Find out which 41 states will not tax Social Security benefits in 2024
More and more states have passed legislation to reduce the tax burden on those who receive Social Security. These are the places that don’t tax benefits.
Americans contribute into the Social Security funds through payroll taxes over the course of their careers. Upon retirement they will no longer have to pay in, instead, having meet the requirements, they will begin to receive money from the Social Security Administration.
One would think that they already have paid taxes on their past income and wouldn’t be on the hook for more taken out of their Social Security benefits. That view though is mistaken for around half of beneficiaries who are now required to pay taxes to the federal government on social security benefits.
States on the other hand have their own tax laws which vary widely across the nation. There are nine states that have no income tax, so they along with 32 other states and the District of Columbia do not tax any Social Security benefits.
That leaves nine states that still apply at least some income taxes to Social Security benefits, but how they are taxed varies.
How much does the IRS tax Social Security benefits?
According to the SSA, 50 percent of a taxpayer’s benefits may be taxable if the following criteria are met:
The tax rate on benefits increases to 85 percent if:
41 states that will not tax Social Security benefits in 2024
Social Security recipients are required to pay state taxes in addition to federal taxes unless they live in one of the 41 states or the District of Columbia that will no longer tax Social Security benefits. Missouri is the most recent state to drop income tax on Social Security benefits with a bill signed into law in July 2023. Nebraska had been phasing out taxes on Social Security benefits in 2022 and they will be exempt in 2024.
States that tax Social Security benefits
In the nine states that do tax any of beneficiaries Social Security payments in 2024, the rate applied varies:
The rate applied to benefits depends on how much the total income is earned or received by a Social Security recipient. The higher the income, the higher the rate.
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