December 18, 2025
- Clarified immigration relevance of the 2025 and 2026 North Carolina tax rates
- Added explicit tax-year guidance: 2024 = 4.5%, 2025 = 4.25%, 2026 = 3.99%
- Emphasized withholding and payroll steps for sponsors and visa holders (Form NC-4 reference)
- Explained part-year resident treatment and practical timelines for movers in 2025
- Reiterated corporate tax path: 2.25% in 2025 and 0% targeted by 2030
(North Carolina) North Carolina’s tax cuts for 2025 and 2026 are moving ahead on the timeline already set in state law, and that matters for many immigration cases even though taxes aren’t “immigration forms.” For tax year 2025, the state’s flat individual income tax rate is 4.25%. For tax year 2026, it is scheduled to drop to 3.99%. On the business side, the corporate income tax rate is 2.25% in 2025, and state law puts it on a path to 0% by 2030.

For newcomers, international students moving into work, and families filing sponsorship cases, the practical issue is simple: immigration officers often look at whether a person’s story about work and money matches the paper trail. That paper trail includes pay stubs, W-2s, state returns, and employer payroll records. Using the wrong year’s state tax rate in a letter, budget, or affidavit can create confusion, delays, and extra questions.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, North Carolina’s move toward lower, predictable rates has become a talking point in relocation decisions, especially for workers comparing offers across several states.
Why the tax-year match matters for immigration filings
Immigration reviewers compare statements about income and employment to documentary evidence. Because state withholding shown on pay stubs and W-2s reflects the applicable state rate for the tax year, using the wrong rate in affidavits, budget letters, or projections can:
- Create apparent discrepancies between claimed and documented net pay.
- Trigger Requests for Evidence (RFEs) or extra consular questions.
- Delay adjudication while the applicant explains timing or provides amended documents.
Important: Small differences in withholding can prompt disproportionate follow-up if the documentation is inconsistent or lacks explanation.
Using the wrong year’s rate in affidavits or projections can trigger RFEs or delays. Double-check pay stubs and W-2s; if a mismatch appears, obtain corrected payroll documents before filing.
Step 1: Confirm which tax year applies to your immigration paperwork
Before you run numbers for a visa, green card, or naturalization file, match the tax rate to the year of the income being discussed.
- 2024 income uses a 4.5% North Carolina individual rate.
- 2025 income uses a 4.25% North Carolina individual rate, effective for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025.
- 2026 income uses the enacted 3.99% rate for taxable years after 2025.
This step sounds basic, but it comes up often when couples file family cases across two calendar years, or when a worker’s job offer starts mid-year. If an immigration filing includes a projection letter (for example, “My expected net pay is X”), make sure the state withholding rate used in that projection matches the year the wages will be paid.
For official state confirmation, the North Carolina Department of Revenue posts rate schedules and withholding guidance on its North Carolina Department of Revenue official site.
Step 2: What North Carolina taxes after you move
Many immigrants ask: “What income will North Carolina tax once I live there?” The state applies its flat rate to North Carolina taxable income, which generally includes:
- Wages
- Self-employment income
- Most retirement income
- Capital gains
Key exception:
- Social Security benefits remain exempt from North Carolina income tax.
If you become a North Carolina resident during 2025, you will typically file as a part-year resident. In plain terms, you pay North Carolina tax on:
- Income earned while you were a resident, and
- North Carolina–source income.
A common timeline for a new arrival:
- Move date (e.g., May 2025): your residency period begins.
- First paycheck (within 2–6 weeks for many jobs): state withholding should reflect the 2025 rate.
- First tax season (early 2026 for 2025 income): you file a part-year resident return showing the split-year story.
Step 3: Make sure payroll withholding matches the 2025 and 2026 rates
Employers and workers on sponsored visas should watch withholding closely because pay records often support immigration filings.
- For 2025 wages, withholding should reflect 4.25%.
- For 2026 wages, withholding should reflect 3.99%.
If you changed jobs, started work after time abroad, or see a mismatch on your pay stub, ask HR which state form they need from you. The source material points to Form NC-4 as the withholding adjustment form used with employers.
Why clean payroll records matter for immigration:
- H-1B and L-1 extensions — recent pay stubs are reviewed.
- PERM and immigrant petitions — employer records may be checked in audits or site visits.
- Consular processing — applicants bring proof of employment and ongoing income.
Step 4: Plan for 2026 if you expect a big income event
The change from 4.25% (2025) to 3.99% (2026) may affect timing for people who control when income is realized. Common examples include bonuses, investment sales, and retirement withdrawals.
A realistic planning process:
- List “big income events” expected in the next 12–18 months (bonus, RSU vesting, home sale, IRA withdrawal).
- Ask whether the timing is flexible (some events are not).
- Compare the year-of-tax effect using the correct rate (2025 vs 2026).
- Keep documentation that explains timing, in case an immigration officer later asks why one year’s income is higher or lower.
Even modest tax savings aside, strong documentation prevents support cases from turning into a request for more evidence.
