14 states use flat tax (2.5-5.8%), 27 states use progressive tax (1-13.3%), and 9 states have no income tax. Which system saves you more depends on your income level.
Fourteen US states use flat income tax (Arizona 2.5% to Idaho 5.8%) where everyone pays the same rate. Twenty-seven states use progressive tax (California 1-13.3%) where rates increase with income. Nine states have no income tax. High earners save the most in low-rate flat tax states like Arizona ($34,500/year savings vs California at $500K income). Low earners save in progressive states with 0% bottom brackets ($980/year savings California vs Illinois at $40K). No-income-tax states beat both systems for most earners if you can handle higher sales/property taxes.
In 2026, 14 US states use flat income tax (single rate for all earners), 27 states use progressive tax (rates increase with income), and 9 states have no income tax. The system that saves you money depends entirely on your income level and the specific state's rates.
The fundamental difference:
Key insight: Low-rate flat tax states (Arizona 2.5%, Indiana 3.05%, Pennsylvania 3.07%) beat progressive states for nearly all earners. High-rate flat tax states (Idaho 5.8%, Georgia 5.39%, Massachusetts 5%) lose to progressive states for low earners. The rate matters more than the system.
Fourteen states use flat income tax: Arizona (2.5%), Colorado (4.4%), Georgia (5.39%), Idaho (5.8%), Illinois (4.95%), Indiana (3.05%), Kentucky (4.5%), Louisiana (3%), Massachusetts (5% + 4% millionaire surtax), Michigan (4.25%), Mississippi (4.7%), North Carolina (4.5%), Pennsylvania (3.07%), and Utah (4.65%). Rates range from Arizona's 2.5% (lowest in the nation) to Idaho's 5.8% (highest flat tax).
Twenty-seven states use progressive tax with graduated brackets: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and DC. California has the highest top rate at 13.3%, followed by Hawaii (11%) and New York (10.9%).
It depends on your income and the specific rates. Low-rate flat tax states (Arizona 2.5%, Indiana 3.05%) beat progressive states for nearly all earners. High-rate flat tax states (Idaho 5.8%, Georgia 5.39%) lose to progressive states for low earners because progressive brackets charge 0-2% on the first $20-30K earned while flat taxes charge the full rate on every dollar. At $40K income, California progressive (2% effective) saves $1,157/year vs Illinois flat 4.95%. At $200K, Arizona flat 2.5% saves $8,685/year vs California progressive 6.84%.
Nine states have no income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire (ended interest/dividend tax in 2024), South Dakota, Tennessee (ended Hall Tax in 2021), Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. These states charge 0% on wages, salaries, business income, and capital gains. They offset lost revenue with higher sales taxes (Texas 8.2%, Tennessee 9.55%) or property taxes (Texas 1.6% vs national 0.99% avg), or natural resource revenue (Alaska oil, Wyoming minerals).
Low earners (under $50K) usually pay less in progressive tax states with 0% bottom brackets. California charges 1% on the first $10,412 and 2% on $10,413-$24,684, resulting in $823 tax at $40K income (2.06% effective). Illinois flat tax charges 4.95% on every dollar = $1,980 at $40K (4.95% effective). Low earners save $1,157/year in California. However, low-rate flat tax states like Arizona (2.5% = $1,000 at $40K) beat progressive states. The rate matters more than the system.
High earners ($200K+) pay significantly less in low-rate flat tax states. At $500K income: Arizona flat 2.5% = $12,500 vs California progressive 13.3% top bracket = $47,823 (save $35,323/year). Even moderate flat tax states beat high progressive states—Colorado 4.4% = $22,000 vs California $47,823 (save $25,823). The exception: high-rate flat tax states like Idaho (5.8%) offer no benefit over progressive states until income reaches $300K+.
Not all flat taxes are low. Idaho's 5.8% flat rate is higher than many progressive states' top rates (North Dakota 2.9%, Iowa 4.4%, Ohio 3.75%). Idaho switched from a 6% progressive system to 5.8% flat in 2023, slightly lowering the top rate but eliminating lower brackets that protected low earners. High flat tax rates hurt low earners who would have paid 0-3% in the bottom brackets of a progressive system. Idaho only benefits high earners who would have hit the old 6% top bracket.
Arizona (2.5% flat) is the best flat tax state for high earners, offering the nation's lowest state income tax rate. At $500K income: Arizona charges $12,500 vs Indiana $15,250 (3.05%), Pennsylvania $15,350 (3.07%), or Colorado $22,000 (4.4%). For maximum savings, the 9 no-income-tax states (Florida, Texas, Nevada, Washington, Tennessee, Wyoming, South Dakota, Alaska, New Hampshire) beat Arizona by charging $0. But Arizona offers better weather/lifestyle than most no-tax states while still delivering $35,000+/year savings vs California.
Yes, states can switch systems through legislation or constitutional amendment. Recent changes: Louisiana switched from progressive (2-6%) to flat (3%) in 2024, Mississippi adopted flat 4.7% in 2024, North Carolina phased from progressive to flat 4.5% by 2014. Some states have constitutional protections—Illinois requires a constitutional amendment (voter-approved) to switch from flat to progressive. Colorado's TABOR amendment requires voter approval for any tax increases. Switching from progressive to flat typically requires supermajority votes or constitutional amendments in most states.
Not always. Some flat tax states offset low income tax with high property or sales taxes. Illinois has 4.95% flat income tax but 2.08% property tax (2nd highest nationally)—total burden ranks 2nd worst. Pennsylvania has 3.07% flat income tax but 1.50% property tax. Compare to Florida (0% income, 0.86% property, 7.01% sales) or Arizona (2.5% income, 0.51% property, 8% sales). At $120K income with $300K home, Illinois total tax = $16,868 (14.1%) vs Florida $6,786 (5.7%). Always check total burden: income + property + sales taxes.
Massachusetts charges a 5% flat tax on all income, but voters approved a 4% surtax on income over $1 million (effective 2023). This makes Massachusetts technically flat for most people (under $1M income) but progressive at the top. At $900K income: pay 5% = $45,000. At $1.5M income: pay 5% on first $1M ($50,000) + 9% on $500K above $1M ($45,000) = $95,000 total (6.3% effective). The surtax funds education and transportation. High earners now pay 9% effective vs 5% before—higher than many progressive states.
Depends on your income and which specific states you're comparing. If earning $150K+ and comparing Arizona (2.5%) vs California (9.3% bracket), move to Arizona and save $10,000+/year. If earning under $50K and comparing Illinois (4.95%) vs California (1-2% brackets), stay in California and save $1,000+/year. But no-income-tax states (Florida, Texas, Nevada, Tennessee) beat both systems for most earners. Calculate total tax burden (income + property + sales + cost of living) before deciding. A $10K tax savings means nothing if your rent doubles.
Last Updated: March 2026