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Indiana Income Tax Guide 2026 | 3.05% Flat Rate, County Taxes & Calculator

KEY INSIGHT
At $100,000 gross income, an Indiana single filer pays approximately $3,020 in state income tax (3.02% effective). Indiana's flat 3.05% state rate is among the lowest in the Midwest, but all 92 counties add income taxes — Marion County (Indianapolis) adds 2.02%, bringing the combined rate to ~5.02% for Indianapolis residents.
At a glance

Key Facts

State Income Tax Rate
3.05% flat rate on Indiana adjusted gross income — reduced from 3.15% (2023) and 3.10% (2024). Phase-down continues: 3.0% in 2026, 2.9% by 2027 per current legislation.
County Income Taxes
All 92 Indiana counties impose a separate county income tax ranging from 0.5% to 2.9%. Marion County (Indianapolis): 2.02%. Hamilton County (Carmel/Fishers): 1.1%. Allen County (Fort Wayne): 1.48%. County tax is based on your county of residence on January 1.
Personal Exemption
$1,000 per taxpayer, $1,000 per spouse (joint filers), plus $1,500 per qualifying dependent. Indiana uses federal AGI as the starting point and subtracts these exemptions to arrive at Indiana taxable income.
Social Security
Fully exempt from Indiana state income tax — Indiana does not tax Social Security benefits at any income level. This is a significant advantage over states like Kentucky and West Virginia that tax Social Security.
Pension & Retirement Income
$16,000 annual deduction for pension/retirement income for Indiana residents aged 62 and older. Disability retirement income is fully exempt. Private pension and IRA/401(k) distributions above the exemption threshold are taxed at the flat rate.
Capital Gains
Taxed as ordinary income at the flat 3.05% Indiana rate — Indiana has no preferential capital gains rate.
Property Tax
~0.85% average effective rate statewide — below the national average of ~1.1%. Indiana's circuit breaker caps property tax at 1% of assessed value for owner-occupied homes, 2% for rentals, 3% for commercial.
Introduction

Indiana's income tax story in 2026 is one of steady, legislated simplicity: a single flat rate of 3.05% that applies to every Indiana resident equally, regardless of income level. That rate has been declining on a published schedule — from 3.15% in 2023, to 3.10% in 2024, to 3.05% in 2025–2026 — and is set to reach 2.9% by 2027. It is one of the most competitive flat income tax rates in the Midwest.

But Indiana's headline rate tells only half the story. All 92 Indiana counties levy their own separate income tax, ranging from 0.5% in the least-taxed rural counties to 2.9% in the highest. For residents of Indianapolis (Marion County), the combined state-plus-county rate hits 5.02% in 2026. Understanding both layers is essential for any Indiana resident — or anyone considering moving to Indiana.

On the positive side, Indiana fully exempts Social Security benefits from state income tax, offers a meaningful pension deduction for retirees aged 62 and older, and maintains property taxes that average a modest 0.85% effective rate. This guide covers all of it: how Indiana's flat tax works, the complete county income tax picture, retirement income treatment, and detailed dollar-by-dollar worked examples at four income levels.

Section 01

Indiana's 3.05% Flat Rate: How It Works and Where It's Headed

The Flat Rate Mechanism

Indiana's flat income tax is straightforward by design. All Indiana residents pay the same percentage on their Indiana-adjusted gross income — there are no brackets, no phase-outs, and no income-based surcharges. The base is federal adjusted gross income (AGI), modified by Indiana-specific additions and subtractions, primarily the personal exemption system.

For a single filer with no dependents, the calculation is: Federal AGI minus $1,000 personal exemption equals Indiana taxable income. Multiply that by 3.05% to get the state income tax. Add your county rate applied to the same base, and you have your total Indiana income tax obligation.

The Legislated Phase-Down Schedule

Indiana's income tax rate reduction is not aspirational — it is written into statute with specific scheduled milestones:

Tax YearIndiana State Income Tax Rate
20233.15%
20243.10%
20253.05%
20263.00% (scheduled)
20272.9% (target)

Each 0.05–0.1 percentage point reduction translates to real money. For a resident earning $100,000, the difference between the 2023 rate (3.15%) and the 2027 target (2.9%) is approximately $250/year in state tax savings — before county taxes are factored in.

