Alabama's income tax system is one of the most distinctive in the United States. It uses three small brackets topped at 5% — brackets so narrow (the first kicks in at just $500 for single filers) that they have remained largely unchanged for decades. Yet two features make Alabama genuinely exceptional: a provision allowing taxpayers to deduct their federal income taxes from state taxable income (shared only with Louisiana until 2025), and one of the most comprehensive pension exemptions in the country — covering state, federal, military, and private pensions alike.
Pair that with the lowest effective property tax rate in the US (~0.41%) and full Social Security exemption, and Alabama emerges as a surprisingly competitive state for retirees — even with high sales taxes that run nearly 10% in major cities. This guide covers every major Alabama tax, walks through the math at $100,000 income, and compares Alabama to Florida and Tennessee for retirees and remote workers.
Alabama levies income tax using three brackets — but the bracket thresholds are remarkably low, reflecting rates that were set generations ago and have never been adjusted for inflation. For a single filer in 2026:
For married filing jointly (MFJ), the brackets double:
In practice, because the 5% bracket begins at just $3,000 (single) or $6,000 (MFJ), virtually every working Alabama resident effectively pays a near-flat 5% marginal rate on most of their income. The 2% and 4% brackets save only a tiny amount at the margin — just $10 + $100 = $110 for a single filer — before all additional income hits 5%.
Alabama's standard deduction phases based on income, unlike the federal standard deduction:
These are unusually small standard deductions compared to the federal system ($14,600 single in 2024), meaning Alabama's taxable income base is broader than many states.
Alabama also allows personal exemptions that reduce taxable income:
| Gross Income | Std Deduction | Exemption | Taxable Income | AL Tax | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $2,000 | $1,500 | $46,500 | $2,210 | 4.42% |
| $75,000 | $2,000 | $1,500 | $71,500 | $3,460 | 4.61% |
| $100,000 | $2,000 | $1,500 | $96,500 | $4,785 | 4.79% |
| $150,000 | $2,000 | $1,500 | $146,500 | $7,285 | 4.86% |
| $250,000 | $2,000 | $1,500 | $246,500 | $12,285 | 4.91% |
Estimates for single filer at $30,000+ income (using $2,000 standard deduction). Excludes federal income tax deduction — see the next section for how that changes the picture.
One of Alabama's most distinctive — and least-publicised — tax provisions is the ability to deduct federal income taxes paid from Alabama taxable income. This is a provision shared historically only with Louisiana (which eliminated it in 2025 as part of its flat-tax reform). As of 2026, Alabama remains one of the very few states that allows this deduction.
When calculating your Alabama taxable income, you subtract the federal income taxes you actually paid during the year (or owed for the year, depending on filing method). This can produce a significant reduction in Alabama taxable income for most earners.
A single filer earning $100,000 in gross income would pay approximately $17,400 in federal income taxes in 2026 (after the standard federal deduction and assuming no other adjustments). Here is how that deduction changes the Alabama calculation:
Compare this to the $4,785 calculated without the federal deduction (effective 4.79%). The federal deductibility provision saves approximately $870 for this earner.
The federal income tax deduction provides the largest absolute dollar savings to earners in the $80,000–$300,000 range — where federal tax liability is substantial but the Alabama top rate is also fully applied. For very high earners subject to the 37% federal bracket, the deduction can be enormous in dollar terms. For lower earners with minimal federal tax liability, the benefit is small.
The deduction is for federal income taxes actually paid or owed, not for FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes. Self-employed filers should note that only the income tax portion of their federal bill — not the self-employment tax — is deductible on the Alabama return.
Alabama's most exceptional retirement tax feature is not its property tax or Social Security exemption — it is the comprehensive exemption for all pension income, regardless of source. Alabama exempts the following from state income tax:
This is one of the broadest pension exemptions in the United States. Most states exempt government and military pensions but tax private pensions and IRA distributions. Alabama exempts all of them.
For a retiree receiving $60,000/year in pension income (private sector) and $30,000 in Social Security:
A retiree with $120,000 in mixed pension and Social Security income — common for federal retirees, military retirees, or those with strong 401(k) balances — could owe zero Alabama state income tax on their entire retirement income package.
Alabama does tax the following income types that are commonly associated with retirement:
Retirees with significant investment portfolios should note that dividends and capital gains are fully taxable in Alabama — unlike pension income.
Alabama fully exempts Social Security benefits from state income tax. This applies to all filing statuses and at all income levels — there is no means test, no phase-out, and no partial taxation of Social Security in Alabama. Whether your income is $30,000 or $300,000, your Alabama-sourced Social Security income faces zero state tax.
This is in contrast to the federal system, where up to 85% of Social Security benefits become subject to federal income tax for higher-income recipients. Alabama provides complete relief at the state level regardless of what happens on your federal return.
For a typical Alabama retiree:
| Income Source | Amount | Alabama Tax |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security | $28,000 | $0 (exempt) |
| 401(k) / IRA distributions | $40,000 | $0 (exempt) |
| Military pension | $30,000 | $0 (exempt) |
| Interest/dividends | $5,000 | ~$150 (taxable) |
| Total | $103,000 | ~$150 |
A retiree drawing $103,000 from these common retirement income sources pays approximately $150 in Alabama state income tax — an effective rate of less than 0.15%. This is among the lightest state income tax burdens for retirees anywhere in the US.
