December 18, 2025
- Updated law reference to House Bill 10 (HB10) and signature date December 4, 2024
- Added LDR guidance citations: Revenue Information Bulletin No. 25-012 and Revenue Bulletin 25-008 (Dec 23, 2024)
- Clarified standard deduction indexing for inflation starting January 1, 2026
- Added prorating guidance and mid-year arrival examples for immigrant workers (July 2025 example)
- Included retirement exemption increase for 65+ to $12,000 and CPI adjustment from January 1, 2026
- Expanded context on related fiscal changes: sales tax schedule, corporate tax rate, and franchise tax repeal dates
(LOUISIANA) One year after Louisiana switched to a 3% flat individual income tax, immigrant workers arriving on job visas and families relocating for new starts are beginning to see what the change means in real paychecks, not just headlines. The flat rate took effect January 1, 2025, after Governor Jeff Landry signed House Bill 10 (HB10) on December 4, 2024, and it now applies to all income earned in 2025, to be reported on tax returns filed in 2026.

What changed: from graduated brackets to a flat rate
For many newcomers, the biggest shift is that the old graduated brackets—1.85%, 3.5%, and a top rate of 4.25%—are gone. In their place is a single 3% rate on taxable income after deductions, which Louisiana officials and payroll providers have treated as the new normal throughout 2025.
The Louisiana Department of Revenue (LDR) backed the rollout with formal guidance, including Revenue Information Bulletin No. 25-012 and updated withholding tables released in Revenue Bulletin 25-008 on December 23, 2024, both of which employers relied on when updating payroll systems for the new year.
Standard deductions and adjustments
Under the new system, the standard deduction amounts are:
- $12,500 for single filers and married filing separately
- $25,000 for married filing jointly, head of household, or qualifying surviving spouse
Those amounts are set to adjust for inflation starting January 1, 2026, based on the Consumer Price Index, meaning newcomers settling in Louisiana for the long haul may see the deduction rise over time.
How this affects immigrant workers
State taxes hit at the same time as federal paperwork, housing costs, and the first months on a new job. Workers in Louisiana on H-1B, L-1, or OPT often arrive mid-year, and HB10’s larger standard deductions can lower taxable income even when they’ve only earned wages for part of the year.
Important details for immigrant workers:
- Many arrive mid-year; deductions may be prorated (see “Prorating the standard deduction” below).
- Withholding changes can affect cash flow during initial months after arrival.
- Tax records matter for immigration processes (see “Immigration ties” section).
Withholding and employer guidance
For employers—especially those sponsoring foreign nationals—the operational story has been about withholding. LDR’s approach uses a slightly higher 3.09% withholding rate, designed as a buffer so most employees don’t end up owing at filing time.
Key employer requirements and guidance:
- Employers must use the updated withholding certificate, Form L-4, which reflects the flat tax and the new deduction structure.
- LDR built the new formulas into withholding tables and emergency rules that employers used starting with the first wages paid after January 1, 2025.
- Employers and residents are directed to the Louisiana Department of Revenue official website for the bulletins and withholding instructions.
Who the rule touches
The rule applies broadly:
- Full-year residents
- Part-year residents
- Nonresidents who work in the state more than 25 days per year
That 25-day threshold can surprise people who live in another state but travel into Louisiana for projects in energy, construction, or healthcare. For many of those workers, withholding applies unless an exemption is properly claimed on Form L-4. In some cases, tax treaties may also shape final tax liability—an issue for certain nonresident aliens connected to F-1 or J-1 programs.
Exemptions and deductions: what was removed
HB10 removed personal and dependent exemptions under the old approach, placing more weight on the larger standard deduction. That can simplify tax filing for newly arrived workers who have never dealt with Louisiana state taxes before, but it may feel unfamiliar to families used to counting exemptions.
Comparative figures:
- Previous standard deduction: $4,500 (single), $9,000 (married filing jointly)
- New standard deduction: $12,500 (single), $25,000 (married filing jointly)
- Flat rate capped at 3%
The source material indicates most filers are expected to move toward the larger standard deduction rather than itemizing or using exemptions.
Practical examples and back-of-the-envelope math
The source material gives clear examples that households have been using to estimate impacts.
- Single filer earning $40,000:
- Taxable income after $12,500 deduction = $27,500
- 3% tax = $825
- Previous system estimate: ~$1,000
- Married couple earning $80,000 jointly:
- Taxable income after $25,000 deduction = $55,000
- 3% tax = $1,650
- Previous system estimate: ~$2,200
Prorating the standard deduction for mid-year arrivals
For immigrants who arrive mid-year, prorating can change outcomes materially.
Example from the source material:
– An H-1B worker moves in July 2025 with roughly $30,000 in half-year income.
– Prorated deduction (half of $12,500) = $6,250
– Taxable income = $23,750
– State tax at 3% = $712
Retirement income exemption for seniors
For older immigrants (family-based immigration or retirees), the retirement income exemption changed:
- Exemption for those 65+ doubled to $12,000 (from $6,000)
- Also set for CPI adjustment starting January 1, 2026
This can reduce state tax on fixed retirement income, though it does not affect sales taxes.
Sales tax and corporate changes in the broader fiscal package
The tax package included sales and corporate changes that affect residents and businesses:
- Sales tax moved to 5% through 2029, dropping to 4.75% in 2030
- Expanded taxability to digital products
- Corporate tax moved to 5.5%
- Repeal of the corporate franchise tax effective January 1, 2026
For immigrant entrepreneurs and visa holders tied to business activity, those corporate provisions can influence business-location decisions even if most workers feel changes first through the personal 3% rate.
Compliance pressures and employer penalties
There are compliance consequences for employers:
- Employer penalties for underpayment can reach up to 5% plus interest
- Most payroll systems updated quickly, and LDR reported high compliance in 2025 filings
- No major reversals were reported by December 2025
Immigration ties and documentation
Tax filing interacts with immigration processes in practical ways. Many immigrants eventually file for permanent residence or renew work authorizations and keep copies of tax returns as part of personal records.
- Applicants for adjustment of status commonly file Form I-485
- Consistent filing can help avoid delays when applicants need to document identity, residence, and eligibility
- Official USCIS filing page for Form I-485: https://www.uscis.gov/i-485 (link preserved exactly as in source)
Key takeaway: Predictable withholding and easier-to-explain tax rules can matter to immigrants both for household budgeting and for maintaining clean records used in immigration processes.
Scale and practical impacts on the workforce
The changes have appeared across pay stubs for an estimated workforce of over 2 million Louisiana workers, including a growing share of foreign-born residents in nationally and globally recruiting sectors.
- A flat rate is easier to predict for relocation negotiations.
- Predictable withholding matters when clean tax records are needed for future filings or immigration steps.
- According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, state-level cost differences increasingly shape mobility for skilled visa holders.
Final observations
For now, Louisiana’s 3% rate, the bigger standard deductions, and the 3.09% withholding method have turned a complicated set of brackets into something closer to a single sentence. That simplicity is becoming part of how new residents describe their first year in the state, affecting decisions for workers, families, and employers alike.
Louisiana replaced graduated income-tax brackets with a 3% flat rate starting Jan. 1, 2025, enacted by HB10. The LDR issued bulletins and updated withholding tables; employers generally used a 3.09% withholding rate as a buffer. Standard deductions rose to $12,500 (single) and $25,000 (married filing jointly), with CPI adjustments beginning in 2026. The change affects full- and part-year residents and nonresidents working more than 25 days in-state, influencing paychecks, withholding, and immigration documentation.
