State Tax Guide

Louisiana State Income Tax Guide (2026)

Louisiana flattened to a 3% income tax in 2025 — the lowest flat rate in any state that taxes income — and lets you deduct federal tax on top of it. The hard part isn't the income tax. It's the hurricane insurance.

Top State Rate

3.0%

$100k Take-Home

$76,663

/year (single)

State Tax on $100k

$2,517

single filer

Louisiana Income Tax Brackets (2026)

Marginal RateTaxable Income (Single Filer)
3%$0All taxable income — flat rate, effective tax year 2025

Each rate applies only to income within that bracket. Your effective rate is the average across all brackets — meaningfully lower than your top marginal rate.

Standard deduction: $12,500 single / $25,000 married filing jointly

Brackets reflect the most recently published schedules. Some states inflation-index thresholds annually — specific 2026 amounts may shift slightly. Verify with your state's Department of Revenue before filing.

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The 30-second version

  • 1.Louisiana's flat 3% income tax (effective 2025, post-Landry reform) is the lowest flat rate in the country among states that tax wage income. Standard deduction tripled to $12,500 single / $25,000 in the same reform — a piece most coverage missed.
  • 2.Federal income tax is deductible on the LA return — one of only 5 states with this structure. A $100K filer saves about $396 in LA tax on top of the flat 3%; a $200K filer saves about $1,090. The IRS effectively subsidizes part of Louisiana's revenue.
  • 3.Property tax averages 0.55% effective — among the lowest in the country. The homestead exemption shields the first $75,000 of fair market value from parish property tax for primary residences.
  • 4.Combined sales tax averages 9.56% — tied with Tennessee for highest in the country. Louisiana shifted revenue from income tax onto sales tax in the same 2024 reform.
  • 5.Hurricane insurance is the actual Louisiana tax. Coastal premiums of $5,000–$8,000/year on a $400K home are routine post-Ida. Inland Baton Rouge / Lafayette / Shreveport pay a fraction of that.
  • 6.Major employers: ExxonMobil Baton Rouge + Lake Charles refineries, Marathon Garyville, Phillips 66 Belle Chasse, Shell Norco, Ochsner Health (largest healthcare employer in the state), LSU Health Shreveport + New Orleans, Capital One DC-style operations in New Orleans, Entergy Louisiana, the state government in Baton Rouge.

A quick hello before we start

Pull up a chair — or, if you're reading this on a phone in line at Cafe Du Monde while a sazerac of beignet sugar settles into your shirt, a stool. We'll be quick.

Quick note up top: nothing here is personal tax, legal, or financial advice. Real numbers, honest opinions, the kind of explainer you'd want from a friend who happens to know Louisiana tax law and won't bill you $400/hour. Your situation has wrinkles only your CPA can iron out — treat this like a coffee at PJ's, not your accountant's office on Poydras.

Last reviewed: May 2026 · Reviewed annually each January when new brackets publish

Why you can trust these numbers

Numbers reflect 2026 IRS federal brackets, caps, and the Louisiana Department of Revenue's post-reform flat-rate schedule under Act 11 of the 2024 Third Special Session. Effective state rates are computed after the federal-income-tax deduction Louisiana uniquely allows — so the 3% headline is not what most filers actually pay. Standard deduction tripled to $12,500 single / $25,000 effective tax year 2025. Reviewed each January when LDR posts annual updates and any time the legislature passes something material. Spot something off? Tell us — reader corrections genuinely make these guides better.

Sources: federal brackets + standard deduction from IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32; state brackets verified against the Tax Foundation 2026 State Income Tax Rates compilation and the official IT-540 Individual Income Tax Forms (LA Department of Revenue).

The flat 3% — and why Louisiana taxes you less than the headline suggests

Louisiana spent decades as a confusingly-bracketed state — 1.85% / 3.5% / 4.25%, federal deduction grafted on, parishes layering local sales tax on top. Then in November 2024 Governor Jeff Landry called the third special session of the year and pushed through Act 11 / HB 2. The bill flattened the income tax to a single 3% rate, tripled the standard deduction to $12,500 single / $25,000 , and bumped sales tax to make up the revenue. It took six weeks to pass. It took six minutes for accountants to start re-running spreadsheets.

