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2026 State Tax Ranking: Biggest Movers

State income tax competitiveness has never been more dynamic. The Tax Foundation and other analysts track state tax climate annually, and for 2026 the rankings reflect a continued shift toward lower, flatter structures — particularly in the South and Midwest. Here is a comprehensive look at which states moved the most, which are falling behind, and what it all means for residents and mobile workers.

The 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Landscape

States compete for residents, businesses, and capital. Lower and simpler income taxes are a key lever in that competition. The national trend is clear: since 2021, more than 25 states have cut income tax rates, and several are in the process of phasing out income taxes entirely.

States With No Personal Income Tax (2026)

StateNotes
AlaskaNo income tax; relies on oil revenues and Permanent Fund dividends
FloridaNo income tax; strong property and sales tax base
NevadaNo income tax; gaming and tourism revenues dominant
New HampshireNo tax on wages; taxes investment income (phased out completely by 2025)
South DakotaNo income tax; conservative fiscal approach
TennesseeNo income tax on wages (dividends/interest tax fully eliminated in 2022)
TexasNo income tax; higher property taxes offset the advantage somewhat
WashingtonNo income tax; capital gains tax enacted (7% on gains over $250k)
WyomingNo income tax; mineral extraction revenues

Washington state’s capital gains tax (7% on long-term gains exceeding $250,000) makes it a partial exception — effective for investors, though still “no income tax” in the traditional wage sense.

Biggest Movers Up: States Improving Competitiveness

1. Iowa — From Top-10 High-Tax to Competitive Flat Tax

Change: Flat rate reduced to 3.8% (from 4.82% in 2025 and 8.53% as recently as 2022)

Iowa has made the most dramatic multi-year improvement of any state. Its transition from a nine-bracket graduated system with a top rate above 8% to a single flat rate at 3.8% represents a fundamental restructuring. For a household earning $100,000, Iowa now costs roughly $3,800 in state income taxes — compared to more than $8,000 just a few years ago.

The reform was funded by strong revenue growth and disciplined spending. Iowa now competes directly with neighboring Illinois (4.95% flat) and Wisconsin (graduated, up to 7.65%) for employers and residents.

2. North Carolina — Steady March Toward the Southeast’s Lowest Rate

Change: Flat rate reduced to 4.25% (from 4.5% in 2025)

North Carolina’s systematic reduction from a top rate above 5.25% in 2021 continues. Legislation on the books calls for further reductions contingent on revenue thresholds — potentially as low as 2.49% by the end of the decade. Combined with no estate tax and competitive business environment, North Carolina has become a top destination for corporate relocations and high-income remote workers.

3. Louisiana — Structural Overhaul Creates Significant Rate Drop

Change: New 3.0% flat rate replacing graduated brackets topping at 4.25%

Louisiana’s 2025-effective overhaul (applying fully to 2026 returns) eliminated its old three-bracket structure in favor of a flat 3.0% rate. The state broadened its tax base — eliminating some deductions — while dramatically cutting the rate. For most middle- and upper-income earners, the result is a net tax reduction.

Louisiana moves from the middle of the pack to one of the more competitive Southern states for income tax purposes.

4. Nebraska — Accelerated Rate Reduction

Change: Top rate reduced to 5.2% (from 5.84% in 2025)

Nebraska is following an aggressive glide path toward a target rate of 3.99%. The state’s economic growth and conservative fiscal management have allowed it to accelerate the timeline. At the current pace, Nebraska could reach its target rate by 2028–2029.

5. Indiana — Lower Flat Rate, Growing Divergence from Illinois

Change: Flat rate reduced to 2.9% (from 3.0% in 2025)

Indiana’s small but consistent reductions reflect a deliberate policy of maintaining one of the lowest flat income tax rates in the nation. Combined with its proximity to Chicago-area workers tired of Illinois’s 4.95% rate, Indiana continues to attract residents from across the state border.

Mid-Tier Movers: Meaningful but Moderate Changes

StateDirection2025 Rate2026 RateComment
MissouriDown4.8% top4.7% topIncremental graduated reform
OhioDown3.75% top3.5% topContinuing simplification
MississippiDown4.7%4.4%Path to eliminating income tax
GeorgiaDown5.39% flat5.19% flatPhased flat tax reduction
ArkansasDown4.4% top4.3% topContinuing relief for high earners

Biggest Movers Down: States Falling Behind Competitors

While many states are cutting, some are adding tax burdens or failing to compete with reforming neighbors.

California — Stable but Increasingly Isolated at the Top

California’s top marginal rate of 13.3% remains the highest personal income tax rate in the nation. While legislative proposals for an additional wealth surtax have not yet passed, California’s combination of high income taxes, a capital gains tax at ordinary income rates, and elevated property values in coastal areas continues to drive high-income migration to Nevada, Texas, Arizona, and Florida.

MetricCaliforniaTexasFlorida
Top income tax rate13.3%0%0%
Capital gains rate13.3% (ordinary)0%0%
State + local avg. tax burden~13.5%~8.6%~9.1%

Minnesota — No Reform in Sight

Minnesota’s top rate of 9.85% on income over $183,340 (single) puts it among the highest in the Midwest, standing in stark contrast to neighbor Iowa’s 3.8%. Minnesota has discussed but not enacted significant reform, and its budget situation makes near-term rate cuts unlikely.

New Jersey and New York — High Rates Remain

StateTop RateOn Income Over
New Jersey10.75%$1,000,000
New York10.9%$25,000,000
New York City (additional)3.876%All income

New York City residents face a combined state + city marginal rate approaching 14.8% at the highest income levels — comparable to California. The combination of high federal rates, state rates, and city rates creates all-in marginal rates above 50% for top earners in these jurisdictions.

Impact on Take-Home Pay: Interstate Comparison

For a remote worker earning $120,000 who can choose their state, the annual after-federal-tax state income tax differential is substantial:

State2026 State Tax (Approx.)Annual Difference vs. Florida
Florida$0
Indiana~$3,480-$3,480
Iowa~$4,560-$4,560
North Carolina~$5,100-$5,100
Georgia~$6,228-$6,228
Illinois~$5,940-$5,940
Minnesota~$7,584-$7,584
California~$10,272-$10,272
New York + NYC~$15,600+-$15,600+

Approximate, using simplified bracket application. Does not include local taxes except NYC estimate.

The Long View: Where State Tax Reform Is Heading

The trend toward flat, lower income taxes is driven by several forces:

  1. Revenue surpluses: Strong tax collections during 2021–2023 funded rate cuts without service reductions
  2. Remote work mobility: Workers who can live anywhere increasingly choose low-tax states
  3. Interstate competition: Once one state cuts, neighbors face pressure to follow
  4. Philosophical shift: A growing consensus that lower, flatter taxes are administratively simpler and more growth-friendly

States that fail to adapt face a slow erosion of their highest-earning taxpayer base — which concentrates their revenue risks on a shrinking population.

Key Takeaway

For 2026, the biggest winners in state tax competitiveness are Iowa, North Carolina, Louisiana, Nebraska, and Indiana — all of which delivered meaningful rate reductions. The no-income-tax states maintain their structural advantage for wage earners. If you have flexibility over where you live and work, the state tax differential has never been larger or more consequential. Use the state tax comparison tools to calculate your specific situation before making any major location decision.

state-tax no-income-tax state-comparison

Last updated March 22, 2026 Tax year 2025-26

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

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by USTax Tools Editorial Desk

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