What Indiana Taxes

Indiana taxes wages, salaries, business income, interest, dividends, rental income, and capital gains at the flat rate. There is no preferential rate for long-term capital gains — all are taxed as ordinary income. Indiana does not conform to federal qualified dividend treatment for state purposes in this regard.

What Indiana Does Not Tax

Section 02

Indiana County Income Taxes: All 92 Counties, What You Need to Know

The Indiana County Tax System

Indiana is one of only a handful of states with a comprehensive county-level income tax system where every county — not just some — levies an income tax. This is not a city tax or a local occupational tax; it is a county-level tax administered through Indiana's state tax system and collected on the annual IT-40 state return. County income taxes in Indiana are based on your county of residence as of January 1 of the tax year, not where you work.

County Income Tax Rates: Major Indiana Counties (2026)

CountyMajor CityCounty RateCombined with State (3.05%)
Marion CountyIndianapolis2.02%5.07%
Allen CountyFort Wayne1.48%4.53%
Vigo CountyTerre Haute2.55%5.60%
Lake CountyGary / Hammond1.5%4.55%
St. Joseph CountySouth Bend1.75%4.80%
Hamilton CountyCarmel / Fishers1.1%4.15%
Hendricks CountyAvon / Plainfield1.5%4.55%
Boone CountyLebanon / Zionsville1.5%4.55%
Johnson CountyGreenwood1.2%4.25%
Madison CountyAnderson1.75%4.80%
Delaware CountyMuncie1.5%4.55%
Monroe CountyBloomington1.345%4.395%

County rates are set annually by county councils. Verify the current rate for your specific county at in.gov/dor before filing.

The Suburban Tax Differential

In the Indianapolis metropolitan area, county tax rates create a meaningful financial difference between living in the city (Marion County, 2.02%) versus suburban counties. Hamilton County (Carmel and Fishers, 1.1%) residents pay nearly 1 percentage point less in county income tax — worth approximately $990/year on a $100,000 income. Over a 10-year period, that is nearly $10,000 in cumulative local income tax savings, which is one factor (along with school quality and housing preferences) that has driven high-income households toward Hamilton County.

Employer Withholding

Indiana employers are required to withhold county income tax at the rate for the employee's county of residence. If an employee lives in Hamilton County but works in Marion County, the employer must withhold at the Hamilton County rate (1.1%), not the Marion County rate (2.02%). Errors in county code assignment are common, particularly at larger employers with multi-state payroll systems. Indiana residents should confirm their county code on their W-2 (Box 19/20) matches their actual county of residence.

Section 03

Indianapolis Combined Tax Burden: The $100K Example

Worked Example: Single Filer, $100,000 Gross Income, Marion County (Indianapolis)

This is the most-searched scenario for Indiana income tax. Here is the complete calculation:

Worked Examples Across Four Income Levels (Marion County / Indianapolis)

Gross IncomeIndiana Taxable Income*State Tax (3.05%)County Tax (2.02%)Total Indiana TaxCombined Eff. Rate
$50,000$49,000$1,495$990$2,4844.97%
$100,000 ★$99,000$3,020$1,998$5,0185.02%
$150,000$149,000$4,545$3,010$7,5545.04%
$250,000$249,000$7,595$5,030$12,6245.05%

★ Highlight example. *Indiana taxable income = federal AGI minus $1,000 personal exemption (single filer). All amounts rounded to nearest dollar. County rates are for Marion County (Indianapolis). Estimates assume no other Indiana deductions.

Hamilton County Comparison (Same Incomes)

For the same $100,000 income, a resident of Hamilton County (Carmel or Fishers) pays: State tax $3,020 + County tax at 1.1% ($1,089) = $4,109 total — approximately $909/year less than an Indianapolis (Marion County) resident.

Section 04

Social Security and Retirement Income: Indiana's Treatment

Social Security: Fully Exempt

Indiana does not tax Social Security benefits — period. Unlike states such as Kentucky (which taxes Social Security fully) or Minnesota (which uses income-based phase-outs), Indiana exempts all Social Security income regardless of the recipient's total income level. For a retired couple receiving $36,000 in combined Social Security benefits, Indiana's exemption saves them approximately $1,830/year in state income tax (at 3.05% state + 2.02% Marion County = 5.07% combined rate), or about $1,099/year at the state rate alone.

