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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A South Dakota VS COUNTRY B California

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

OVERVIEW
South Dakota and California sit at opposite ends of the American tax spectrum. South Dakota has no income tax — prohibited in the state constitution since 1889 — and ranks as the nation's premier trust domicile with over $600 billion in trust assets. California has the highest top state income tax rate in the United States at 13.3% (12.3% base plus a 1% Mental Health Services surtax on incomes over $1 million), plus 10 progressive brackets below that. At $100,000 income, a California resident pays approximately $4,241 in state income tax while a South Dakota resident pays $0. At $250,000, the difference exceeds $19,000 per year. At $500,000, California's capital gains tax — which taxes investment gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3% — costs approximately $44,000+ on a $500,000 gain event. South Dakota's property taxes (averaging 1.14%) are notably higher than California's (0.74% effective under Prop 13 restrictions), which is one area where California's constitutional limits keep taxes low. For high earners, business owners, trust creators, and investors who can work remotely, South Dakota's combination of zero income tax, zero capital gains tax, and best-in-class trust law makes it one of the most financially advantageous state relocations from California.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🦅
COUNTRY A
South Dakota
TAX RATE
0%
No Income Tax — #1 US Trust Domicile
No income tax (constitutionally prohibited since 1889); 4.2% state sales tax (~6.4% combined with local); property tax ~1.14% average; no estate or inheritance tax; nation's leading trust and asset protection jurisdiction
🌴
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; property tax ~0.74% effective (Prop 13 limited); no state estate tax; 9% combined sales tax average
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from CaliforniaSouth Dakota at Annual South Dakota income tax saving vs California (at $100K–$500K income)
$4,200–$44,000+
That's $350–$3,667/month 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
🦅 SD TAX
🌴 CA TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
$50,000
$0 income tax; ~$1,425 property (1.14% × $125K home); ~$1,280 sales (6.4% × $20K spending) = ~$2,705 total
~$1,500 income tax (CA ~3% effective at $50K); ~$1,850 property (0.74% × $250K home); ~$1,800 sales (9% × $20K) = ~$5,150 total
SD saves ~$1,500/yr in income tax at $50K income; CA property tax may differ based on assessed value under Prop 13
$15,000
$100,000
$0 income tax; ~$2,280 property (1.14% × $200K home); ~$1,920 sales (6.4% × $30K) = ~$4,200 total
~$4,241 income tax (CA 4.2% effective, from CA FTB); ~$3,700 property (0.74% × $500K home); ~$2,700 sales (9% × $30K) = ~$10,641 total
SD saves ~$4,241/yr in income tax at $100K; total combined difference ~$6,441/yr
$64,410
$150,000
$0 income tax; ~$3,420 property (1.14% × $300K home); ~$2,560 sales (6.4% × $40K) = ~$5,980 total
~$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
SD saves ~$9,900/yr in income tax at $150K; total combined ~$13,070/yr
$130,700
$250,000
$0 income tax; ~$5,700 property (1.14% × $500K home); ~$3,840 sales (6.4% × $60K) = ~$9,540 total
~$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
SD saves ~$19,200/yr in income tax at $250K; total combined ~$24,310/yr
$243,100
$500K capital gain
$0 state capital gains tax (South Dakota has no income or capital gains tax)
~$44,100 California state capital gains tax (CA taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3%; effective rate ~8.8% on $500K gain after standard deduction)
SD saves ~$44,100 on each $500K capital gain event vs California
Depends on frequency of gain events
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South Dakota Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • No income tax — South Dakota has constitutionally prohibited an income tax since achieving statehood in 1889; residents pay $0 state income tax on wages, salaries, business income, investment income, and retirement distributions at any income level
  • No capital gains tax — South Dakota residents pay $0 state capital gains tax; California taxes capital gains as ordinary income at up to 13.3% (the highest capital gains rate of any US state); a $500,000 gain costs approximately $44,100 in California vs $0 in South Dakota
  • Nation's #1 trust domicile — South Dakota has the most sophisticated trust laws in the US: no rule against perpetuities (trusts can last indefinitely), strong Domestic Asset Protection Trust (DAPT) statutes, directed trust legislation, and privacy laws; over $600 billion in trust assets are domiciled in South Dakota
  • No estate or inheritance tax — South Dakota has neither an estate tax nor an inheritance tax; California also has no state estate tax, making this a tie — but South Dakota's trust advantages for multigenerational wealth transfer far exceed California's
  • Strong LLC and business protections — South Dakota offers strong charging order protections, low fees, and minimal disclosure requirements for LLCs; popular for business formation alongside Wyoming
  • Low cost of living — South Dakota's housing, food, and general cost of living are substantially below California's; median home prices in Sioux Falls run $300,000–$400,000 vs $700,000–$1.2M+ in California's major metros
− CONS
  • Higher property tax than California — South Dakota averages ~1.14% effective property tax, while California's Prop 13 limits create an average of ~0.74%; a $400,000 home costs ~$4,560/yr in property tax in South Dakota vs ~$2,960 in California
  • Higher sales tax than California on a percentage basis — South Dakota's combined sales tax (~6.4%) is lower than California's (~9%) but South Dakota applies sales tax to more categories including food; California exempts groceries from sales tax
  • Limited urban amenities — South Dakota lacks the density, cultural infrastructure, healthcare specialization, and professional networking of California's major metros; significant lifestyle trade-off for urban professionals
  • Smaller economy and job market — South Dakota's economy is agricultural and financial services focused; job opportunities in tech, entertainment, media, and advanced professional services are dramatically fewer than California
🌴

California Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Economic powerhouse — California is the world's 5th-largest economy; Silicon Valley, Hollywood, biotech, and finance provide unparalleled career opportunities; proximity to the largest technology ecosystem in the world
  • Lower effective property tax (Prop 13 benefit) — California's Proposition 13 limits property tax to 1% of assessed value with a maximum 2% annual increase; long-time homeowners pay very low effective rates on appreciated property; effective statewide average is ~0.74%
  • Climate and lifestyle — California's Mediterranean climate, national parks, beaches, mountains, and cultural diversity offer exceptional quality of life; weather is the most commonly cited reason California residents stay despite high taxes
  • No state estate tax — California abolished its estate tax and has not reinstated it; estates of any size pay $0 California state estate tax (federal estate tax still applies above the federal exemption of ~$13.99M in 2026)
  • Income tax exemption for Social Security — California does not tax Social Security income at the state level; retirees receiving Social Security pay $0 California state tax on that income (other retirement income is still taxed)
− CONS
  • Highest state income tax in the US — California's top rate of 13.3% (12.3% base + 1% Mental Health surtax on $1M+) is the highest marginal state income tax rate in the nation; at $250,000 income, effective California state tax is approximately $19,200 vs $0 in South Dakota
  • Capital gains taxed as ordinary income — California taxes capital gains as regular income at up to 13.3%, unlike the federal preferential rates; no reduced rate for long-term gains; a South Dakota resident in the same situation pays $0 state capital gains tax
  • Payroll tax with no income cap — California's 1.1% State Disability Insurance (SDI) tax applies to all wages with no wage ceiling (post-2024 change); adds significant cost for high earners compared to states with capped payroll taxes
  • Very high cost of living — California median home prices ($750,000+ statewide) and rents ($2,500–$5,000+/month in major metros) combine with high income tax to create one of the most expensive places to live in the US
  • Franchise Tax Board compliance complexity — California aggressively audits residents who claim to have moved out of state; 'safe harbour' residency rules require spending fewer than 546 days in California in any two-year period; leaving California requires meticulous documentation
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does South Dakota have an income tax?

No. South Dakota's state constitution has prohibited a personal income tax since statehood in 1889. The legislature cannot impose one without a constitutional amendment. South Dakota residents pay $0 state income tax on wages, salaries, investment income, business pass-through income, capital gains, and retirement distributions. South Dakota funds government through sales taxes, property taxes, and gaming revenues.

What is California's income tax rate in 2026?

California has 10 progressive income tax brackets ranging from 1% to 13.3% in 2026. The 13.3% top rate (12.3% base + 1% Mental Health Services surtax) applies to income above $1,000,000. The 9.3% bracket (the most common top bracket for high earners not yet at $1M) applies to income from approximately $72,724 to $371,479. At $100,000 income, California residents pay approximately $4,241 in state income tax (4.2% effective rate), according to the California FTB.

How much do you save on taxes by moving from California to South Dakota?

At $100,000 income: approximately $4,241/year in income tax savings. At $250,000: approximately $19,200/year. At $500,000: approximately $38,000–$44,000/year depending on income composition. For investors with capital gains, South Dakota saves 13.3% (California's rate) vs $0 on every dollar of gain. A $1 million real estate gain saves approximately $88,000–$100,000 in California tax by being a South Dakota resident. Important: California aggressively audits relocation claims; proper domicile establishment is essential.

How does California's Prop 13 affect property taxes?

California's Proposition 13 (1978) limits property tax to 1% of the assessed value at time of purchase, with a maximum 2% annual increase. This creates very low effective property taxes for long-time owners — some Californians pay property taxes based on values set decades ago. However, for new buyers at current prices, the effective rate is essentially the full 1%. The statewide effective average is approximately 0.74% of current market value. South Dakota has no similar limit and averages ~1.14% effective property tax.

Does California tax 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. California provides no preferential rate for long-term capital gains (unlike the federal government's 0%, 15%, or 20% rates). A California resident who sells $500,000 in stock pays approximately $44,000+ in state capital gains tax. A South Dakota resident pays $0 state capital gains tax on the same sale.

Why is South Dakota the best state for trusts?

South Dakota is widely considered the premier US trust jurisdiction due to several unique laws: (1) No rule against perpetuities — trusts can last forever (dynasty trusts); (2) Domestic Asset Protection Trust statutes allow self-settled trusts with strong creditor protection; (3) Directed trust legislation separates investment management from trustee administration; (4) Strong privacy protections with no public trust registries. Over $600 billion in trust assets are domiciled in South Dakota, attracting HNW families from California and nationwide who want sophisticated multigenerational wealth structures.

Is it hard to leave California for tax purposes?

California is one of the most aggressive states for auditing claimed departures. California's Franchise Tax Board (FTB) applies a 'safe harbour' rule: a California resident who leaves must spend fewer than 546 days in California over any consecutive two-year period to be considered a non-resident. California also uses a 'closest connections' test examining voter registration, driver's licence, bank accounts, professional licences, and social ties. Proper domicile establishment in South Dakota — new driver's licence, voter registration, bank accounts, and documented time in SD — is essential before filing as a non-resident.

Is South Dakota good for retirees from California?

Yes, particularly for retirees with investment income, capital gains, or large IRA distributions. Social Security, pension income, 401(k) withdrawals, and IRA distributions are all completely exempt from South Dakota state tax. California taxes these at up to 13.3% (excluding Social Security, which California doesn't tax). A retiree taking $150,000/year in IRA distributions saves approximately $9,900/year in South Dakota vs California. South Dakota's lower cost of living further stretches retirement assets. The main trade-off is climate — South Dakota winters are harsh.