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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Alaska VS COUNTRY B New York

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

OVERVIEW
Alaska is the only state in America that pays its residents a government dividend — and charges no income tax. New York City residents pay up to 14.776% in combined state and city income tax. The combination creates one of the largest state-to-state tax differentials anywhere in the US. At $100,000 income, an Alaska resident pays $0 state income tax and receives $1,702 in PFD, while a NYC resident pays $7,916 in combined income tax. That's a $9,618 per person annual advantage for the Alaskan. At $300,000, the NYC resident pays approximately $30,280/year in combined state and city income tax vs $0 in Alaska — plus the Alaskan collects another $1,702. For a family of four, Alaska's PFD alone delivers $6,808 per year. New York also imposes an estate tax above $6.94 million with a cliff effect that can dramatically increase liability for large estates. Alaska has no estate tax. For investors with capital gains, the contrast is equally stark: New York City taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 14.776% combined; Alaska charges $0. The trade-off is real: Alaska's climate is extreme, its geography is remote, and cost of goods in rural communities is high. But for high earners who can work remotely, the annual financial advantage of Alaska over New York City is among the largest of any state-to-state comparison in the US.
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 varies); property tax ~0.98% average; Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) ~$1,702/person annually; no estate tax; no capital gains tax
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COUNTRY B
New York
TAX RATE
4–10.9%
Progressive Income Tax — NYC Adds Up to 3.876% Surcharge
9 progressive state brackets 4–10.9%; NYC residents pay additional 3.078–3.876% = up to 14.776% combined; property tax ~1.73% statewide average; estate tax above $6.94M; 8.52% combined sales tax
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from New YorkAlaska at Annual Alaska advantage vs NYC: income tax saving + PFD dividend at $100K–$500K income
$9,600–$52,400+ per person
That's $800–$4,367/month including PFD (vs NYC residents) 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
🗽 NY 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 ~1-3%) = net tax position improved by PFD
~$2,150 NY state income tax; +~$1,540 NYC local = ~$3,690 combined income tax; ~$2,595 property (1.73% × $150K home); ~$1,704 sales (8.52% × $20K) = ~$7,989 total (NYC resident)
AK saves ~$3,690/yr in income tax + receives $1,702 PFD = ~$5,392 annual advantage per person at $50K vs NYC
$53,920
$100,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$2,940 property (0.98% × $300K home); ~$900 local sales (Anchorage est.) = ~$3,840 total outgoing
~$4,466 NY state income tax; +~$3,450 NYC local = ~$7,916 combined income tax; ~$5,190 property (1.73% × $300K home); ~$2,556 sales (8.52% × $30K) = ~$15,662 total (NYC resident)
AK saves ~$7,916/yr in income tax + receives $1,702 PFD = ~$9,618 annual advantage per person at $100K vs NYC
$96,180
$200,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$3,920 property (0.98% × $400K home); ~$1,200 local sales = ~$5,120 total outgoing
~$12,800 NY state income tax (~6.4% effective); +~$7,440 NYC local = ~$20,240 combined income tax; ~$8,650 property (1.73% × $500K home); ~$4,260 sales = ~$33,150 total (NYC resident)
AK saves ~$20,240/yr in income tax + $1,702 PFD = ~$21,942 annual advantage per person at $200K vs NYC
$219,420
$300,000
$0 income tax; +$1,702 PFD received; ~$4,900 property (0.98% × $500K home); ~$1,800 local sales = ~$6,700 total outgoing
~$19,000 NY state income tax (~6.33% effective); +~$11,280 NYC local = ~$30,280 combined income tax; ~$10,380 property (1.73% × $600K home); ~$5,112 sales = ~$45,772 total (NYC resident)
AK saves ~$30,280/yr in income tax + $1,702 PFD = ~$31,982 annual advantage per person at $300K vs NYC
$319,820
$500K capital gain
$0 state capital gains tax; +$1,702 PFD still received regardless of income level
~$31,300 NY state capital gains tax (taxed as ordinary income at up to 9.65%); +~$19,380 NYC surcharge = ~$50,680 combined state+city capital gains tax
AK saves ~$50,680 per $500K capital gain event vs NYC resident; plus annual $1,702 PFD
Depends on frequency of gain events; $1,702 PFD received every year 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; NYC residents pay up to 14.776% combined on the same income
  • Permanent Fund Dividend — Alaska pays every eligible resident an annual cash dividend from oil revenues; approximately $1,702/person in 2024; a family of four receives approximately $6,808/year for residing in Alaska; no other US state pays its residents an annual dividend
  • No capital gains tax — Alaska residents pay $0 state tax on capital gains; NYC residents pay up to 14.776% combined on the same gains; a $500,000 gain saves approximately $50,680 in New York City taxes
  • No estate tax — Alaska has no state estate tax; New York imposes estate tax on estates above $6.94M (2026) at rates up to 16% with a cliff effect; significant advantage for accumulated wealth
  • No state sales tax — Alaska has no state-level sales tax (local taxes apply in many municipalities, averaging ~1.76% statewide); New York's combined average is 8.52%
− CONS
  • Extreme climate and remote location — Alaska's winters are severe and the state is geographically isolated; Anchorage averages -5°F in January; many communities accessible only by air; very different from New York City's density and 24-hour urban infrastructure
  • High cost of goods in rural areas — shipping logistics make consumer goods significantly more expensive outside Anchorage; rural Alaska grocery costs can exceed New York City prices; Anchorage is more competitive but still elevated for some categories
  • Limited professional opportunities — Alaska's economy focuses on oil, fishing, tourism, and federal employment; professional career opportunities in finance, law, media, and technology are dramatically fewer than New York City
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New York Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Financial capital of the world — New York City concentrates Wall Street, private equity, hedge funds, investment banking, and global asset management; career proximity to these industries is a real economic argument for accepting 14.776% combined income tax
  • Cultural and professional infrastructure — NYC's museums, Broadway, international finance, media, fashion, and law create a professional and lifestyle density that Alaska cannot match; the 'NYC premium' is real for certain careers
  • Upstate New York affordability — Buffalo, Rochester, and Albany offer very affordable housing and moderate income tax (4–6.85% state only, no city surcharge); upstate residents pay significantly less than NYC residents
− CONS
  • Second-highest combined income tax in the US — NYC residents face up to 14.776% combined; at $200,000 income, approximately $20,240/year; at $300,000, approximately $30,280; Alaska residents pay $0 and receive $1,702 in PFD
  • Capital gains taxed as ordinary income — New York taxes capital gains at full rates up to 10.9% state + 3.876% NYC surcharge; no preferential rates; Alaska charges $0
  • Estate tax with cliff effect — New York imposes estate tax above $6.94M with a cliff provision; estates exceeding 105% of the exemption pay tax on the entire value; Alaska has no estate tax
  • High combined sales tax — New York's 8.52% combined average applies broadly; Alaska has no state sales tax (local only, averaging ~1.76%)
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Alaska have an income tax?