What a typical filer actually pays: take a $100,000 single Ochsner nurse-practitioner. Federal of $100,000, federal tax of about $13,200, LA standard deduction $12,500, federal-tax deduction $13,200. LA taxable income drops to $74,300. LA tax at flat 3% = $2,229. Effective LA rate on gross: about 2.2%. The headline says 3%; the math says 2.2%. The federal deduction is doing real work in the back of the equation, and most coverage of the Landry reform didn't mention it because it's the boring half.

Louisiana joined the federal-tax-deduction club in 1934 alongside Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, and Montana. The other states (Oregon dropped it; North Dakota dropped it; Utah dropped it) gave the deduction up to flatten their structures. Louisiana didn't. So you have a flat 3%, a tripled standard deduction, AND the federal deduction stacked on top. It's the most generous state-tax structure for working professionals in the South, even before you compare to neighboring Texas (which is 0% income but 1.7%–2.0% effective property tax).

No Louisiana parish or city imposes a local income tax. New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Shreveport, Monroe, Lake Charles — pure state + federal + , full stop. Louisiana shifts local revenue onto property tax (modest at 0.55% effective) and parish-level sales tax additions, not paychecks. If you've ever filed in Pennsylvania (with the Local EIT chasing you) or Ohio (600+ municipal income taxes), Louisiana is suspiciously simple. Suspicious in a good way.

What you'll actually pay — three real-life scenarios

Three Louisianans most readers can identify with. Find the one closest to you. If none match, the calculator at the top is for you.

Illustrative — single filer unless noted, full-year Louisiana residency, W-2 income, federal-conforming standard deduction at the federal level, LA federal-tax-deduction applied. Coastal hurricane insurance not in the income-tax line; it shows up in homeowner cost separately. Ballparks, not invoices.

Scenario 1: Ochsner Health bedside RN in Metairie, $72,000

Federal income tax~$6,330
Louisiana state income tax (~1.7% effective after federal deduction)~$1,205
FICA (Social Security + Medicare)~$5,508
Total taxes~$13,043
Annual take-home~$58,957
Effective combined rate~18.1%

Ochsner Medical Center, East Jefferson General, Tulane Medical, or one of the smaller West Bank hospitals. The combined Louisiana + federal + payroll bill works out to about $501 per biweekly paycheck — roughly $1,200/year less than the same RN earning $72K in Houston after Texas property tax catches up to her, and appreciably less than Atlanta or Nashville at the same comp. The win at this income level is real but quiet: the $1,200 effective state tax is less than what an Atlanta RN pays in two weeks. Eat at Domilise's. The poboy is the dividend.

Scenario 2: ExxonMobil Baton Rouge process engineer, $115,000

Federal income tax~$16,460
Louisiana state income tax (~2.1% effective after federal deduction)~$2,431
FICA~$8,798
Total taxes~$27,689
Annual take-home~$87,311
Effective combined rate~24.1%

ExxonMobil's Baton Rouge complex is the second-largest refinery in the United States and a 100-year fixture on the east bank of the Mississippi. The actual engineering culture is closer to a small-town company-store than the Houston energy-industry mythology — pension-eligible benefits, 5% annual raises, deep tenure, plant managers who show up to the kid's high-school graduation. A 3-bedroom in Country Club of Louisiana or Bocage runs $400K–$550K. The same square footage in Houston Memorial runs $750K–$1.1M. ExxonMobil engineers buy their first house at 28; Houston engineers rent through 33. Different financial life, same job, $80K cheaper square foot.

