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Which states still tax tips in 2026?

The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act created a federal deduction for tip income — up to $25,000 per return — but it only cuts federal income tax. Whether your state also stops taxing tips depends entirely on where you live. We computed the answer for every US jurisdiction for tax year 2026, from primary state sources. Here is where tips are still taxed, where they are now effectively tax-free, and where it is still unsettled.

31
jurisdictions still tax tips (states + DC)
10
states make qualified tips effectively tax-free
9
states with no wage income tax at all
1
partial or still-unclear for 2026
The short version: most states still tax tips in 2026. The federal deduction is the headline, but state conformity is the deciding factor for your take-home pay — and the map is still moving. Indiana, Michigan, New York — tips newly tax-free for 2026; Georgia — only a partial state exclusion.

State-by-state: tips & overtime conformity, tax year 2026

Tap a column header to sort. "Still taxed" means the state does not adopt the federal deduction, so tip income remains taxable on your state return. Figures are for tax year 2026 and reflect the federal OBBBA tips deduction (with the overtime column shown for context).

State Tips taxed? (2026) Overtime taxed? (2026) Notes & source
AlabamaStill taxedPartialAlabama does not conform to the full federal overtime deduction, but HB 527 (signed April 16, 2026) allows a smaller capped state deduction of up to $1,000 of qualified overtime compensation for tax years 2026–2028. Tips got no state relief — the federal tips deduction reduces your federal tax only. (Alabama's own earlier full overtime exemption ended June 30, 2025.) source
AlaskaNo state wage taxNo state wage taxAlaska has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
ArizonaTax-freeTax-freeArizona adopted full OBBBA conformity in HB 4168, signed June 13, 2026 as part of the FY2026 budget deal. It creates a mandatory individual income-tax subtraction for qualified overtime and tips under A.R.S. §43-1022, retroactive to tax year 2025 and applying to 2026 and forward. (Earlier standalone conformity bills were vetoed in early 2026; the budget resolved it.) source
ArkansasStill taxedStill taxedArkansas has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
CaliforniaStill taxedStill taxedCalifornia has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
ColoradoTax-freeStill taxedColorado allows the tips deduction both years. The overtime deduction flows through for 2025 but is added back from 2026 (HB25-1296), which is under a pending legal challenge. source
ConnecticutStill taxedStill taxedConnecticut has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
DelawareStill taxedStill taxedDelaware has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
District of ColumbiaStill taxedStill taxedDistrict of Columbia has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
FloridaNo state wage taxNo state wage taxFlorida has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
GeorgiaPartial changed from 2025PartialGeorgia decouples from the full federal deductions. For tax years 2026 through 2028 it offers a smaller capped state exclusion instead (HB 463, signed May 11, 2026: up to $1,750 of qualified overtime and $1,750 of cash tips), not the full federal amount. source
HawaiiStill taxedStill taxedHawaii has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
IdahoTax-freeTax-freeIdaho starts from federal taxable income and conformed via HB559 (2026), retroactive to 2025 — the deductions flow through. source
IllinoisStill taxedStill taxedIllinois has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
IndianaTax-free changed from 2025Tax-freeIndiana decouples for 2025. SEA 243 couples for 2026 ONLY and currently sunsets after 2026 — 2027–2028 are not yet conformed. source
IowaTax-freeTax-freeIowa conforms (federal-taxable-income base); the deductions flow through to the state return. source
KansasStill taxedStill taxedKansas has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
KentuckyStill taxedStill taxedKentucky has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
LouisianaStill taxedStill taxedLouisiana has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MaineStill taxedStill taxedMaine has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MarylandStill taxedStill taxedMaryland has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MassachusettsStill taxedStill taxedMassachusetts has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MichiganTax-free changed from 2025Tax-freeMichigan starts from federal AGI, so there is no automatic flow-through. A state subtraction applies for 2026–2028 but NOT for 2025. source
MinnesotaStill taxedStill taxedMinnesota has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MississippiStill taxedStill taxedMississippi has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MissouriStill taxedStill taxedMissouri has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
MontanaTax-freeTax-freeMontana conforms; its 2025 forms allow the tips and overtime deductions. source
NebraskaStill taxedStill taxedNebraska has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
NevadaNo state wage taxNo state wage taxNevada has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
New HampshireNo state wage taxNo state wage taxNew Hampshire has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
New JerseyStill taxedStill taxedNew Jersey has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
New MexicoStill taxedStill taxedNew Mexico has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
New YorkTax-free changed from 2025Still taxedNew York adopted its own 'no tax on tips' break in the FY2027 budget (signed May 28, 2026): up to $25,000 of tipped income is excluded from New York State income tax for tax years beginning in and after 2026, mirroring the federal rule. Overtime was NOT included — the federal overtime deduction reduces your federal tax only, and 2025 tips got no state relief. source
North CarolinaStill taxedStill taxedNorth Carolina has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
North DakotaTax-freeTax-freeNorth Dakota is a rolling-conformity state that starts from federal taxable income, so it automatically incorporates the federal overtime and tips deductions for tax years 2025–2028. No decoupling legislation has been enacted. source
OhioStill taxedStill taxedOhio has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
OklahomaStill taxedStill taxedOklahoma has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
OregonTax-freeTax-freeOregon conforms (rolling conformity); the deductions flow through to the state return. source
PennsylvaniaStill taxedStill taxedPennsylvania has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
Rhode IslandStill taxedStill taxedRhode Island has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
South CarolinaStill taxedStill taxedSouth Carolina's IRC conformity date (December 31, 2024) pre-dates the federal OBBBA, and the 2026 conformity bill (H3368) was not enacted, so the tips (§224) and overtime (§225) deductions must be added back on the South Carolina return — they reduce your federal tax only. source
South DakotaNo state wage taxNo state wage taxSouth Dakota has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
TennesseeNo state wage taxNo state wage taxTennessee has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
TexasNo state wage taxNo state wage taxTexas has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
UtahStill taxedStill taxedUtah does not allow these federal deductions to reduce your Utah state tax. source
VermontStill taxedStill taxedVermont has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
VirginiaStill taxedStill taxedVirginia has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
WashingtonNo state wage taxNo state wage taxWashington has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source
West VirginiaStill taxedStill taxedWest Virginia has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
WisconsinStill taxedStill taxedWisconsin has not adopted the federal tips/overtime deductions for state income tax as of mid-2026, so they reduce your federal tax only. source
WyomingNo state wage taxNo state wage taxWyoming has no state income tax on wages, so there is no state return to deduct on — your federal saving is the whole story. source

