North Carolina's Aggressive Tax Cut Path (2026)
North Carolina has been on one of the most aggressive tax reduction paths in the United States. For 2026, the state's flat income tax rate dropped to 3.99%, continuing a phased reduction that began in 2014. The trajectory:
| Year | NC Flat Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| 2013 and earlier | Progressive (top rate 7.75%) |
| 2014-2015 | 5.80% |
| 2017-2018 | 5.499% |
| 2019-2021 | 5.25% |
| 2022 | 4.99% |
| 2023 | 4.75% |
| 2024 | 4.50% |
| 2025 | 4.25% |
| 2026 | 3.99% (current) |
| 2027 (if revenue triggers met) | 3.49% |
| 2028 (if revenue triggers met) | 2.99% |
| Long-term target | 2.49% by 2029 |
This decade-long trajectory has positioned North Carolina as one of the most tax-competitive states in the Southeast, attracting major corporate relocations (Apple's Research Triangle campus, Toyota's EV battery plant, etc.) and significant population growth in Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham.
The Bailey Settlement: A Critical NC Tax Break
One of North Carolina's most important tax provisions is the Bailey Settlement — a court-ordered exemption from a 1998 ruling. It allows certain government retirees to exclude their pension income from NC state tax entirely.
Eligibility:
- You must have been vested in a federal, state, or local government retirement system in NC
- Vesting must have occurred by August 12, 1989
- Typically requires 5 years of service by that date
- Applies to military pensions for vested members
What Bailey covers:
- Federal civil service retirement pensions (CSRS)
- FERS retirement (vested portion only)
- Military retirement pay
- NC state and local government pensions
What Bailey does NOT cover:
- 401(k) or 403(b) plans (taxed at 3.99%)
- IRA distributions (taxed at 3.99%)
- Private pensions (taxed at 3.99%)
- Government employees who vested after August 12, 1989
NC Retirement Income: Mixed Bag
North Carolina has a complicated retirement tax picture:
- Social Security: Fully exempt from state income tax
- Military retirement (new policy 2021+): Fully exempt for ALL military retirees
- Bailey-eligible government pensions: Fully exempt (vested pre-Aug 12, 1989)
- Most 401(k), IRA, private pensions: Taxed at 3.99% flat
NC is less retirement-friendly than Florida or Tennessee (no state tax) or Georgia ($65K exclusion), but better than New York or California. The declining rate (now 3.99%, possibly 2.99% by 2028) helps narrow the gap.
2026 Federal Tax Brackets
| Taxable Income (Single) | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $11,925 | 10% |
| $11,926 – $48,475 | 12% |
| $48,476 – $103,350 | 22% |
| $103,351 – $197,300 | 24% |
| $197,301 – $250,525 | 32% |
| $250,526 – $626,350 | 35% |
| $626,351+ | 37% |
NC vs Other States: 2026 Comparison
| State | $100K Net Take-Home (Single) |
|---|---|
| Florida / Texas / Tennessee (no state tax) | ~$78,500 |
| Ohio (2.75% flat) | ~$76,400 |
| Pennsylvania (3.07% flat) | ~$75,500 |
| North Carolina (3.99% flat) | ~$74,500 |
| Georgia (4.99% flat) | ~$73,500 |
| Illinois (4.95% flat) | ~$73,400 |
| South Carolina (top 6.2%) | ~$72,400 |
| California (progressive) | ~$72,000 |
| New York City | ~$69,500 |
NC's 3.99% rate is the second-lowest in the Southeast (only behind Tennessee's 0% on wages), and remarkably competitive with Sun Belt rivals. If the scheduled 2027 cut to 3.49% happens, NC will pull even further ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
For 2026, North Carolina has a flat 3.99% state income tax rate, down from 4.25% in 2025. This is the result of a multi-year phasedown plan that started at 5.25% in 2021. Future scheduled reductions could bring the rate to 3.49% in 2027 and 2.99% in 2028 if revenue triggers are met, though Governor Stein has called to freeze further cuts.
No. North Carolina does not allow cities or counties to impose local income taxes. There's a single flat state rate of 3.99% for 2026 with no additional local wage taxes. This makes NC's payroll system among the simplest in the Southeast, alongside Georgia (which also has no local income tax).
The Bailey Settlement is a court-ordered exemption that allows certain government retirees to exclude their pension income from North Carolina state tax. Eligibility: You must have been vested (typically 5 years of service) in a federal, state, or local government retirement system in North Carolina by August 12, 1989. If you qualify, your pension is exempt from NC tax. This does not extend to 401(k), IRA, or private pensions, which are taxed at the flat 3.99% rate.
For 2026, North Carolina's standard deduction is $13,000 for single filers (up from $12,750), $26,000 for married filing jointly, and $19,500 for head of household. NC eliminated personal exemptions when it adopted the flat tax in 2014. The standard deduction is the primary tax-free amount; below it, you owe no NC tax.
Sources & Methodology
- NC General Statute § 105-153.7 — Individual income tax statute
- House Bill 334 (2021) — Phased rate reduction schedule
- North Carolina Department of Revenue (NCDOR) — 2026 tax rate schedules
- Bailey v. State of North Carolina (1998) — Government retiree exemption
- IRS Publication 15-T (2026) — Federal withholding
- Tax Foundation — 2026 state tax data
Calculator methodology reviewed by Benjamin Thomas, CPA, MST. Rates verified against NCDOR publications, January 2026.