Tennessee: Where Your Retirement Income Stays Yours


Low taxes, affordable living, and a culture of responsibility make East Tennessee one of the nation’s most retiree-friendly regions

When you’ve worked hard, saved carefully, and dreamed of a well-earned retirement, the last thing you want is for state taxes to take a big bite out of it. A recent MSN Money analysis spotlighted the few states that don’t tax Social Security, 401(k), IRA, or pension income—and Tennessee stands proudly among them.

At a time when inflation and insurance costs are squeezing budgets, Tennessee’s approach offers something rare: financial peace of mind. The state repealed its last remaining income tax in 2021, and today it has no tax on wages, pensions, or retirement withdrawals, and no inheritance or estate tax. That clarity makes it easier to plan ahead without fear of year-end surprises from the tax collector.

Other States Take a Bigger Bite

Many popular retirement destinations can’t say the same. California taxes most retirement income at rates that climb as high as 12.3 percent, while New York, New Jersey, Minnesota, and Oregon also tax pensions and IRA withdrawals. Even middle-income retirees in those states can lose thousands of dollars each year to state income tax.

North Carolina and South Carolina both exempt Social Security but continue to tax other forms of retirement income—at 4.25 percent and 6 percent, respectively. Florida, like Tennessee, has no state income tax, but its advantage often fades under sky-high homeowners’ insurance costs that offset what residents save in taxes.

Across the Southeast, the comparison keeps coming back to the same point: Tennessee’s structure is the cleanest, simplest, and most predictable.

The Kingsport Advantage

Here in Kingsport, that statewide tax benefit is magnified by affordability. Housing prices and utilities are far below the national average, and property taxes are among the lowest in the country, averaging about 0.49 percent. While our combined sales-tax rate averages roughly 9.6 percent, most retirees spend less on taxable goods and more on services, housing, and travel.

Add in four gentle seasons, the Greenbelt, Bays Mountain, and a sense of community that still feels personal, and Kingsport offers something money can’t buy: belonging.

A Culture of Responsibility

Tennessee’s tax structure reflects its values—limited government and personal responsibility. Social programs here are lean, and residents are expected to plan ahead and lean on family, church, and community when life gets tough. For many, that’s a feature, not a flaw. It encourages self-reliance and the generosity that defines East Tennessee’s character.

The Bottom Line

In states like California or New York, taxes take a chunk of retirement income before you ever get to enjoy it. In Tennessee—and especially in Kingsport—you keep more, live better, and rest easier knowing the state won’t come knocking for a piece of your savings.

Tennessee doesn’t just reward hard work—it respects it. For retirees seeking a place where their income stretches further and their independence still matters, Kingsport may be one of America’s best-kept secrets.

One response to “Tennessee: Where Your Retirement Income Stays Yours”

  1. Retirees are the best newcomers , for so many reasons…

    It is my hope that anyone coming to TN , is here because they LIKE US. They want to know our history, heritage, culture. Because so many ancestors, at least of westerners , came thru TN..

    Unfortunately not everyone is coming here because they like us. NextDoor shows responses that indicate a takeover, a progressive eradication of Bubba and D’Jerome , by NY elites and CA celebrities. The kind that our elected officials want to have in their election pictures- and not us…

    So can you explain what we can do?

    Like

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