Scenario 3: Capital One senior software engineer in New Orleans, $165,000

Federal income tax~$28,210
Louisiana state income tax (~2.4% effective after federal deduction)~$3,968
FICA~$10,229
Total taxes~$42,407
Annual take-home~$122,593
Effective combined rate~25.7%

Capital One's New Orleans operations center grew out of the bank's Hibernia acquisition and now runs a serious technology shop in the CBD — full-stack engineers, machine-learning teams, fraud-detection groups. Comp is bottom-quartile of FAANG ranges but real, and the 0.55% property tax + flat 3% income tax + federal-deduction stack means the effective tax math is closer to a Seattle staff engineer than a New York one. The $122K take-home buys a renovated Uptown shotgun for $550K, twenty minutes from the office, with property tax of about $3,000/year. The same square footage in Austin runs $900K with $14,000 property tax. The numbers aren't subtle.

Hurricane insurance + property tax — the actual Louisiana cost of living

If you ask a Louisianan what their biggest household line item is, they'll talk about insurance — not income tax. There's a reason. Louisiana's effective property tax rate averages 0.55%, well below the US average of 1.05%, and the homestead exemption shields the first $75,000 of fair market value from parish tax for primary residences. A $400,000 New Orleans home pays $1,800–$2,500/year in property tax, depending on Orleans-vs-Jefferson millage and assessor practices. The same home in Travis County, Texas pays $7,200–$8,800. Property tax is the unsung Louisiana strength.

Insurance is the unsung Louisiana cost. Louisiana Citizens, the insurer of last resort, raised rates 63% in 2023. Private-market premiums in coastal parishes have doubled or tripled since Hurricane Ida (August 2021). A $400,000 home in Metairie or Belle Chasse routinely runs $5,000–$8,000/year for windstorm coverage alone; another $1,500–$3,500/year for flood through the NFIP, or $4,000–$10,000 if you're forced into private flood. Inland Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Shreveport, Monroe, and Alexandria pay $1,500–$2,500/year combined — a quarter of the coastal premium. Where you live in Louisiana decides whether the tax structure is a gift or a wash.

Sales tax is the explicit revenue trade. Louisiana's combined state-plus-local sales tax averages 9.56% — tied with Tennessee for the highest in the country. The state portion is 5%; parish and municipal portions add 4–5.5% on top. A $50,000 car in New Orleans collects $4,780 in sales tax; the same purchase in Baton Rouge runs $4,750. Shopping in Mississippi (combined 7.07%) for big-ticket items is a real tactic for border-area Louisianans, and Walmart parking lots in Bogalusa and Tallulah quietly fill with Louisiana plates. The sales tax giveth what the income tax taketh away.

The Louisiana Senior Citizens Special Property Tax Assessment is the most-overlooked filer-side benefit in the state. Residents 65 and older with household income under approximately $100,000 (indexed annually) can freeze the assessed value of their primary residence — meaning property tax doesn't grow with home appreciation. For a retiree who bought a Lakeview home in 2008 for $200,000 that's now worth $400,000, the freeze can save $700–$1,200/year and grows with each year of appreciation. Frequently unclaimed. If your parents are over 65, ask them.

The "should I move to Texas?" math — actually run

Skip both "Texas is paradise" (oversold post-2020) and "Louisiana is just as good" (the insurance crisis disagrees). Run it for your situation:

  1. Income tax savings: at $100K, moving to Texas saves about $1,800/year in state income tax (after Louisiana's federal deduction). At $200K, $4,400. At $400K, $11,000+. The savings is real but smaller than the headline 3%-vs-0% suggests because of LA's federal deduction.
  2. Property tax delta: Texas (1.7%–2.0% effective) is dramatically higher than Louisiana (0.55%). For a $400K house, that's $4,500–$5,800/year more in Texas — eats most of the income tax savings if you own.
  3. Insurance flips the script for coastal: a $400K Metairie home costs $5,000–$8,000/year for windstorm + flood. A $400K Houston home runs $3,000–$4,500/year (Texas insurance has its own crisis post-Harvey but is materially cheaper than coastal Louisiana). Inland Louisiana to Texas is a wash on insurance; coastal Louisiana to Texas is a $2,000–$4,000/year insurance saving.
  4. What you give up: the food. The music. The neighbors who actually wave back. The fact that Mardi Gras is a 14-day public holiday and your office understands. None of this shows up in a spreadsheet, and most Louisianans who move to Houston for the tax structure move back inside five years for the things they didn't model.
  5. What doesn't move: the federal-tax-deduction is Louisiana-only. You give it up the day you change residency. For a high-income filer ($300K+) it's worth running the federal deduction value against the Texas property-and-insurance-tax delta. The answer at $300K is closer than people assume.