Pension Income: $16,000 Exemption for Age 62+

Indiana allows a deduction of up to $16,000 per taxpayer per year for pension and retirement income received by Indiana residents who are 62 years of age or older. This includes:

For a retired couple, both aged 65, each taking $25,000 in IRA distributions, each applies their $16,000 exemption, reducing their combined Indiana taxable retirement income by $32,000. The combined Indiana tax savings on this exemption alone: approximately $1,625 at the state-only rate (3.05% × $32,000 = $976) plus county tax savings.

Disability Retirement Income

Indiana fully exempts disability retirement income — defined as amounts received from an employer's disability retirement plan prior to the taxpayer reaching the minimum retirement age specified in the plan. This is fully exempt from Indiana income tax in any amount.

Government Pensions

Indiana Public Retirement System (INPRS) pensions and most federal government pensions (CSRS, FERS) do not receive a blanket exemption beyond the $16,000 age-based deduction. Military retirement pay, however, is fully exempt from Indiana income tax — an important distinction for veterans retiring to Indiana.

Indiana's Retirement Tax Competitiveness

Combining Social Security exemption, the $16,000 pension deduction for those 62+, military retirement exemption, low property taxes (~0.85%), and a declining flat income tax rate, Indiana is genuinely competitive for retirees within the Midwest — particularly compared to Wisconsin (taxes most retirement income), Minnesota (taxes Social Security for higher-income retirees, top rate 9.85%), and Illinois (which exempts more income but has a 4.95% rate and very high property taxes).

Section 05

Indiana vs Neighboring States: Full Tax Comparison

The Midwest Income Tax Landscape in 2026

Indiana's flat 3.05% state income tax rate puts it at or near the most competitive end of Midwest states for headline income tax. Here is how Indiana compares to its five bordering states:

StateIncome Tax StructureRate at $100KSocial SecurityAvg Property Tax
Indiana3.05% flat~3.05% + countyExempt~0.85%
OhioGraduated 2.75%–3.5%~2.75%–3.5%Exempt~1.53%
Illinois4.95% flat4.95%Exempt~2.08%
Michigan4.25% flat4.25%Exempt~1.43%
Kentucky3.5% flat + local3.5% + 2.2% (Louisville)Taxed~0.86%
WisconsinGraduated 3.54%–7.65%~5.3%Partial exempt~1.61%

Indiana vs Ohio: A Close Race

Ohio's graduated structure means lower-income Ohioans (under ~$46,100) pay only 2.75% — lower than Indiana's 3.05%. But Ohio's income is not flat: it rises to 3.5% at incomes above about $92,150. For a $100,000 earner, Ohio is slightly cheaper on state income tax alone, but Ohio's much higher property taxes (~1.53% vs Indiana's ~0.85%) often mean Indiana wins on total tax burden for homeowners. Additionally, Ohio's major cities (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati) add local income taxes of 2–2.5%, similar to Indiana's county tax situation.

Indiana vs Illinois: Indiana Wins Clearly

Illinois has a flat 4.95% income tax rate — the same rate for every earner, the same as Indiana's system but 1.9 percentage points higher. On a $100,000 income, an Illinois resident pays approximately $4,950 in state income tax vs Indiana's $3,020 — a difference of $1,930/year. Illinois also has dramatically higher property taxes averaging 2.08% vs Indiana's 0.85%, making Indiana's total tax burden substantially lower for most households. Illinois does exempt Social Security and most retirement income, but Indiana's lower rates often offset this advantage for working-age residents.

Indiana vs Michigan

Michigan's flat 4.25% rate is higher than Indiana's 3.05%, and Michigan's average property tax of 1.43% exceeds Indiana's 0.85%. Michigan also has city income taxes in Detroit (2.4% for residents), Grand Rapids, Lansing, and other cities, creating a similar multi-layer situation to Indiana's county taxes. Indiana is generally more competitive than Michigan on total tax burden for most income levels.

