States with the most tax savings

People enjoy an unusually warm day in New York City as temperatures reach the low 80s on June 4, 2025 in New York City.

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President Donald Trump‘s “big beautiful bill” temporarily raised the limit on the federal deduction for state and local taxes, known as SALT, from $10,000 to $40,000 for 2025. 

But some residents of certain states could see a bigger tax benefit, according to a Redfin report released last week. 

The results are “in line with what you might expect,” and there is “a sizable benefit to residents of certain states,” said Chen Zhao, head of economics research for Redfin.  

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Trump’s 2017 tax cuts capped the SALT deduction at $10,000. Before 2018, the SALT deduction — including state and local income taxes, and property taxes — was unlimited. But the so-called alternative minimum tax reduced the benefit for some wealthy homeowners.

You must itemize tax breaks, rather than claim the standard deduction, to benefit from SALT. During tax year 2022, only 10% of filers itemized deductions, and those taxpayers were more likely to be higher earners, according to the latest IRS data.

Here is where taxpayers could see the biggest benefit from the $40,000 SALT deduction cap for 2025.

States with the biggest SALT savings

Other measures of the SALT deduction benefit

A separate report released by the Bipartisan Policy Center in May also analyzed which states benefit most from the SALT deduction, based on the number of residents paying SALT, and where taxpayers have the largest SALT deductions.

In 2022, the average SALT deduction was close to $10,000 in states such as Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, California and Massachusetts, according to the analysis, based on the latest IRS data. The bottom five were Wyoming, Tennessee, Nevada, North Dakota and South Dakota.

Those higher averages suggest a large portion of taxpayers claiming the deduction came close to the $10,000 cap, the researchers wrote.

Meanwhile, the states and district with the highest share of SALT claimants were Washington, D.C., Maryland, California, Utah and Virginia, the Bipartisan Policy Center analysis found. The bottom five were West Virginia, South Dakota, North Dakota, Ohio and Wyoming.

However, “neither of these measures is a perfect proxy for how states benefit from the SALT deduction—or are impacted by the SALT cap,” the researchers said.

Why Congress raised the SALT cap

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