Quick guide: $80K renter in inland Louisiana — math says stay (savings real, friction eats the move). $150K Baton Rouge homeowner with paid-off mortgage — Louisiana wins on every line. $250K coastal Louisiana homeowner staring at an $8,000 windstorm renewal — Houston starts looking reasonable, but verify Houston insurance quotes before signing the lease. $500K+ working professional considering Houston relocation for an energy-industry promotion — the move pencils, but you're trading culture for square footage and you should know that going in.

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Things financially comfortable Louisianans actually do

If you earn $80K+ and you're not doing most of these, you're leaving real money on the table. None of this is exotic. None of it requires a fancy accountant. Most of it requires 30 minutes of setup once a year and discipline the rest of the year.

  • Max your — $24,500 in 2026 (catch-up $8,000 at 50+, super catch-up $11,250 at 60–63). Louisiana conforms to federal pre-tax treatment, so every $1,000 deferred saves about $250 in combined federal + Louisiana tax (the LA savings is small because the rate is small, but it's real).
  • Max your if eligible — $4,400 single / $8,750 family. Triple-tax-advantaged: contributions deductible federally and in Louisiana, growth tax-free, qualified withdrawals tax-free. Especially valuable in coastal Louisiana where insurance premium creep eats other savings.
  • Claim the federal-income-tax deduction on your LA return — file Form IT-540 and check the federal-tax box. Often missed by self-prepared filers using out-of-state software defaults. At $100K it's worth $396; at $200K, $1,090.
  • START 529 — Louisiana's plan offers a state deduction of up to $2,400 per beneficiary per year ($4,800 ). Modest but worth claiming if you have kids; rolls over annually if unused.
  • Louisiana Senior Citizens Special Assessment — at age 65+ with income under ~$100K, freeze your home's assessed value. Compounds every year as property appreciates. File with your parish assessor.
  • Hurricane preparation as financial planning: maintain a separate emergency fund equal to your insurance deductible plus 3 months of expenses. Wind/hail deductibles in coastal LA are typically 2–5% of dwelling value, meaning a $400K home requires $8K–$20K liquid before insurance kicks in. A high-yield savings account dedicated to this is not optional.
  • Pre-IPO or large-bonus-year residency planning: if you have a major liquidity event coming ( vest, business sale, partnership buyout), Louisiana's flat 3% + federal deduction is one of the most favorable state structures in the country. Time the residency to capture it.
  • Estate planning: Louisiana has no estate tax and no inheritance tax. The state's forced-heirship laws (Napoleonic Code legacy — Louisiana is the only US state without common-law inheritance) DO affect your estate plan if you have minor children. Use a Louisiana-licensed estate attorney, not a generic online template.

If you do only one thing on this list, claim the federal-income-tax deduction. It's free money on every Louisiana return, and Louisiana is one of only five states that offers it. Don't leave it on the table because your tax software didn't prompt you.

Real questions people actually ask

Q: I'm thinking about moving from Texas to Louisiana. Will I save on taxes?

It depends entirely on whether you own a home and where. A Texas renter moving to inland Louisiana saves on property tax (irrelevant for renters) and pays new income tax — net loss for renters. A Texas homeowner moving to Baton Rouge or Lafayette saves $4,000–$6,000/year on property tax, picks up about $1,800–$3,000 in Louisiana income tax, net win of $1,500–$4,000/year. A Texas homeowner moving to coastal Louisiana (Metairie, Slidell, Mandeville) saves on property tax but pays catastrophic insurance, often net loss. The numbers depend on the specific zip code on both sides; don't generalize.

