Advertiser Disclosure
GOBankingRates works with many financial advertisers to showcase their products and services to our audiences. These brands compensate us to advertise their products in ads across our site. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site. We are not a comparison-tool and these offers do not represent all available deposit, investment, loan or credit products.
15 States To Relocate To If You Plan To Work in Retirement in 2025



Commitment to Our Readers
GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.
20 YearsHelping You Live Richer
Reviewed by Experts
Trusted by Millions of Readers
It’s not unusual to work in retirement. Some retirees take on part-time jobs for additional income streams if Social Security benefits and savings aren’t enough to support them. Others pursue interesting side hustles they didn’t get the chance to dig into sooner as careers.
If you plan to work in retirement, it’s important to know how tax friendly (or not) your state is when it comes to your income. Less favorable tax laws might mean you need to relocate somewhere else.
To determine the best states to relocate to if you’re planning to work in retirement, GOBankingRates surveyed income taxes at the federal and state levels, plus property taxes and sales taxes. After calculating these taxes, GOBankingRates found each state’s total annual taxes paid, total tax burden and overall cost of living.
See which 15 states are best to relocate in if you’re planning to work in retirement.
15. South Carolina
- Median household income: $66,818
- Tax burden: 28.3%
- Cost-of-living index: 95.2
14. North Dakota
- Median household income: $75,949
- Tax burden: 26.8%
- Cost-of-living index: 92.1
13. Oklahoma
- Median household income: $63,603
- Tax burden: 29.4%
- Cost-of-living index: 87.9
12. New Mexico
- Median household income: $62,125
- Tax burden: 28.4%
- Cost-of-living index: 92.9
11. Louisiana
- Median household income: $60,023
- Tax burden: 28.9%
- Cost-of-living index: 93.5
10. Indiana
- Median household income: $70,051
- Tax burden: 27.5%
- Cost-of-living index: 91.3
9. Alabama
- Median household income: $62,027
- Tax burden: 29.1%
- Cost-of-living index: 88.8
8. Arkansas
- Median household income: $58,773
- Tax burden: 29.3%
- Cost-of-living index: 89.0
7. South Dakota
- Median household income: $72,421
- Tax burden: 25.8%
- Cost-of-living index: 92.3
6. Montana
- Median household income: $69,922
- Tax burden: 25.1%
- Cost-of-living index: 94.0
5. Wyoming
- Median household income: $74,815
- Tax burden: 24.4%
- Cost-of-living index: 95.4
4. Kentucky
- Median household income: $62,417
- Tax burden: 26.8%
- Cost-of-living index: 92.9
3. Tennessee
- Median household income: $67,097
- Tax burden: 25.9%
- Cost-of-living index: 90.0
2. Mississippi
- Median household income: $54,915
- Tax burden: 27.3%
- Cost-of-living index: 87.5
1. West Virginia
- Median household income: $57,917
- Tax burden: 25.7%
- Cost-of-living index: 84.8
Methodology: To generate the best and worst states to relocate to if you plan to work in retirement, GOBankingRates surveyed three key taxes: (1) income taxes at both the federal and state levels (including FICA), (2) property taxes and (3) sales taxes. Incomes are based on 2023 American Community Survey median household figures and income tax estimates were created by using an in-house calculator for a person who was filing their taxes as a single person and using the standard deduction (with 2024 tax brackets). Property taxes were calculated using each state’s average rate, as sourced from Tax Foundation and Zillow’s median home value index data as of December 2024. Sales taxes were calculated using each state’s “state and local combined sales tax rate,” sourced from the Tax Foundation, and factored against each state’s average annual consumer expenditure. Estimates on annual consumer expenditure in each state were created by taking the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ 2023 Consumer Expenditure Survey’s national average annual expenditures estimate and factoring it out for each state using the Missouri Economic Research and Information Center’s cost-of-living indices for the Q3 of 2024. Once the three above taxes were calculated as an annual amount, GOBankingRates found each state’s total annual taxes paid and (4) total tax burden. GOBankingRates also found the (5) overall cost-of-living index for each state. For final calculations, factors (1) through (5) were scored and combined, with the lowest score being best. In final calculations, factor (3) was weighted 0.5x and factor (5) was weighted 2x. All data was collected on and is up to date as of Feb. 5, 2025.
Share This Article:
You May Also Like

3 Ways AI Is Quietly Transforming Retirement Planning -- and What It Means for Your Money
October 05, 2025
4 min Read

Here's the Salary You Need To Make To Get the Maximum Social Security Benefit
September 22, 2025
4 min Read


5 Things Boomers Should Always Upgrade in Retirement -- Even If It's Begrudgingly
October 01, 2025
4 min Read


10 Things That Should Be in the Budget of Every Middle-Class Retiree at Age 70
September 05, 2025
4 min Read


I Asked ChatGPT Where Social Security Checks Go the Furthest in Retirement
October 05, 2025
4 min Read

If Wealth Was Distributed Equally Across the US, How Long Would the Money Last New Retirees?
October 03, 2025
4 min Read





- How Long Will My Money Last?
- How Much Do You Need To Retire?
- How To Prepare For Retirement
- How To Save For Retirement Without A 401K
Learn More About Early Retirement Planning
Make your money work for you
Get the latest news on investing, money, and more with our free newsletter.
By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe at any time.

Thanks!
You're now subscribed to our newsletter.
Check your inbox for more details.



Sending you timely financial stories that you can bank on.
Sign up for our daily newsletter for the latest financial news and trending topics.
For our full Privacy Policy, click here.
Looks like you're using an adblocker
Please disable your adblocker to enjoy the optimal web experience and access the quality content you appreciate from GOBankingRates.
- AdBlock / uBlock / Brave
- Click the ad blocker extension icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable on this site
- Refresh the page
- Firefox / Edge / DuckDuckGo
- Click on the icon to the left of the address bar
- Disable Tracking Protection
- Refresh the page
- Ghostery
- Click the blue ghost icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable Ad-Blocking, Anti-Tracking, and Never-Consent
- Refresh the page