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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Alaska VS COUNTRY B California

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for Alaska and California in 2026.

OVERVIEW
Alaska and California present one of the most dramatic contrasts in the American tax landscape: not only does Alaska have no income tax while California has the highest in the nation, but Alaska is the only state in the US that actually pays its residents an annual dividend. The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) distributes a share of the state's oil revenues to every eligible Alaska resident — approximately $1,702 per person in 2024. A family of four receives approximately $6,808/year just for living in Alaska. California, by contrast, charges residents 1–13.3% in state income tax, with capital gains taxed at the same progressive rates as ordinary income. At $100,000 income, a California resident pays approximately $4,241 in state income tax while an Alaska resident pays $0 and receives $1,702. That's a swing of approximately $5,943 per person, per year, before accounting for Alaska's lower sales taxes. The trade-offs are real: Alaska has no state sales tax but many municipalities levy local sales taxes; property taxes average 0.98%; and Alaska's remote location, extreme climate, and high cost of goods in rural areas are significant lifestyle considerations. But for high earners, retirees with investment income, and remote workers who value outdoor lifestyle over urban density, Alaska's combination of no income tax and an annual government dividend is unlike anything California can offer.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
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COUNTRY A
Alaska
TAX RATE
0%
No Income Tax — State Pays Residents the Permanent Fund Dividend
No income tax; no state sales tax (local sales taxes vary by municipality); property tax ~0.98% average; Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) pays residents ~$1,702/person annually from the $77.5B oil fund; no estate tax; no capital gains tax
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COUNTRY B
California
TAX RATE
1–13.3%
Highest State Income Tax in the US
10 progressive brackets from 1% to 13.3% (#1 highest in US); 1% Mental Health Services surtax on income over $1M; effective property tax ~0.74% (Prop 13 limited); capital gains taxed as ordinary income; 9% combined sales tax average; no state estate tax
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from CaliforniaAlaska at Annual Alaska advantage vs California: income tax saving ($4,241+) plus PFD dividend ($1,702) at $100K income
$5,900–$45,700+ per person
That's $492–$3,808/month including PFD (at $100K–$500K income) back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🐻 AK TAX
🌴 CA TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
$50,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$1,960 property (0.98% × $200K home); $0 state sales tax (local varies ~1-5%) = net tax position improved by PFD
~$1,500 income tax (CA ~3% effective at $50K); ~$1,850 property (0.74% × $250K home); ~$1,800 sales (9% × $20K spending) = ~$5,150 total
AK saves ~$1,500/yr in income tax + receives $1,702 PFD = ~$3,202 annual advantage per person at $50K
$32,020
$100,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$2,940 property (0.98% × $300K home); ~$900 local sales (est. 3% × $30K in Anchorage) = ~$3,840 total outgoing, plus $1,702 PFD received
~$4,241 income tax (CA 4.2% effective); ~$3,700 property (0.74% × $500K home); ~$2,700 sales (9% × $30K) = ~$10,641 total
AK saves ~$4,241/yr in income tax + receives $1,702 PFD = ~$5,943 annual advantage per person at $100K
$59,430
$150,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$3,920 property (0.98% × $400K home); ~$1,200 local sales (est. Anchorage 3% × $40K) = ~$5,120 total outgoing
~$9,900 income tax (CA ~6.6% effective at $150K); ~$5,550 property (0.74% × $750K home); ~$3,600 sales (9% × $40K) = ~$19,050 total
AK saves ~$9,900/yr in income tax + $1,702 PFD = ~$11,602 per person annual advantage at $150K
$116,020
$250,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$4,900 property (0.98% × $500K home); ~$1,800 local sales (est. 3% × $60K) = ~$6,700 total outgoing
~$19,200 income tax (CA ~7.7% effective at $250K); ~$9,250 property (0.74% × $1.25M home); ~$5,400 sales (9% × $60K) = ~$33,850 total
AK saves ~$19,200/yr in income tax + $1,702 PFD = ~$20,902 per person annual advantage at $250K
$209,020
$500K capital gain
$0 state capital gains tax; +$1,702 PFD still received regardless of income
~$44,100 California state capital gains tax (CA taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%; ~8.8% effective rate on $500K gain)
AK saves ~$44,100 per $500K capital gain event vs California; plus annual $1,702 PFD
Depends on frequency of gain events; $1,702 PFD received annually regardless
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🐻

Alaska Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • No income tax — Alaska residents pay $0 state income tax on wages, salaries, investment income, capital gains, business income, and retirement distributions at any income level; California charges 1–13.3% on the same income
  • Permanent Fund Dividend — Alaska pays every eligible resident an annual dividend from oil revenues; the PFD was $1,702/person in 2024 (amount set annually by the legislature); a family of four receives approximately $6,808/year just for residing in Alaska; no other US state pays residents a dividend
  • No state sales tax — Alaska is one of five states with no state-level sales tax; however, many municipalities (Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau) levy local sales taxes ranging from 0% to 7.5%; the Alaska average combined rate is approximately 1.76% vs California's ~9%
  • No capital gains tax — Alaska residents pay $0 state tax on capital gains from stocks, real estate, cryptocurrency, and business sales; California taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%; a $500,000 gain saves approximately $44,100 in California tax
  • No estate tax — Alaska has no state estate tax; California also has no state estate tax; equal on this dimension, but Alaska's income tax advantage compounds wealth accumulation
− CONS
  • Extreme climate and isolation — Alaska's winters are severe and the state is geographically isolated from the contiguous US; Anchorage averages -5°F in January; many rural communities are accessible only by plane; very different from California's Mediterranean climate and urban density
  • High cost of goods — Shipping and logistics costs make consumer goods significantly more expensive in Alaska, particularly in remote areas; groceries and household items can cost 30–50% more than California averages in rural communities; Anchorage is more affordable but still elevated
  • Limited professional ecosystem — Alaska's economy concentrates in oil, fishing, tourism, and federal employment; career opportunities in technology, finance, entertainment, and advanced professional services are dramatically fewer than California
  • Higher property tax than California (Prop 13) — Alaska's ~0.98% effective rate exceeds California's Prop 13-limited 0.74% average; long-time California homeowners may pay even lower effective rates; new buyers in Alaska pay more per dollar of home value
🌴

California Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • World's most productive career ecosystem — California is home to Silicon Valley (Google, Apple, Meta, Nvidia), Hollywood, biotech (Genentech, Amgen), and the world's largest venture capital market; the economic opportunity premium for Californians is real and substantial
  • Mediterranean climate — California's climate (mild winters, abundant sunshine) is the primary reason most residents remain despite the highest income taxes in the US; 300+ sunny days per year in many areas; no winters to speak of in LA/San Diego
  • Low effective property tax (Prop 13) — Long-time California homeowners pay property taxes on assessed value at purchase, capped at 2% annual increases; many longtime owners pay under 0.5% effective rate; new buyers pay closer to 1%
  • No state estate tax — California has no state estate tax; equal to Alaska on this point; federal estate tax applies above ~$13.99M in both states
  • Social Security exempt — California does not tax Social Security income; Alaska also has no income tax so Social Security is completely exempt; both states are equal for Social Security recipients
− CONS
  • Highest state income tax in the US — California's 13.3% top rate is the highest marginal state income tax in the nation; at $250,000 income, approximately $19,200/year; at $500,000, approximately $38,000–$44,000; Alaska residents pay $0 and also receive $1,702 in PFD
  • Capital gains taxed as ordinary income — California taxes long-term capital gains at the same progressive rates as ordinary income, up to 13.3%; no preferential rate exists; Alaska charges $0 on capital gains; investors and business sellers face dramatically different outcomes
  • High combined sales tax — California's combined sales tax averages ~9% and applies broadly; Alaska has no state sales tax and an average combined rate of approximately 1.76%; a family spending $50,000/year on taxable goods saves approximately $3,620/year in sales tax by choosing Alaska
  • FTB residency exit complexity — California's Franchise Tax Board aggressively pursues high-income departures; establishing Alaska residency requires careful documentation of 'closest connections' changes; leaving California is complex for high earners with ongoing California business ties
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Alaska have an income tax?

No. Alaska has no state income tax. Residents pay $0 state tax on wages, salaries, investment income, capital gains, dividends, and retirement distributions. Alaska is also the only US state that pays its residents an annual dividend — the Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) — from oil revenues. In 2024, the PFD was approximately $1,702 per eligible resident.

What is the Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD)?

The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend is an annual payment made to every eligible Alaska resident from the state's $77.5 billion Permanent Fund, which accumulates oil revenue royalties. The amount is set annually by the Alaska Legislature and varies based on fund earnings and legislative appropriation. In 2024, the PFD was approximately $1,702 per person. A family of four residing in Alaska receives approximately $6,808/year. To be eligible, residents must have lived in Alaska for a full calendar year and intend to remain.

How much does an Alaskan save vs a Californian?

At $100,000 income: Alaska saves ~$4,241 in income tax plus receives a $1,702 PFD = ~$5,943 advantage per person. At $250,000: ~$20,902 per person. For a family of four at $250,000 combined income: approximately $83,608 per decade in income tax savings plus $68,080 in PFD over 10 years = ~$150,000+ cumulative advantage. For capital gains: each $500,000 gain saves ~$44,100 in California tax.

Does Alaska have a sales tax?

Alaska has no state-level sales tax, making it one of five US states without one. However, many Alaska municipalities (including Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Juneau) levy local sales taxes ranging from 0% to 7.5%. Alaska's combined average rate (state + local) is approximately 1.76% vs California's ~9%. In Anchorage specifically, sales tax is low (~0% in most of the city); in rural communities, rates vary more widely.

Is Alaska good for retirees from California?

Yes, particularly for retirees with investment income or capital gains. Alaska has no income tax on any income type, including Social Security, pension income, IRA withdrawals, and investment distributions. The PFD ($1,702+/year per person) effectively pays retirees to live there. California retirees with $200,000/year in investment income save approximately $15,000–$18,000/year in state income tax by relocating to Alaska. The trade-offs are climate (harsh) and isolation. Anchorage offers urban amenities; Juneau and Sitka offer coastal lifestyle. Many Californians establish Alaska residency but spend winters elsewhere (Alaska requires 183+ days in-state for PFD eligibility).

Does California have an income tax on capital gains?

Yes. California taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3% — the highest capital gains tax rate of any US state and one of the highest in the developed world. Unlike federal tax (which offers 0%, 15%, or 20% preferential long-term capital gains rates), California provides no reduced rate for long-term gains. An Alaska resident selling $500,000 in stock pays $0 state capital gains tax. The same sale in California generates approximately $44,100 in state tax plus any applicable federal tax.

How do property taxes compare between Alaska and California?

Alaska's effective property tax rate averages approximately 0.98% of market value. California's statewide effective average is approximately 0.74% — lower than Alaska's — primarily because of Proposition 13's assessment caps. However, Prop 13 benefits primarily long-time homeowners; new buyers in California pay taxes based on their purchase price at ~1%. In Anchorage (Alaska's largest city), property tax rates run approximately 1.17%. Property tax is one area where long-time California homeowners have a structural advantage over Alaska.