Q: Did the 2024 Landry reform actually help working-class Louisianans?

On the income-tax side, yes — the standard deduction tripled, which means a single filer at $40,000 income now has $12,500 zeroed out before the 3% rate applies, versus $4,500 zeroed out under the old 1.85% structure. A $40K worker pays roughly $825 in LA tax under the new structure versus $750 under the old (depends on bracket boundaries). Roughly a wash for low earners. On the sales-tax side, the same reform raised sales tax 0.55 percentage points, which falls hardest on lower-income filers. Net: high earners win clearly, low earners are roughly flat. The reform was sold as a tax cut and was, on average — but the distribution skews up the income scale. Standard story for flat-tax conversions.

Q: Is the LA federal-income-tax deduction available if I take the federal standard deduction?

Yes. The Louisiana federal-tax deduction is based on the federal income tax you actually pay (line 24 of federal Form 1040 minus refundable credits), not on whether you itemize. So you take the federal standard deduction at the federal level (most filers do, post-), then deduct your federal tax liability on the LA return. The two deductions don't conflict. Common misconception that costs filers money every spring.

Q: Should I worry about the flat-rate getting raised back up?

Probably not in the short term, more reasonably in the medium term. The Landry reform passed with serious Republican-supermajority backing in both chambers and Governor Landry has staked his political identity on the flat-rate structure. A future Democratic governor could push to restore progressive brackets, but Louisiana's political center is well to the right of where it was in 2008 — Republican supermajorities make repeal politically difficult. The structural risk is fiscal: Louisiana's energy revenue is volatile, federal pandemic transfers are gone, and if state revenue craters in a 2027–2028 oil-price downturn, the legislature could revisit. Plan for stability through 2028; treat it as uncertain past that.

Q: Does Louisiana tax Social Security or pension income?

Social Security: fully exempt from state tax, every dollar. Public pensions (federal civil service, military retirement, Louisiana state retirement, parish/municipal): fully exempt. Private pensions and /IRA distributions: taxable at the flat 3% above standard deduction, but the federal-tax deduction still applies — so effective rate on retirement income lands around 1.5%–2.5%. Combined, Louisiana is genuinely retirement-friendly, and noticeably more so than the headline rate suggests for moderate-income retirees.

Q: How does the LA Senior Citizens Special Property Tax Assessment actually work?

If you're 65 or older and your household adjusted gross income falls under the annual threshold (about $100,000 for 2026, indexed), you can apply through your parish assessor to freeze the assessed value of your primary residence. Future appreciation doesn't push your tax bill up; only millage rate increases do. For long-tenured homeowners in appreciating markets (Lakeview, Old Metairie, Garden District) the freeze compounds substantially — a $300K assessed value frozen in 2018 might save $1,500/year by 2030 and $3,000/year by 2040. File the application once; renew annually with your parish to maintain eligibility. Frequently unclaimed by qualifying retirees.

Our honest opinion (which is just an opinion)

Louisiana is fundamentally one of the most tax-friendly states in the country for working professionals — flat 3%, federal-tax deduction, low property tax, no estate tax. The Landry reform made it more so. The hard part isn't the income tax. It's the hurricane insurance, the food and culture you can't replicate elsewhere making it a complicated state to leave, and whether the political supermajority that passed the flat rate holds for the next decade.