No. Alaska has no state income tax of any kind. Residents pay $0 state tax on wages, investment income, capital gains, dividends, and retirement distributions. Additionally, Alaska is the only state in the US that pays residents an annual dividend — the Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) — approximately $1,702/person in 2024. Combined, Alaska residents have a significant financial advantage over New York City residents who face up to 14.776% combined state + city income tax.

How much does an Alaska resident save vs a NYC resident per year?

At $100,000 income: ~$7,916 saved in income tax + $1,702 PFD received = ~$9,618/person/year. At $200,000: ~$21,942/person/year. At $300,000: ~$31,982/person/year. For a family of four at $200,000 combined income, the cumulative advantage over 10 years exceeds $219,000 in income tax savings plus $68,080 in PFD payments = approximately $287,000 total over a decade.

What is the Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend and who qualifies?

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 earns returns on invested oil revenues. In 2024, the PFD was approximately $1,702 per person. To qualify: you must be an Alaska resident for the full prior calendar year, intend to remain in Alaska indefinitely, be physically present in Alaska for the required period, and have not been convicted of certain felonies. The amount varies annually based on fund earnings and legislative appropriation.

Is it worth moving from New York City to Alaska for taxes?

For high earners who can work remotely, the financial case is compelling: at $200,000 income, the income tax + PFD advantage is approximately $21,942/year, or $219,000 over a decade. The trade-offs are significant — Alaska's climate, isolation, cost of goods, and limited urban amenities are the opposite of New York City. Many Alaska movers compromise: establish Alaska residency, spend summers in Alaska (qualifying for PFD), and travel during winter. Consult a tax attorney on residency requirements and New York's potential claims on income before making the move.

Does New York tax capital gains?

Yes. New York taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 10.9% state rate. NYC residents pay an additional 3.876% surcharge, bringing combined capital gains taxation to up to 14.776%. There is no preferential rate for long-term capital gains in New York. A NYC resident who sells $500,000 in stock pays approximately $50,680 in combined state + city tax. An Alaska resident in the same scenario pays $0 state capital gains tax.

How do property taxes compare between Alaska and New York?

Alaska's effective property tax rate averages approximately 0.98% of market value. New York's statewide average is approximately 1.73%. However, New York City's property tax system is complex — effective rates vary widely by property type and borough. Manhattan residential co-ops and condos often have very low effective rates due to assessment practices, while Queens and Brooklyn residential properties can exceed 1.5%. NYC suburban counties (Westchester, Nassau) often exceed 2%. For direct comparison, Alaska's 0.98% statewide average is lower than most New York metro area rates.

Does Alaska have a sales tax?

Alaska has no state-level sales tax. However, many municipalities levy local sales taxes: Juneau charges 5%, Sitka 6%, some rural communities up to 7.5%. Anchorage has no general sales tax. Alaska's combined average (state + local) is approximately 1.76% vs New York's 8.52%. A family spending $40,000/year on taxable goods saves approximately $2,704/year in sales tax by choosing Alaska over New York.