Advertiser Disclosure
GOBankingRates works with many financial advertisers to showcase their products and services to our audiences. These brands compensate us through a variety of commercial arrangements, including advertising placements and performance-based compensation, such as when users click on links, submit applications, open accounts, or fund accounts. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site but does not affect the content of any product review or rating. We are not a comparison tool, and these offers do not represent all available deposit, investment, loan, or credit products.
Trump Wants To Eliminate Social Security Taxes: 10 States Where Retirees Would Save the Least
Written by
Heather Taylor
Edited by
Chris Cluff

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
What could a retiree’s financial picture look like without Social Security taxes? Donald Trump, the Republican candidate for president, has presented an economic plan to eliminate tax on Social Security wages along with a lowered corporate tax rate.
While this plan would provide some seniors with immediate relief, this type of federal tax cut wouldn’t be universally beneficial to all in retirement. This is particularly true of retirees who live in states where they are taxed the most. Because Trump’s proposed federal tax cut would not affect state taxes, these retirees ultimately would save the least.
Utilizing GOBankingRates data ranking all 50 states based on the best and worst to retire rich in, we pulled 10 states with tax rates and state taxes that still would make it complicated for retirees to save a lot of money if Social Security taxes were eliminated.
California
- State sales tax: 8.85%
- Median property tax rate: 0.75%
- Estimated property tax: $6,017
- Average Social Security benefits: $1,883
- State tax on Social Security benefits: No
Colorado
- State sales tax: 7.81%
- Median property tax rate: 0.55%
- Estimated property tax: $3,087
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,022
- State tax on Social Security benefits: Yes
Connecticut
- State sales tax: 6.35%
- Median property tax rate: 1.79%
- Estimated property tax: $7,510
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,171
- State tax on Social Security benefits: Yes
Hawaii
- State sales tax: 4.50%
- Median property tax rate: 0.32%
- Estimated property tax: $3,180
- Average Social Security benefits: $1,942
- State tax on Social Security benefits: No
Massachusetts
- State sales tax: 6.25%
- Median property tax rate: 1.14%
- Estimated property tax: $7,227
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,080
- State tax on Social Security benefits: No
New Jersey
- State sales tax: 6.60%
- Median property tax rate: 2.23%
- Estimated property tax: $11,806
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,139
- State tax on Social Security benefits: No
New Mexico
- State sales tax: 7.62%
- Median property tax rate: 0.67%
- Estimated property tax: $2,016
- Average Social Security benefits: $1,789
- State tax on Social Security benefits: Yes
New York
- State sales tax: 8.53%
- Median property tax rate: 1.40%
- Estimated property tax: $6,108
- Average Social Security benefits: $1,931
- State tax on Social Security benefits: No
Rhode Island
- State sales tax: 7.00%
- Median property tax rate: 1.40%
- Estimated property tax: $6,470
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,018
- State tax on Social Security benefits: Yes
Vermont
- State sales tax: 6.36%
- Median property tax rate: 1.83%
- Estimated property tax: $7,035
- Average Social Security benefits: $2,045
- State tax on Social Security benefits: Yes
Editor’s note on election coverage: GOBankingRates is nonpartisan and strives to cover all aspects of the economy objectively and present balanced reports on politically focused finance stories. You can find more coverage of this topic on GOBankingRates.com.
Tax data was sourced from The Tax Foundation and is accurate as of May 7, 2024.
More From GOBankingRates
Share This Article:
You May Also Like
4 Out-of-the-Box Ways the Government Can Fix the Looming Social Security Shortfall
April 14, 2026
3 min Read
Here's How Much More Would You Need to Save if Social Security Is Capped at $50K
April 10, 2026
3 min Read
Social Security Payment Schedule April 2026 -- What to Know Before Your Check Arrives
April 10, 2026
3 min Read
Here's How Much Your Social Security Check May Impact Your Budget in April 2026
April 08, 2026
3 min Read
Why More Americans Are Claiming Social Security at 62 -- Even When It Pays Less
April 06, 2026
3 min Read
I Asked ChatGPT What Working Past 70 Costs Me in Lost Social Security Payments
April 06, 2026
3 min Read
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




