US Tax Tools

Best States to Move to From Alabama

Alabama uses 2% – 5%, so the value of a move depends on more than just the headline rate. Some states will still leave you with a meaningfully lower total tax bill than Alabama. Use the ranking tool below to compare all 50 states and see how much you could save based on your actual income and filing status.

State Tax Ranking
On $100,000 income, Alaska ranks #1 with the lowest total tax while Oregon has the highest. Your state (Alabama) ranks #34.
Alaska could save you $4,173/yearExplore moving to Alaska
Compare two specific states?State Tax Comparison
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Most Tax Savings

Alaska

Save $4,173/yr

Your Tax Burden

$4,173

4.17% effective state rate

Federal + FICA

$21,099

Same across all states

At your income of $100,000, Alabama charges $4,173 in state income tax (4.17% effective rate).

Best option: Alaska saves you $4,173/year — With no state income tax, your take-home pay in Alaska is higher than most states. However, the cost of living — particularly housing, food, and energy — is significantly above the national average, which can offset the tax savings.

Highest tax: Oregon would cost you $2,914/year more than Alabama.

You save $449 vs 2024
All 50 States + DC Ranked
#StateState TaxEff. RateTotal TaxTake-HomeAnnual Savings
1Alaska$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
2Florida$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
3Nevada$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
4New Hampshire$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
5South Dakota$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
6Tennessee$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
7Texas$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
8Washington$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
9Wyoming$00.00%$21,099$78,901+$4,173
10North Dakota$7710.77%$21,870$78,130+$3,402
11Ohio$1,6011.60%$22,700$77,301+$2,572
12Arizona$2,1062.11%$23,205$76,795+$2,066
13Indiana$2,5702.57%$23,669$76,331+$1,603
14Pennsylvania$2,5862.59%$23,685$76,315+$1,586
15Louisiana$2,9993.00%$24,098$75,902+$1,173
16Arkansas$3,2083.21%$24,307$75,693+$964
17New Jersey$3,2403.24%$24,339$75,661+$932
18Rhode Island$3,2673.27%$24,366$75,634+$905
19Kentucky$3,3703.37%$24,469$75,531+$803
20West Virginia$3,4253.43%$24,524$75,476+$747
21Mississippi$3,4903.49%$24,589$75,411+$683
22Michigan$3,5813.58%$24,680$75,320+$592
23Colorado$3,7073.71%$24,806$75,194+$466
24North Carolina$3,7913.79%$24,890$75,110+$381
25Oklahoma$3,8133.81%$24,912$75,088+$359
26New Mexico$3,8493.85%$24,948$75,052+$324
27Connecticut$3,8843.88%$24,983$75,017+$289
28Utah$3,9183.92%$25,017$74,983+$255
29Missouri$3,9323.93%$25,031$74,969+$241
30Maryland$3,9493.95%$25,048$74,952+$223
31Wisconsin$4,0794.08%$25,178$74,822+$94
32Vermont$4,0854.08%$25,184$74,816+$88
33Illinois$4,1704.17%$25,269$74,731+$2
34AlabamaYour state$4,1734.17%$25,272$74,729
35Massachusetts$4,2134.21%$25,312$74,689-$40
36Nebraska$4,2524.25%$25,351$74,649-$80
37Kansas$4,3454.34%$25,444$74,556-$172
38California$4,3784.38%$25,477$74,523-$205
39Georgia$4,3944.39%$25,493$74,507-$221
40Iowa$4,5034.50%$25,602$74,398-$330
41Delaware$4,5444.54%$25,643$74,357-$372
42Virginia$4,5874.59%$25,686$74,314-$414
43South Carolina$4,6994.70%$25,798$74,202-$526
44Montana$4,7254.72%$25,824$74,176-$552
45New York$4,7294.73%$25,828$74,172-$557
46Idaho$4,8874.89%$25,986$74,015-$714
47Minnesota$5,2935.29%$26,392$73,608-$1,120
48Maine$5,5595.56%$26,658$73,342-$1,386
49District of Columbia$5,5615.56%$26,660$73,340-$1,389
50Hawaii$6,2046.20%$27,303$72,697-$2,032
51Oregon$7,0877.09%$28,186$71,814-$2,914

About Taxes in Alabama

This state uses a progressive income tax system with multiple brackets, similar to the federal system. Only the income within each bracket is taxed at that rate, so your effective state rate is lower than the top bracket. Tax planning strategies include maximizing pre-tax retirement contributions to reduce state-taxable income.

Tip: In a progressive-bracket state, pre-tax 401(k) and HSA contributions reduce your state tax bill along with federal tax. If you are near a bracket boundary, an additional contribution can drop you into a lower state bracket.

What to Consider When Moving

Tax residency rules: Most states tax you as a resident for the entire year if you live there for more than 183 days. Moving mid-year may require filing part-year returns in both states.

Remote work complication: Some states, notably New York, use "convenience of the employer" rules. If you move but keep an employer in a higher-tax state, part of your income may still be sourced there.

Total cost matters: A no-income-tax state saves you the full state tax amount, but higher property taxes (Texas), sales taxes (Tennessee, Washington), or cost of living can erode the savings. Compare total out-of-pocket, not just income tax.

Frequently asked questions

Which state has the lowest taxes if I move from Alabama?

States with no income tax — Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming — often offer the biggest income tax savings compared to Alabama. Use the ranking tool above with your actual income and filing status to see the exact best-fit destination for you.

How much would I save moving from Alabama to Texas or Florida?

Because Texas and Florida have no state income tax, your savings can equal most or all of your Alabama state income tax bill. The exact amount depends on your income, filing status, spending, and home value.

What is Alabama's income tax rate?

Alabama has 2% – 5%, with a top marginal rate of 5%. Your effective rate depends on income, filing status, deductions, and credits.

Do all states have income tax?

No. Nine states have no individual income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming.

Should I consider other taxes when comparing states?

Yes. Income tax is only one part of your total tax burden. Property taxes, sales taxes, housing costs, and local taxes can materially change whether a move actually saves money.

Does this calculator include federal taxes?

The ranking focuses on state-to-state tax differences. Federal income tax and FICA are broadly similar no matter where you live, so the ranking is most useful for isolating the state-level part of the move decision.

Sources

Related Calculators

Last updated April 27, 2026 Tax year 2025-26

Data sources: IRS (irs.gov), Social Security Administration

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

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