Section 06

Indiana Property Tax, Sales Tax, and the Full Picture

Property Tax: Low by National Standards

Indiana's average effective property tax rate of approximately 0.85% of market value is meaningfully below the national average of ~1.1%. Indiana's circuit breaker system caps property tax at 1% of gross assessed value for owner-occupied homes, preventing the runaway property tax bills seen in Illinois, New Jersey, and Connecticut.

Property Tax Examples

Indiana's homestead exemption reduces the assessed value of an owner-occupied primary residence by up to 60% of the gross assessed value (the Standard Deduction), with supplemental deductions available. This is a significant reduction — in practice it roughly halves the effective tax rate on owner-occupied homes compared to the nominal millage rate.

Sales Tax

Indiana has a 7% statewide sales tax with no local additions — what you pay in Indianapolis is what you pay in Evansville. This is unusual among states; most allow local sales tax additions. Indiana's 7% is moderate by national standards. Prescription drugs and most groceries (unprepared food) are exempt from Indiana sales tax. This simplicity is a genuine benefit for businesses and consumers alike.

No Indianapolis City Income Tax

A common misconception: there is no separate Indianapolis city income tax. The only local income tax layer for Indianapolis residents is the Marion County income tax of 2.02%. Indiana's local tax structure uses counties as the unit — not cities. This differs from states like Ohio (where Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati all have separate city income taxes) and Pennsylvania (where local earned income taxes are set at the municipality level).

Total Tax Burden Summary

Tax TypeIndiana RateNational Context
State income tax3.05% flatBelow average for states with income tax
County income tax0.5%–2.9% (varies)Indiana-specific system; adds significant burden
Sales tax7% flat statewideModerate; no local additions
Property tax~0.85% avg effectiveBelow national average (~1.1%)
Estate/inheritance taxNoneIndiana repealed both
Section 07

Filing Indiana Taxes: IT-40 and Practical Guidance

Indiana Individual Income Tax Return: Form IT-40

Indiana residents file Form IT-40 to report both their state income tax and their county income tax. The county tax is calculated on Schedule CT-40, which is part of the IT-40 package. You need your county's Local Tax Rate to complete this — Indiana publishes updated county rates annually at in.gov/dor.

Determining Your County

Your county income tax is based on your Indiana county of residence as of January 1 of the tax year. If you moved to Indiana from another state during the year, you use the county where you lived on January 1 (which might have been outside Indiana, in which case you may not owe county tax for that year — but you should confirm with the Indiana DOR). If you moved between Indiana counties during the year, you owe based on where you lived on January 1 — not a prorated amount based on months in each county.

Employer Withholding and W-2 Review

Indiana employers withhold state and county income tax and report them on the W-2. Box 15 shows the Indiana state abbreviation; boxes 18-19 show local withholding. If your employer is withholding county tax at the wrong rate (a common error, especially for remote workers at large out-of-state employers), you will either owe additional county tax at filing or receive a refund. Always verify your W-2 county withholding amount against your home county's actual rate.

Self-Employed and Estimated Taxes

Indiana self-employed individuals must pay both state and county estimated taxes quarterly if they expect to owe $1,000 or more. Indiana estimated tax payments are due April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Both state and county estimated tax can be paid together through Indiana's INtax online portal.

Official Source

All Indiana income tax rates, forms, schedules, and county rate tables are published by the Indiana Department of Revenue at in.gov/dor. Always verify county rates for the current tax year before filing, as individual county rates are updated annually by county councils.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Indiana's income tax rate for 2026?

Indiana's state income tax rate for 2026 is 3.05% flat — the same rate applies to all income levels with no brackets. This has been reduced from 3.15% (2023) and 3.10% (2024) as part of a legislated phase-down. The rate is scheduled to continue declining toward 2.9% by 2027. All 92 Indiana counties additionally levy their own income tax on top of the state rate, ranging from 0.5% to 2.9%.

How much Indiana tax do I pay on $100,000?

On $100,000 gross income as a single filer, you pay approximately $3,020 in Indiana state income tax (calculated as 3.05% × $99,000 after the $1,000 personal exemption). Your county income tax is additional. In Marion County (Indianapolis), the county rate is 2.02%, adding approximately $1,998, for a combined total of ~$5,018 (5.02% effective rate). In Hamilton County (Carmel/Fishers), the county rate is 1.1%, adding $1,089, for a combined total of ~$4,109.