Alabama has the lowest effective property tax rate in the United States, averaging approximately 0.41% of market value. To put that in perspective, the national average effective rate is around 1.0%, and high-property-tax states like New Jersey (~2.2%) or Illinois (~2.0%) are more than five times Alabama's rate.
| Home Value | Estimated Annual Property Tax | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|
| $150,000 | ~$615 | ~0.41% |
| $250,000 | ~$1,025 | ~0.41% |
| $400,000 | ~$1,640 | ~0.41% |
| $600,000 | ~$2,460 | ~0.41% |
Alabama's property tax system is constitutionally structured to keep assessments low. Residential property is assessed at only 10% of fair market value (compared to 100% in many states). The millage rates then apply to this already-reduced assessed value. Combined with various homestead exemptions available to Alabama residents — including an over-65 exemption that can eliminate property taxes entirely for qualifying seniors — the result is among the lowest property tax burdens in the nation.
Jefferson County (Birmingham metro) follows the same assessment methodology. A home valued at $300,000 in the Birmingham area would typically pay $1,200–$1,400/year in property taxes — a fraction of what the same home would cost in Atlanta ($2,580), Nashville ($2,130), or the national average ($3,000).
Alabama allows a homestead exemption reducing the assessed value of a primary residence for tax purposes. Senior homeowners (age 65+) may qualify for a full property tax exemption if their income is below certain thresholds — meaning many Alabama retirees on fixed incomes pay zero property tax.
Alabama's low property and income tax burden does not come entirely without cost. The state's sales tax structure means consumers pay some of the highest combined rates in the country on day-to-day spending.
Alabama is consistently ranked among the top 10 states for highest combined state and local sales tax rates. Unlike many states, Alabama also taxes groceries — the state applies its full 4% rate to food purchases (some localities provide a partial exemption). This grocery tax is particularly notable because it creates a higher proportional burden on lower-income households who spend a larger share of income on food.
Several Alabama cities levy a separate occupational tax (sometimes called a municipal license tax) on earned income:
The Birmingham occupational tax effectively adds 1 percentage point to the income tax burden for those who live or work in the city. For a $100,000 earner working in Birmingham, that is an additional $1,000/year on top of state income tax.
Alabama exempts prescription drugs from the state portion of sales tax. Some localities also provide exemptions for certain medical supplies. Raw agricultural products sold directly to farmers may also be exempt. Beyond these, the sales tax base in Alabama is broad.
Alabama, Tennessee, and Florida are three of the most popular destinations for retirees and remote workers leaving higher-tax states. Each takes a fundamentally different approach to taxation:
| Feature | Alabama | Tennessee | Florida |
|---|---|---|---|
| State Income Tax | Up to 5% (3 brackets) | Zero | Zero |
| Federal Tax Deductible? | Yes (unique) | N/A | N/A |
| Social Security | Exempt | N/A | N/A |
| ALL Pensions Exempt? | Yes — all types | N/A (no income tax) | N/A (no income tax) |
| Avg Property Tax | ~0.41% (lowest US) | ~0.71% | ~0.83% |
| Avg Sales Tax | ~9% combined | ~9.55% combined | ~7.1% combined |
| Cost of Living | Low | Low–Moderate | Moderate–High |
Alabama's exemptions for all pension income and Social Security mean that many retirees will pay little or no Alabama income tax. A retiree receiving $85,000/year from a mix of Social Security ($28,000), IRA withdrawals ($35,000), and a private pension ($22,000) owes $0 in Alabama state income tax on that full amount — while Tennessee and Florida also owe $0 due to having no income tax. However, Alabama's property taxes are approximately half of Tennessee's and half of Florida's, which provides additional long-term savings on housing costs.
Remote workers earning active wages are better served by Tennessee or Florida's zero income tax. A remote worker earning $120,000 in Alabama would pay approximately $5,585 in state income tax (before the federal deduction) — whereas in Tennessee or Florida, the bill is $0. The federal deductibility provision can reduce the Alabama bill significantly, but it does not eliminate it. Alabama's lower cost of living and very low property taxes may offset some of this difference depending on housing choices.
| Profile | Alabama | Tennessee | Florida |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retiree ($100K: SS + pension) | ~$0–$150 state income tax | $0 | $0 |
| Retiree property tax ($300K home) | ~$1,230/yr | ~$2,130/yr | ~$2,490/yr |
| Remote worker ($100K salary) income tax | ~$3,915 (with fed deduction) | $0 | $0 |
| Remote worker property tax ($300K home) | ~$1,230/yr | ~$2,130/yr | ~$2,490/yr |
Property tax estimates approximate. Florida homestead exemption available for primary residences. Alabama senior exemptions may further reduce AL property taxes for qualifying retirees.
The bottom line: Alabama is the strongest of the three states for property tax savings and retirement income exemptions. Tennessee and Florida win on income tax for working residents. Florida has the lowest sales tax of the three.
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