Step 5: Use the right income story for family sponsorship (Form I-864)
For family sponsorship, taxes are frequently the clearest financial evidence. The financial sponsor files an affidavit promising support, and officers check whether the sponsor’s income matches tax records.
The key federal form is Form I-864, Affidavit of Support. While the form is federal, the evidence packet often includes state returns or state withholding shown on W-2s and pay stubs. That’s where the North Carolina rate year matters.
Practical actions to reduce questions:
- If you include a letter projecting net pay, note the applicable withholding rate — 2025 4.25% or 2026 3.99% — depending on the wages discussed.
- If your household moved from another state in 2025, attach a short note explaining part-year residency so the state return amount doesn’t look “too low” for the year.
Step 6: Handling pending or amended returns — don’t mix up rates
Immigration cases often proceed while tax returns are pending or amended. Two important clarifications:
- A pending 2024 return is taxed at 4.5%; the 2025 cut does not apply to 2024 income.
- An amended 2024 return does not retroactively receive the 2025 rate; it still uses 4.5%.
If you submit amended returns for immigration purposes, include proof the amended return was filed and accepted, and keep your explanation short and factual.
Step 7: Retirement income, exemptions, and immigrant households
North Carolina’s flat rate applies to most retirement income, but specifics matter for older immigrants, returning U.S. citizens sponsoring family, and mixed-status households.
The source material states:
- Social Security benefits — exempt from North Carolina income tax.
- Military pension income — exempt due to prior legislative changes.
- Many other pensions, annuities, and IRA/401(k) distributions — taxed at the flat rate (4.25% in 2025, 3.99% in 2026).
Practical immigration impact: retirees who sponsor family must show steady income. If withdrawals change year to year, keep a clear record explaining what changed and why.
Step 8: Business owners — track the corporate rate schedule through 2030
Entrepreneurs and employers sponsoring foreign workers should track business tax changes as well as personal taxes.
Corporate schedule highlights:
- Corporate income tax rate — 2.25% for 2025, with stepdowns to 0% by 2030.
For immigration cases tied to a business (employer-sponsored green cards, work visa support letters, or startup planning for founders), tax stability can influence hiring, expansion, and how a company documents its ability to pay wages.
A basic employer checklist:
- Confirm entity type (C-corp vs pass-through) and where North Carolina corporate tax applies.
- Update payroll systems for the individual withholding changes.
- Keep clean records that match wage offers made in immigration filings.
Step 9: Use plain, consistent language when describing taxes in immigration files
When your immigration file includes taxes, keep the language consistent and easy to verify. Avoid casually mixing “tax year” and “calendar year.” Use phrases like “tax year 2025” and tie them to the correct rate.
Helpful phrasing examples:
- “My North Carolina wages for tax year 2025 are withheld at the state’s 4.25% flat individual income tax rate.”
- “My projected 2026 wages reflect the enacted 3.99% rate.”
Consistency reduces delays for families and workers, and minimizes cross-department mismatches for employers.
Step 10: What authorities may request and what to keep in your file
North Carolina tax authorities generally do not decide immigration benefits, but their documents commonly become part of the evidence submitted to federal agencies. USCIS or a consular officer may ask for tax transcripts, state returns, or proof of current income.
Keep a “tax-and-immigration” folder with:
Create a ‘tax-and-immigration’ folder with recent pay stubs, W-2s/1099s, state returns, amended returns, and notes on residency changes or big income timing to speed up reviews.
- Recent pay stubs showing state withholding
- W-2s and/or 1099s
- Filed state and federal returns for the years requested
- Any amended returns and proof of filing
- Short explanations for major changes (job change, move date, bonus timing, investment sale)
That file helps you answer questions fast, especially when a case moves quickly or a last-minute interview request arrives.
Key takeaway: Match the tax rate to the tax year in every projection, affidavit, and explanation. Clear documentation and consistent language prevent avoidable delays.
Table: Quick at-a-glance North Carolina rates mentioned
| Item | Tax Year / Period | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Individual income tax (2024) | Tax year 2024 | 4.5% |
| Individual income tax (2025) | Tax year 2025 | 4.25% |
| Individual income tax (2026) | Tax year 2026 | 3.99% |
| Corporate income tax (2025) | Tax year 2025 | 2.25% |
| Corporate income tax (2030 and beyond) | By 2030 | 0% |
Preserve the original state and federal resources for confirmation: the North Carolina Department of Revenue guidance is available at https://www.ncdor.gov/ and the federal affidavit-of-support form is at https://www.uscis.gov/i-864.
North Carolina’s enacted tax schedule sets a 4.25% flat individual rate for 2025 and 3.99% for 2026, with corporate tax at 2.25% in 2025 toward 0% by 2030. For immigration filings, auditors compare pay stubs, W-2s, and state returns to affidavits and projections. Using the correct tax-year withholding rate—confirmed via Form NC-4 and state guidance—and keeping clear part-year residency notes prevents RFEs, delays, and documentation mismatches.