The case for Louisiana:

  • +Flat 3% income tax (lowest flat rate among states with wage tax). Effective rate ~2% after federal deduction
  • +Federal income tax deductible on LA return — saves $396 at $100K, $1,090 at $200K
  • +Standard deduction tripled to $12,500 / $25,000 in the 2024 reform — quietly meaningful
  • +Property tax 0.55% effective — among lowest in the nation
  • +$75,000 homestead exemption + senior assessment freeze (age 65+, income-tested)
  • +No state estate tax, no inheritance tax
  • +Distinctive food and music culture you cannot replicate anywhere else in America
  • +ExxonMobil Baton Rouge + Lake Charles + Ochsner + LSU Health + Capital One NOLA tech as anchor employers

The case against:

  • Sales tax 9.56% combined — tied with Tennessee for highest in the country
  • Hurricane insurance has become genuinely difficult in coastal parishes — premiums up 100%+ since 2020
  • Limited high-comp white-collar career mobility (Houston and Atlanta are the regional alternatives)
  • Wage growth has lagged the broader Sun Belt for the past decade
  • Standard deduction phase-in only fully helps low/mid earners (high earners still bracketed by federal)
  • Hurricane risk is real, increasing, and not going away — IPCC projections favor higher Gulf SST through 2050
  • Forced-heirship Napoleonic Code complicates estate planning vs common-law states
  • The flat-rate political consensus is durable in 2026 but not guaranteed forever

Honest take: Louisiana is genuinely strong for inland working professionals at moderate-to-high comp ($75K–$300K), retirees with paid-off housing in non-coastal parishes, and remote workers who can capture the flat-3% + federal-deduction structure without commuting to Houston or Atlanta for high comp. Less compelling for coastal homeowners staring at $8,000 windstorm renewals, high earners targeting Bay Area / NYC compensation that simply isn't available locally, and anyone who needs a deep white-collar career market. The tax structure is excellent. Whether Louisiana works for you depends on whether the things tax can't fix — insurance, career market depth, climate exposure — are dealbreakers in your specific situation.

What now

Run your numbers in the calculator at the top of this page. Louisiana's calc engine reflects the post-Landry flat 3% rate and the tripled standard deduction. Most professionals see 1.8%–2.5% effective state rate at typical comp ($75K–$200K) once the federal deduction adjustment lands. That's competitive with Tennessee or Florida (which charge 0%) once you factor in property tax, and clearly better than Mississippi or Alabama at the same income.

If you own a home in coastal Louisiana, get insurance quotes refreshed every renewal cycle. The market has been moving fast since Ida and again post-2024 — what your neighbor paid last year is not what you'll pay this year. Quote at least three carriers including Citizens, and budget for windstorm + flood as a separate line item from your base homeowner's policy. The income-tax savings are eaten in the policy if you don't actively shop.

Max your . At Louisiana's effective ~2% state rate plus 22%–24% federal, every $1,000 pre-tax saves about $240–$260. A maxed $24,500 saves about $5,900 in combined federal + Louisiana tax. Louisiana conforms to federal pre-tax treatment cleanly. If you're age 65+, file the senior property assessment freeze with your parish assessor — it compounds. If you're a coastal homeowner, build the deductible-buffer emergency fund alongside your 401(k); the two work together, not against each other.

Sources & further reading

A few honest notes

  • Not personal tax, legal, or financial advice. Verify with a licensed CPA, EA, or tax attorney before making decisions that depend on these numbers.
  • Tax law changes. This guide reflects 2026 IRS schedules and current Louisiana Department of Revenue rules per Act 11 of the 2024 Third Special Session.
  • Federal-income-tax deductibility is a Louisiana-distinguishing feature — file LA Form IT-540 carefully. Out-of-state software defaults often miss it.
  • Property tax estimates vary materially by parish (Louisiana's county-equivalent). Coastal premium impact on insurance varies even more — pull actual quotes by zip code before assuming.
  • Hurricane insurance is the structural Louisiana caveat for coastal homeowners — verify rates pre-purchase and refresh quotes annually.
  • Scenario numbers are illustrative — they don't include every credit, deduction, or wrinkle that might apply to your specific filing situation.
  • Reading this page does not create a client relationship between you and ProSalaryTax.

Last updated May 2026 with 2026 IRS schedules, post-Landry flat-rate structure, and current Louisiana Department of Revenue guidance.

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