Does Indiana tax Social Security income?

No. Indiana fully exempts Social Security benefits from state income tax. There is no income threshold or phase-out — all Social Security income is exempt regardless of how much you earn from other sources. This is a significant advantage for Indiana retirees compared to states like Kentucky and West Virginia, which do tax Social Security.

What are Indiana's county income taxes?

All 92 Indiana counties levy their own income tax in addition to the 3.05% state rate. County rates range from approximately 0.5% to 2.9%. The rate that applies to you is based on your county of residence as of January 1 of the tax year — not where you work. Marion County (Indianapolis) is 2.02%; Hamilton County (Carmel/Fishers) is 1.1%; Allen County (Fort Wayne) is 1.48%. Verify your county's current rate at in.gov/dor before filing.

Is Indiana a good state for retirees from a tax perspective?

Indiana is moderately favorable for retirees. Pros: Social Security is fully exempt; Indiana offers a $16,000/year pension deduction for residents aged 62+; military retirement is fully exempt; property taxes average a low 0.85%; Indiana has no estate or inheritance tax. Cons: Private pension and IRA distributions above the $16,000 exemption are taxed at 3.05% plus county rates; county income taxes add 0.5%–2.9% on top of the state rate. Compared to neighboring states, Indiana is better than Wisconsin and Kentucky for most retirees, competitive with Ohio, but worse than Tennessee or Florida (no income tax).

How does Indiana's flat tax compare to Illinois?

Indiana's 3.05% flat rate is substantially lower than Illinois's 4.95% flat rate — a difference of 1.9 percentage points. On a $100,000 income, this means approximately $1,930/year more in state income tax in Illinois. Illinois also has dramatically higher property taxes (averaging ~2.08% vs Indiana's ~0.85%). Illinois exempts more retirement income (all pension/IRA/401(k) distributions are exempt in Illinois, vs Indiana's $16,000 limit), which can make Illinois more favorable for high-income retirees with large retirement account withdrawals. But for working-age residents, Indiana's total tax burden is generally lower.

What is Indiana's personal exemption amount?

Indiana provides a personal exemption of $1,000 per taxpayer. Married couples filing jointly receive $2,000 ($1,000 each). Each qualifying dependent adds $1,500 to the exemption. These amounts are subtracted from federal AGI to arrive at Indiana adjusted gross income (the base for both state and county income taxes). Indiana does not have a standard deduction separate from the federal standard deduction — the personal exemption is the primary Indiana-specific reduction.

Does Indiana tax capital gains?

Yes. Indiana taxes capital gains as ordinary income at the flat 3.05% state rate, plus your county income tax rate. There is no preferential capital gains rate in Indiana — long-term capital gains receive the same treatment as wages and ordinary income at the state level. Federal preferential rates (0%, 15%, 20%) apply for federal purposes, but Indiana does not honor these for state income tax purposes.

What is the Indiana property tax circuit breaker?

Indiana's circuit breaker (also called the Property Tax Cap) limits property tax to a maximum percentage of a property's gross assessed value: 1% for owner-occupied residential homes, 2% for rental/investment residential property, and 3% for commercial and other property. For a $350,000 owner-occupied home, this means the maximum annual property tax bill is capped at $3,500. In practice, most Indiana homeowners pay below the cap, but it prevents extreme property tax bills in rapidly appreciating markets.

When do I need to file Indiana state income taxes?

Indiana income tax returns (Form IT-40) are due on April 15, the same date as federal returns. If you need an extension, Indiana automatically grants a 60-day extension to file (to June 15), but any tax owed is still due on April 15 — an extension to file is not an extension to pay. Indiana income tax can be filed electronically through Indiana's INfreefile program (for qualifying filers) or through commercial tax software. The Indiana Department of Revenue's website (in.gov/dor) has all forms, instructions, and e-filing options.
Disclaimer:This guide provides general tax information for educational purposes only. Indiana state and county income tax rates change regularly. County rates are set annually and vary — always verify your county's current rate at in.gov/dor before filing. Always consult a qualified Indiana tax professional before making significant tax or financial decisions.
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