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Alaska Tax Tables for 2025

The 2025 Alaska Tax Tables summarise the state-level rules applied to wages, deductions, credits and taxable income. These tables match the rules used by the Alaska State Tax Calculator 2025.

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Alaska Tax Tables for 2025

The tables below outline the income tax structure, deduction amounts, state-level credits and payroll-related rules used for Alaska in 2025. Alaska applies a flat income tax to this filing status. All taxable income is taxed at the same rate, with no marginal brackets. This table shows the single rate used in calculations. To understand how flat tax tables differ from progressive systems, see our Tax Tables guide.

Single – Flat Income Tax (2025)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Single filers.

Single – Flat Income Tax (2025) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Married filing jointly – Flat Income Tax (2025)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Married filing jointly filers.

Married filing jointly – Flat Income Tax (2025) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Married filing separately – Flat Income Tax (2025)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Married filing separately filers.

Married filing separately – Flat Income Tax (2025) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Head of household – Flat Income Tax (2025)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Head of household filers.

Head of household – Flat Income Tax (2025) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Widowed – Flat Income Tax (2025)

A single flat tax rate applies to all taxable income for Widowed filers.

Widowed – Flat Income Tax (2025) – Flat-rate tax structure
BracketRangeRate
10 and over0%

Alaska Standard Deduction(2025)

State-level standard deduction amounts for each filing status.

Alaska Standard Deduction(2025) – State-specific standard deduction.
Filing StatusAmount
Single$0
Married filing jointly$0
Married filing separately$0
Head of household$0
Widowed$0

Alaska Tax Tables for Related Years

These related years are often reviewed together for comparing bracket changes, deductions and Alaska updates:

2022202320242026

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Anchorage or Fairbanks tax income?

No. Neither Anchorage nor Fairbanks taxes individual wages. Anchorage historically debated implementing a municipal income tax as an alternative to property taxes, but such measures have never passed. Fairbanks relies on property taxes and user fees. As a result, residents and workers in both cities benefit from Alaska’s statewide 0% income-tax policy with no additional local payroll deductions.

If I move to Alaska mid-year, do I immediately stop paying state income tax?

Yes. Once you become an Alaska resident, no state income tax applies to wages earned from that point forward. You must still file a part-year return for the state you moved from, reporting income earned before establishing Alaska residency. Alaska requires no part-year return, residency declaration or supplemental state forms. Your federal obligations remain unchanged, but Alaska offers instant relief from state withholding the moment your employer updates your work location or residency information.

If I open an LLC in Alaska, will I owe any state income tax?

For single-member LLCs treated as disregarded entities and traditional pass-through entities, Alaska imposes no state income tax at the individual or pass-through level. The income flows through to your federal return, and no Alaska filing is required. However, certain corporations—including C-corporations operating in Alaska—*are* subject to Alaska corporate income tax. LLCs electing C-corp treatment must follow those rules. For most small business owners, Alaska remains one of the most tax-advantaged jurisdictions in the United States.

How do pre-tax benefits like HSAs or FSAs affect take-home pay in Alaska?

HSAs, FSAs, dependent care FSAs and similar pre-tax benefits reduce federal taxable wages and often reduce FICA taxes. Alaska’s lack of a state tax means there is no second layer of savings or rules to track. As a result, tax planning involving pre-tax benefits is cleaner and easier for Alaska residents, since all tax effects occur at the federal level.

Where can I access a structured version of Alaska Form 6220?

A structured and calculator-ready version of the form is available at AK-6220 Underpayment Calculator, including line-by-line fields and automated penalty estimation.

Important Notes

All calculations are estimates for guidance only. Always review your return and consider professional advice when submitting official filings.