2025 Tax Year · LB 754 Reform · 5.20% Top Rate · Social Security 100% Exempt

Nebraska Income Tax Calculator

Four years ago, Nebraska taxed Social Security income the same way the federal government does — which meant higher-income retirees were paying Nebraska state tax on their benefits. In 2025, that changes entirely: Social Security is 100% exempt, regardless of income. The same LB 754 legislation that phased out Social Security taxation is also driving Nebraska’s top income tax rate from 6.84% in 2023 down to 3.99% by 2027. This calculator covers where things stand right now — and shows the glide path ahead.

Reviewed for accuracy: June 2026 · Sources: Nebraska Department of Revenue, IRS

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Nebraska Income Tax in 2025: Why This Year Is Different

Nebraska has been rewriting its income tax code in real time, and the 2025 tax year is where the most visible changes arrive at once. The state’s income tax history begins in 1967 — relatively late compared to most states — and for decades ran as a straightforward percentage of federal tax liability. The current bracket structure, with rates from 2.46% at the bottom to what was once 6.84% at the top, emerged from a series of reforms in the 1980s and 1990s. That top rate of 6.84% had been in place for years when the legislature decided in 2023 that Nebraska was losing competitive ground to Iowa, South Dakota, and the growing number of states cutting rates. Legislative Bill 754, signed in 2023, set in motion the most dramatic top-rate reduction in Nebraska’s history: from 6.84% in 2023 to 5.84% in 2024, then 5.20% in 2025, then 4.55% in 2026, and finally 3.99% in 2027. That is a cut of nearly three full percentage points over four years — specifically targeting the bracket that touches the most economically mobile workers and business owners.

The Social Security change deserves separate attention because of how Nebraska got here. Unlike states that simply decided to exempt Social Security benefits in one legislative session, Nebraska built a four-year ramp starting in 2022: 50% of benefits were exempt that year, then 60% in 2023, then 80% in 2024, and now 100% effective January 1, 2025. Every year since 2022, Nebraska retirees have seen their Social Security benefits become a little more tax-free, until this year, when that number hits zero. A couple receiving $50,000 in Social Security income who earned above the old exemption threshold was paying Nebraska state tax on up to $42,500 of those benefits in 2024 — at the 5.20% marginal rate, that was roughly $2,200 in annual state tax on income they will now owe nothing on. The exemption applies to everyone: no income ceiling, no age requirement, no phase-out. You either have Social Security income or you don’t, and in 2025, Nebraska doesn’t tax it. LB 754 also extended full exemption to federal civil service retirement income — CSRS and FERS annuities — effective tax year 2024, adding a second layer of relief for the significant federal-employee population in Nebraska, particularly around Offutt Air Force Base and federal agencies in Omaha and Lincoln.

The part of Nebraska’s tax code that most newcomers don’t know about: inheritance tax. Nebraska is one of only six states in the country that still levies a tax on what heirs receive from an estate — not the estate itself, but the recipients. LB 310, passed in 2023, eliminated the inheritance tax for immediate family: spouses, children, grandchildren, parents, and grandparents are now fully exempt. But the tax persists for distant relatives and non-relatives on inheritances above $40,000, at rates that range from 1% for aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews to 18% for non-relatives. Nebraska also follows the federal standard deduction rather than setting its own — which means Nebraska taxable income tracks relatively closely with federal taxable income, making pre-tax retirement contributions particularly effective at reducing both simultaneously. No Nebraska city or county levies a local income tax: Omaha, Lincoln, Bellevue, Grand Island, Kearney, and every other Nebraska municipality are income-tax-free at the local level.

Frequently Asked Questions

Nebraska uses four progressive brackets for 2025 under LB 754: 2.46% on the first $3,700 of taxable income for single filers, 3.51% from $3,701 to $22,170, 5.01% from $22,171 to $35,730, and 5.20% on income above $35,730. Married filing jointly filers use wider thresholds with the 5.20% rate applying above $71,460. The top rate drops to 4.55% in 2026 and 3.99% in 2027 under the LB 754 schedule.

No. Beginning with tax year 2025, Nebraska fully exempts 100% of Social Security benefits from state income tax for all taxpayers regardless of income. This completes a four-year phase-in under LB 754: 50% exempt in 2022, 60% in 2023, 80% in 2024, and now 100% in 2025. Nebraska taxpayers subtract the full amount of Social Security included in federal AGI on Schedule I.

No. Nebraska fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax effective tax year 2022 under LB 387. There is no dollar cap and no income limit. The exemption is claimed on Schedule I of Form 1040N.

No. Beginning with tax year 2024, Nebraska fully exempts federal civil service retirement annuities (both CSRS and FERS) from state income tax under LB 754. Taxpayers subtract this income on Schedule I, Part B. Prior to 2024, federal civil service pensions were taxable in Nebraska.

Nebraska follows the federal standard deduction. For 2025, that is $15,750 for single filers, $31,500 for married filing jointly, and $23,625 for head of household. If you itemized deductions on your federal return, Nebraska allows you to deduct the larger of the federal itemized deduction amount or the Nebraska standard deduction, minus any state and local income taxes previously deducted.

Yes. Nebraska is one of only six states in the country that still levies an inheritance tax. However, LB 310 (2023) eliminated the inheritance tax for immediate family members — spouses, children, grandchildren, parents, and grandparents are exempt. The tax applies at rates of 1% to 18% for distant relatives and non-relatives on inheritances above $40,000.

Methodology: Calculations use Nebraska’s 2025 four-bracket income tax schedule (2.46%–5.20% per LB 754, per Nebraska Department of Revenue), the federal standard deduction ($15,750 single / $31,500 MFJ / $23,625 HOH), 100% Social Security exemption (effective TY2025 under LB 754), full military retirement exemption (effective TY2022 under LB 387), full federal civil service retirement exemption (effective TY2024 under LB 754), Nebraska 529 contribution deduction (up to $10,000/$5,000 MFS per year), and LB 754 rate schedule projections (4.55% top rate in 2026, 3.99% in 2027). Federal calculations use 2025 IRS brackets and Child Tax Credit rules; FICA uses 2025 Social Security (6.2% to $176,100) and Medicare (1.45% + 0.9% additional) rates per IRS.gov. Bracket thresholds are approximated from available legislation; verify exact inflation-adjusted thresholds with the Nebraska DOR before filing. Nebraska allows no local income tax. This tool is for planning purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Last reviewed: June 2026.