Download the full dataset: CSV · JSON. Free to reuse with attribution to Tools Berry (CC BY 4.0).

How we computed this

The federal deduction is fixed nationwide; the variation is entirely at the state level, driven by whether each state starts its income tax from federal adjusted gross income or taxable income, and whether it has passed legislation to adopt or decouple from the new federal deduction.

Federal baseline (IRC §224)
A deduction (claimed on Schedule 1-A after AGI, so it does not reduce your AGI) available whether or not you itemize, for qualified tips — cash or charged tips paid voluntarily in an occupation that customarily and regularly receives them — capped at $25,000 per return (the cap is not doubled for joint filers), for tax years 2025–2028, phasing out above $150,000 (single) / $300,000 (married) modified AGI. It reduces federal income tax only; FICA still applies.
State conformity call
For each of the 50 states and DC we recorded whether, for tax year 2026, the state's tax base lets the federal tips (and overtime) deduction flow through ("still taxed" = no; "tax-free" = yes), plus partial or unclear cases where legislation is capped, pending, or administrative only.
Sources
Primary sources per state — the state Department of Revenue / Taxation guidance and the enacting bill text — supplemented by non-partisan trackers (Tax Foundation, Bloomberg Tax, Thomson Reuters). Each row links its source. Nine states have no wage income tax, so the question is moot there.
Scope & limits
This covers state income tax treatment of the federal deduction for 2026 only; several states' 2027–2028 treatment is unsettled and some 2026 rules face legal challenges (noted per state). This is computed general information, not tax advice.

Cite this data

Free to use and republish with attribution. Suggested citation:

Tools Berry, "Which States Still Tax Tips in 2026?", tools-berry.com/data/tips-tax-by-state/ (updated July 7, 2026).

Download: CSV · JSON · licensed CC BY 4.0. Journalists: happy to provide the underlying per-state sources or a custom cut — contact us.

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Edmond Daher is a software engineer and the creator of Tools Berry, a suite of free, privacy-first calculators that run entirely in your browser. He built the 51-jurisdiction OBBBA conformity dataset and the tips and overtime calculators behind this study. This analysis computes figures from primary state and federal sources; it is general information, not tax advice, and Edmond is not a CPA — verify your own situation with the IRS, your state tax authority, or a tax professional.

Press & reuse: the dataset and the embeddable calculators are free to cite with attribution. Questions or a correction? Contact us.

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