(ALABAMA) Moving to Alabama often comes with a long checklist: a new job, a lease, school enrollment, and immigration paperwork. One item that sneaks up on many new arrivals is state income tax. For tax year 2026, Alabama keeps its long-standing three-step rate system—2%, 4%, and 5%—and those rates apply to your Alabama taxable income, not your full paycheck.
For immigrants, international students on practical training, new permanent residents, and mixed-status families, the process usually feels harder because income can come from several places (a W-2 job, contract work, a spouse’s job, or even taxable scholarship money). The good news is that Alabama’s rate structure is simple once you know what number the state is actually taxing.

Step 1 (Week 1 in Alabama): Determine your Alabama tax residency
Alabama tax residency is about where you live and your ties, not your visa category. If you move to Alabama and make it your home, Alabama may expect a return for that year.
What to do right away:
– Save your lease, move-in date, utility start dates, and first Alabama pay stub.
– Track the date you left your prior state or country.
– Document household moves if your spouse and children moved with you.
This matters because your filing duties can change if you lived part of the year elsewhere, even if all your work was in Alabama near the end of the year.
Step 2 (Weeks 1–4): Make sure you have the right tax ID to file
Most workers will file with a Social Security number (SSN). Some newcomers, spouses, or dependents may need an IRS Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) to file a return with the correct names listed.
- If you need an ITIN, request it with Form W-7.
- See official instructions: About Form W-7, Application for IRS Individual Taxpayer Identification Number.
Timing matters because ITIN processing can slow down filing.
Step 3 (January–February 2027): Gather documents that determine Alabama taxable income
To estimate and later file Alabama income tax, start with the federal documents that show income for the year:
- W-2 (job wages)
- 1099 forms (contract work, some scholarships, other payments)
- Records of any tax withheld
- If you worked in more than one state, keep each state’s wage and withholding documents separate
Alabama’s system begins with a federal starting point and then makes Alabama-specific adjustments. The Alabama Department of Revenue explains that the brackets apply to taxable income after Alabama additions/subtractions, exemptions, and the Alabama standard or itemized deduction, meaning the rate is not applied to your gross wages.
Step 4 (February–March 2027): Estimate your Alabama taxable income before worrying about brackets
This is the step many people skip—and it’s where many filing mistakes begin. Alabama’s brackets apply to Alabama taxable income, which is the amount after state adjustments and deductions, not your gross pay or offer letter amount.
Practical steps to estimate:
1. Start with your federal income figures used for your federal return.
2. Apply Alabama’s additions and subtractions that fit your situation.
3. Apply exemptions and either the Alabama standard deduction or itemized deductions.
4. The result is your Alabama taxable income for the bracket calculation.
If you don’t have Alabama deduction/exemption tables yet, do a rough estimate with last pay stubs and household details, then update with official figures when you file.
Step 5 (March–April 2027): Apply Alabama’s 2026 rate brackets correctly
Alabama uses graduated rates. You pay each rate only on the portion of taxable income that falls into that band.
Single, Head of Household (HOH), and Married Filing Separately (MFS):
– 2% on the first $0–$500 of Alabama taxable income
– 4% on income over $500 up to $3,000 (the “next $2,500”)
– 5% on income over $3,000
Married Filing Jointly (MFJ):
– 2% on the first $0–$1,000 of Alabama taxable income
– 4% on income over $1,000 up to $6,000 (the “next $5,000”)
– 5% on income over $6,000
Important note:
Because the 5% threshold starts at $3,000 for many filers, most working adults will have some income taxed at 5%. This can surprise people who assume the “top bracket” only applies to very high earners.
Step 6 (March–April 2027): Use Alabama’s official tax tables for exact numbers
When moving from estimates to filing, use Alabama’s tax tables to compute exact liability for a given Alabama taxable income and filing status.
- Official guidance, tax tables, and instructions are available from the Alabama Department of Revenue: Alabama Department of Revenue – Individual Income Tax.
- The department summarizes the bracket design: “2 percent on first $500 of taxable income; 4 percent on next $2,500; 5 percent on all over $3,000,” with joint thresholds similarly described.
Step 7 (By the filing deadline): File, pay, and keep proof for immigration and future needs
Many immigrants keep tax records for reasons beyond taxes: renting a home, applying for loans, or showing compliance for immigration steps.
Save the following:
– A full copy of your filed return
– Proof of payment or refund
– Any letters from Alabama about adjustments
Tip from analysis by VisaVerge.com:
Newcomers often confuse gross pay with taxable income, or pick a filing status without checking how it affects the $3,000 and $6,000 cutoffs for the 5% rate.
Step 8 (After filing): What to expect if Alabama asks questions
If Alabama contacts you, it’s often about math differences, missing documents, or mismatched withholding. Respond promptly and include clear copies of requested documents.
- If your household includes people without Social Security numbers, keep ITIN paperwork and identity documents organized to support the names on the return.
- If you moved into or out of Alabama during 2026, be ready to show move dates. A clean paper trail shortens back-and-forth and reduces stress during an already busy immigration journey.
Final reminder:
– Keep records organized and up to date.
– Estimate carefully using Alabama taxable income—not gross pay—to avoid surprises at filing time.
This guide outlines the eight essential steps for newcomers to navigate Alabama’s income tax system for 2026. It highlights the importance of determining tax residency, obtaining proper identification like ITINs, and distinguishing between gross and taxable income. With rates of 2%, 4%, and 5%, the state uses a low-threshold graduated system that affects most working adults, necessitating careful documentation for future immigration and financial needs.
