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13 States That Won’t Tax Your Retirement Distributions

Every penny from your 401(k), IRA, pension and Social Security counts


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Every cent counts for retirees, and for that reason, state taxes are about as welcome as a bear in a beehive. Although you shouldn’t base where you retire on taxes alone, they are an important consideration, especially if you’re going to live in a new state when you retire.

States get tax revenue from a number of sources. Some states, such as Alaska, South Dakota and Wyoming, sit on enough natural resources that their mineral rights sales enable them to keep most taxes extraordinarily low and skip income taxes altogether. Oil-rich Alaska, for example, has no taxes on income, estates or retirement benefits. In fact, residents get an annual payment from the state for their share of those oil riches. In 2023 that was $1,312 per citizen.

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No income tax

The federal government considers distributions from pensions, 401(k)s and traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs) as income — the same as it does the income you get from work. Eight states have no income tax whatsoever: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington and Wyoming. That means retirement income, including Social Security retirement benefits, remains untouched by the state taxman.

A ninth state, New Hampshire, also has no income tax, so it doesn’t tax retirement distributions. New Hampshire does, however, tax interest and dividends, although that will be phased out by 2025.

Four other states have income taxes but give retirees a break on pensions and retirement plan distributions.

  • Illinois, which has a 4.95 percent flat income tax, won’t tax distributions from most pensions and 401(k) plans, or from IRAs and Social Security payouts. Earnings from investments are taxable, however.
  • Mississippi has a maximum state tax of 5 percent. It doesn’t tax retirement distributions or Social Security benefits.
  • Pennsylvania has a 3.07 percent flat tax and doesn’t tax retirement plans or Social Security benefits.
  • Iowa, which has a maximum 5.7 percent income tax, doesn’t tax retirement plans or Social Security payouts for people 55 and older.

What about everyone else? Most states carve out some exemptions for retirement income. For example, in addition to the nine states with no income tax, 29 states don’t tax military retirement pay: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin. In Virginia, you won’t pay taxes on any of your military retirement pay — provided you’ve won the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Some states offer breaks on pensions but not distributions from defined contribution retirement plans such as 401(k)s or IRAs. Retirees in Alabama, which has a maximum 5 percent income tax, can generally deduct all pension income and partially deduct income from DC plans; that exemption, created by a 2022 state law, started out at $6,000 in the 2023 tax year and increases $6,000 a year until 2026, when it will be capped at $24,000. Hawaii has a steep top income tax but doesn’t tax pension distributions — at least the part that you didn’t contribute to. You’ll get taxed on your contributions and any investment gains from those contributions when you take withdrawals.

Other states limit how much retirement income is taxable. Arkansas, for example, exempts $6,000 of private or public employee retirement income, as well as all military and railroad retirement income. New York excludes $20,000 of annuity or retirement benefits for those 59½ or older, as well as government pension income from the U.S., New York State or New York localities.

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Yet other states limit taxes on retirement income based on the taxpayer’s age. South Carolina, for instance, will let taxpayers 65 and older subtract $10,000 from their public and private retirement income. Colorado ups that to $24,000.

Some states toss the taxpayer’s income into the equation. In Connecticut, for example, qualifying pension and annuity income is shielded from state income tax if you’re single and have an adjusted gross income of $75,000 or less.

Most states don’t tax Social Security benefits. Nine states do, to widely varying degrees: Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont and West Virginia.

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