Alaska Income Tax Structure for 2026
Alaska levies no broad-based personal income tax. Your total federal-plus-state tax burden equals just your federal income tax (10%–37% bracket-based) plus FICA (Social Security 6.2% to $176,100 in 2026, Medicare 1.45%). This puts Alaska in a small group of states — Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming — where wage earners avoid state income tax entirely.
Federal vs. Alaska State Tax: Stacking the Layers
Federal income tax operates on seven brackets ranging from 10% to 37% (2026). On a $75,000 taxable income for a single filer, you'd pay roughly $11,500 in federal income tax after the $14,600 standard deduction. Add Social Security (6.2% × wages up to $176,100) and Medicare (1.45% × all wages) for FICA totaling $5,738 on that same income.
Without Alaska state income tax, that same $75,000 earner faces only federal plus FICA — a combined effective rate of about 22%. The savings vs. a 5.00% state-tax state amount to roughly $3,750/year on this income.
Alaska Tax Filing Essentials
Federal returns are due April 15 each year (or the next business day if April 15 falls on a weekend or holiday). Alaska residents only file federal returns — no state income tax return is required for wage earners. Extensions push the filing deadline by six months but do not extend the time to pay.
Federal returns require W-2s, 1099s, and any deduction supporting documents. Keep records for at least three years (six if you've under-reported income by more than 25%, indefinitely if you've filed a fraudulent return or never filed). Direct deposit refunds typically arrive in 21 days for federal e-filed returns.
Alaska Tax Planning Levers
Pre-tax retirement contributions are the highest-yield tax move for most Alaska earners: a maxed traditional 401(k) ($24,500 in 2026, plus $8,000 catch-up if 50+) reduces both federal and FICA-bound taxable income. HSA contributions ($4,400 self-only or $8,750 family in 2026) offer triple tax advantage when paired with a high-deductible health plan.
Cost of living in Alaska exceeds the US baseline at 127 (100 = national average). Combined with Alaska's zero state income tax, residents typically retain a higher share of nominal wages than in high-tax states. Use the calculator above to model your specific scenario, then revisit annually as brackets and deductions adjust for inflation.