South Dakota 0% 4.5% 1.14% Low spending

*Effective tax on median household income, approximate.

State Taxes on Retirement Income

Tax treatment of retirement income varies dramatically by state:

Category States Details
No income tax at all AK, FL, NV, NH*, SD, TN, TX, WA, WY No retirement income tax either
Exempt all retirement income IL, MS, PA Don’t tax 401(k)/IRA/pension distributions
Exempt Social Security only ~28 states Tax 401(k)/IRA, exempt SS
Tax Social Security CO, CT, KS, MN, MT, NE, NM, RI, UT, VT, WV Partial exemptions vary widely
Tax everything CA, OR, NJ, NY, MA (mostly) Full taxation at regular rates

Where you retire matters enormously. A $60,000/year pension is tax-free in Illinois but could face a 9.9% rate in Oregon. Factor state taxes into your Retirement Planning Guide early.

See: State Taxes on Retirement Income | Best States to Retire for Taxes | Best States for Retirees

Other State Taxes That Affect Your Bottom Line

Income tax is just one piece. Here’s the full picture:

Tax Type Range Key Data Learn More
Sales tax 0%–7.25% (state) + local 5 states have no sales tax (AK, DE, MT, NH, OR) Sales Tax by State
Property tax 0.28%–2.23% effective Biggest cost for homeowners; varies by county Property Tax by State
Capital gains tax Same as income tax in most states WA has separate 7% capital gains tax Capital Gains Tax by State
Estate/inheritance tax 12 states + DC have estate tax; 6 states have inheritance tax Federal exemption: $13.99M (2026) Estate Tax by State

State Tax Filing Deadlines

Most states follow the federal April 15 deadline, but several differ:

State Filing Deadline Note
Most states April 15 Same as federal
Virginia May 1 Historically later
Louisiana May 15 Extended deadline
Iowa April 30 Later than federal
Hawaii April 20 Slightly later
Delaware April 30 Later than federal

If you file a federal extension (Form 4868), most states automatically extend your state deadline too — but not all. Check your state’s rules.

See State Tax Deadlines for the complete list and Tax Deadline Guide for federal deadlines.

The SALT Deduction

The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction lets you deduct state/local taxes on your federal return, but it’s capped:

SALT Deduction Limit
State income tax OR sales tax (choose one) Combined cap: $10,000
+ Local property tax
Married filing separately $5,000

Impact: If you pay $8,000 in state income tax and $7,000 in property tax ($15,000 total), you can only deduct $10,000. This cap primarily affects taxpayers in high-tax states like California, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.

2026 note: The $10,000 SALT cap was set by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Congress may adjust this as TCJA provisions are debated. See 2026 Tax Changes for updates.

Quick Reference Table

Topic Key Number Learn More
No income tax states 9 states States with no income tax
Highest state rate 13.3% (California) California tax guide
Lowest flat rate 3.07% (Pennsylvania) Pennsylvania tax guide
SALT deduction cap $10,000 Tax filing guide
States taxing Social Security ~11 states State taxes on retirement
Standard state deadline April 15 State tax deadlines

The Bottom Line

Your state tax rate matters, but never look at income tax in isolation. A state with 0% income tax may charge high property or sales taxes that offset the savings. When comparing states for a move or evaluating a job offer, calculate your total tax burden — federal income tax + state income tax + sales tax on typical spending + property tax on your target home. The “cheapest” state for you depends on your income level, spending habits, homeownership status, and retirement plans.

State Tax Planning: Multi-State and Remote Workers

Multi-State Workers

If you work remotely across multiple states or had income from multiple sources:

  • Your state of domicile (where you have primary residence and intent to return) is your resident state.
  • Income earned in another state may owe that state’s tax, with a credit from your home state.

Most states provide a credit for taxes paid to other states, but the mechanics differ. Do not assume you are protected from double taxation without checking both states’ reciprocity agreements.

Remote Workers

Working remotely for an out-of-state employer can trigger tax obligations in your home state even if your employer withholds for their state. Some states have “convenience of the employer” rules. Verify your state combination.

Part-Year Residents

Moving mid-year requires income allocation between states. Most states use a prorated share based on days or wages earned in each state.

Domicile vs. Residency: Why the Difference Matters

Domicile is where you intend to make your permanent home. Residency is where you physically live.

Some people are statutory residents in a state (present 183 days+) but domiciled elsewhere. When a state treats you as both a domiciliary and a statutory resident, you can face double taxation with limited relief.

If you split time between two states, document your primary location with objective evidence: voter registration, driver’s license, primary physician, tax filings, and property valuations.

State Tax and Investment Income

Income Type Common State Treatment
Qualified dividends Taxed as ordinary income in most states
Long-term capital gains Taxed at ordinary income rate in most states
Muni bond interest Exempt in issuing state; taxable in others
Federal bond interest Often exempt at state level

High-investment-income households in high-rate states benefit from municipal bonds, tax-deferred accounts, and tax-managed funds.

Year-End State Tax Moves

Actions that can lower state tax before December 31:

  • Accelerate deductions into current year in high-deduction-value states.
  • Harvest capital losses to offset any state-level capital gains treatment.
  • Max 529 contributions if your state offers a deduction for in-state plans.
  • Review any employer stock or bonus timing if near a bracket boundary.

High-Income State Tax Strategy Checklist

  • Know your effective state marginal rate on next dollar of income.
  • Check whether your state taxes retirement distributions and Social Security.
  • Review capital gains treatment (many states add gains to ordinary income fully).
  • Evaluate relocation economics if state rate is above 7% and life allows flexibility.
  • If you moved mid-year, confirm domicile status was properly established.
  • For remote workers: verify employer withholding state matches your home state.

Scenario Planning

Scenario A: High earner considering California → Texas move $250,000 income in CA saves $20,000+ annually moving to TX. Weigh against property taxes, home price differences, family and career impact.

Scenario B: Remote worker moves from NY to FL for employer in NY New York’s convenience of the employer doctrine may still require NY tax filing. NY residency establishment must be clean.

Scenario C: Retiree in MN (taxes Social Security) vs FL Retiree with $80,000 Social Security + $40,000 pension may save $4,000–$8,000/year by relocating to a retirement-friendly state.

State-specific guides


See parent hub: Taxes

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

Jane Smith
Reviewed by Jane Smith

Jane Smith is an expert reviewer with over 10 years of experience in retirement income planning, tax-aware portfolio strategy, and household cash-flow optimization.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy