Tax Guide for Seniors in Alabama (2026 Guide)
Last updated: April 9, 2026
Bottom line: Alabama is easier on many retirees than people expect. The state does not tax Social Security and exempts many pensions and retirement systems, but IRA, 401(k), 403(b), SEP, and Keogh withdrawals still often need Alabama review on Schedule RS. Alabama also does not appear to offer a broad statewide senior income-tax credit or a statewide renter rebate or circuit-breaker program on current income-tax and property-tax pages, so the real Alabama wins are retirement exemptions, county-run homestead relief, and free filing help.
Emergency help now
- If you got an Alabama tax notice and do not know who to call, contact Alabama Department of Revenue Taxpayer Advocacy at 334-242-1055.
- If you are waiting on a state refund, check Where’s My Refund through My Alabama Taxes or call the refund hotline at 1-855-894-7391.
- If you need free help before the April 15, 2026 Alabama filing deadline, use the AARP Tax-Aide locator at 1-888-227-7669 or the IRS VITA/TCE locator at 1-800-906-9887.
Quick help box
- Fastest state filing path: My Alabama Taxes lets Alabama taxpayers file an Alabama return for free.
- Fastest answer on retirement income: Start with Alabama’s official exempt-income list and the 2025 Form 40 booklet and Schedule RS instructions.
- Fastest property-tax check: Use the county office finder and ask which homestead type fits you: H-2, H-3, or H-4.
- Best help for low-income or older filers: AARP Foundation Tax-Aide, IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance and Tax Counseling for the Elderly, and the Alabama Asset Building Coalition.
- Best phone option: Call ALDOR Individual Income Tax at 334-242-1170 Option #1.
Who this page is for
This guide is for seniors in Alabama, retired couples, low-income older adults, homeowners, renters, caregivers, and adult children helping a parent. It is a practical Alabama tax map. It is not a full Internal Revenue Service manual, and it is not a full property-tax-relief or rent-rebate article.
Quick facts
- Best immediate takeaway: Social Security is not taxed by Alabama.
- Major rule: Many pensions are exempt, but IRA and 401(k) withdrawals often are not.
- Realistic obstacle: Homestead rules use different income tests, and the application is handled by your county office, not the state income-tax portal.
- Useful fact: If you are age 65 or older and receive retirement income taxable to Alabama, you can usually exclude up to $6,000 per taxpayer on Schedule RS.
- Best next step: Gather every 1099-R, your last Alabama return, and your property tax bill before you ask for help.
| If you need help with | Best place to start | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security, pension, or 1099-R confusion | Alabama’s exempt-income page and the Form 40 booklet/Schedule RS instructions | “Is this exact retirement payment taxable to Alabama, and do I need Schedule RS?” |
| Property-tax relief on your home | Your county office finder and the homestead exemption page | “Which homestead type should I apply for, and what proof do you need?” |
| Free filing help | AARP Tax-Aide, IRS VITA/TCE, or Alabama Asset Building Coalition | “Do you prepare Alabama returns too, and do I need an appointment?” |
| Refund delay | My Alabama Taxes or the refund hotline | “Has my return been received, and is anything missing?” |
| Notice, levy, or wrong-office confusion | ALDOR Taxpayer Advocacy | “Which office handles this notice, and what documents should I have ready?” |
What senior taxes in Alabama actually look like
Do this first: sort your income into separate buckets before you file. In Alabama, that usually matters more than your age by itself.
- Usually not taxed by Alabama: Social Security, military retirement, Railroad Retirement, Alabama Teachers’ Retirement, Alabama Employees’ Retirement, Alabama Judicial Retirement, Civil Service Retirement, and several other listed systems.
- Often not taxed if the plan qualifies: defined benefit pensions.
- Often still taxable: IRA, 401(k), 403(b), SEP, and Keogh withdrawals, unless a rollover, basis rule, or exclusion applies.
- Handled locally, not through Alabama income tax filing: homestead exemptions and most property-tax relief.
For many older adults in Alabama, the state income tax bill is not the only pressure point. The general state sales tax rate is 4%, and the state rate on food for home consumption is 2% as of September 1, 2025, but city and county sales tax rates still vary. On the property side, property taxes are due October 1 and become delinquent after December 31, so a missed homestead exemption or a late payment can matter even if your state income tax is low.
Does Alabama tax Social Security?
No. Alabama lists federal Social Security benefits as exempt from Alabama income taxation. If Social Security is your only income, Alabama state income tax may not be your main problem. Your bigger Alabama issues may be property-tax relief, local sales taxes, or getting back Alabama tax that was withheld from another source. If you are not sure whether you still need to file, check the official filing rules or ask a free tax-prep site before you skip a return.
Does Alabama tax retirement income?
Yes, some of it. Alabama is generous with many pensions, but it does not exempt all retirement income. The biggest mistake older adults make is treating every 1099-R the same way.
| Income type | Usually taxed by Alabama? | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security | No | Keep your SSA-1099 for records, but Alabama generally does not tax it. See the official exempt-income list. |
| Military retirement, Railroad Retirement, Civil Service Retirement, Alabama state retirement systems, TVA Pension System, U.S. Government Retirement Fund | No | Check Alabama’s official exempt-income list if you want to confirm your system by name. |
| Private defined benefit pension | Usually no | Ask the plan administrator whether the plan qualifies as a defined benefit plan under IRC 414(j). Alabama also posts an incomplete list of known defined benefit plans. |
| IRA, 401(k), 403(b), SEP, Keogh | Often yes | Use Schedule RS instructions. Rollovers, old after-tax basis, and the age-65 exclusion can change the taxable amount. |
| Annuities and pensions not on Alabama’s exempt list | Sometimes partly or fully | Do not guess. The taxable part may depend on your cost basis and the Alabama worksheet in the Form 40 booklet. |
| Roth rollovers and some Roth distributions | Depends | Alabama generally follows the federal treatment here, but use the current instructions if you converted or rolled over funds. |
Schedule RS matters. Alabama uses Schedule RS with Form 40 to report pension, annuity, and retirement-plan income. This is also where Alabama calculates the age-65 retirement exclusion. If your federal 1099-R taxable amount is not right for Alabama because you have older after-tax contributions or a different Alabama basis, the Alabama worksheet may lower the taxable amount.
Example only: A retiree in Montgomery receives Social Security, a military pension, and a $10,000 IRA withdrawal. The Social Security and military pension are exempt in Alabama. The IRA withdrawal may still be taxable, but if the retiree is 65 or older, Alabama may exclude up to $6,000 of the taxable retirement amount on Schedule RS. Basis, rollovers, and prior after-tax contributions can change the result.
Senior tax breaks, deductions, exclusions, or credits
The main Alabama senior breaks are real, but they are narrow. Alabama’s best retirement-related tax breaks are the income exemptions for Social Security and many pensions, the retirement exclusion of up to $6,000 per taxpayer for people age 65 and older who receive retirement income taxable to Alabama, and homestead relief for homeowners. Alabama also has a standard deduction and personal exemptions, but those are not senior-only.
What Alabama does not seem to offer: We did not verify a broad statewide senior income-tax credit, a statewide renter rebate, or a statewide circuit-breaker program on current Alabama income-tax pages and property-tax pages as of April 2026. That is why this guide focuses on the Alabama rules that actually move the needle.
One tip many seniors miss: Alabama’s forms allow reporting of Alabama tax withheld from retirement distributions that are exempt from Alabama income. In plain English, that means if tax was withheld from an exempt pension by mistake, filing may be how you get it back.
Property-tax relief overview
If you own your home and are age 65 or older, call your county office before you do anything else. Alabama’s homestead exemptions are applied through the county revenue commissioner, tax assessor, tax collector, or other local assessing office. A homestead is a single-family owner-occupied primary residence, with up to 160 acres, and you generally must own and occupy it on the first day of the tax year.
| Homestead type | Who should ask about it | What it generally does |
|---|---|---|
| H-2 | Age 65+ with annual adjusted gross income under $12,000 on the most recent Alabama return, or certain disabled taxpayers | Exempts all state property tax and $5,000 of assessed value on county taxes, including school district ad valorem taxes. See the official homestead page. |
| H-3 | Age 65+ with combined federal taxable income of $12,000 or less | Exempts all ad valorem taxes. This is one of the most valuable Alabama senior tax breaks. |
| H-4 | Age 65+ with income above $12,000 on the most recent Alabama return | Exempts all state property tax and gives the regular county homestead exemption. |
Why this gets confusing: H-2 and H-3 do not use the same income test. One looks to the Alabama return. The other looks to combined federal taxable income. On top of that, some counties, municipalities, or other taxing authorities may grant up to $4,000 more in assessed-value relief. That is why local variation should be taken seriously in Alabama.
Best next step: use the county office finder, ask what homestead type fits you, what proof of income they want, whether they need a deed or parcel number, and whether the office will accept documents by mail, email, or in person. If property tax is your main issue, the next page to read on GrantsForSeniors.org is the separate Property Tax Relief in Alabama guide.
Rent rebate or circuit-breaker overview
If you rent, do not waste hours hunting for a statewide Alabama renter tax credit. As of April 2026, we did not verify a statewide Alabama renter rebate or property-tax circuit-breaker program on the current Alabama income-tax or property-tax pages. For renters, the real tax questions are usually whether you owe any Alabama income tax at all, whether Alabama tax was withheld that you can recover, and whether a free preparer can help you claim any refund you are already owed. If rent is your main problem, the next page to read on GrantsForSeniors.org is the separate Rent Rebates and Circuit Breakers in Alabama guide.
Free tax help in Alabama
The fastest realistic path is usually free help, not a paid storefront. For the 2026 filing season, Alabama says the individual income tax deadline is April 15, 2026, so do not wait until the last week if you need a human helper.
- My Alabama Taxes: My Alabama Taxes is ALDOR’s free direct filing system for Alabama returns. You need a username, your Social Security number, and the Alabama adjusted gross income from a current or prior Alabama return.
- AARP Foundation Tax-Aide: Tax-Aide offers free help with a special focus on older adults and low-to-moderate-income taxpayers. You do not need to be an AARP member. Find a local site at the Alabama locator or call 1-888-227-7669.
- IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance and Tax Counseling for the Elderly: The IRS free-prep page explains that Tax Counseling for the Elderly gives special attention to people age 60 and older. Call 1-800-906-9887 for VITA/TCE.
- Alabama Asset Building Coalition: The Alabama Asset Building Coalition promotes free VITA and TCE help in Alabama and says free prep is available for qualifying taxpayers, older adults, people with disabilities, and some limited-English filers. Its free-prep line is 205-731-4000.
- ALDOR Help Center and service centers: The Help Center lists service centers around Alabama, including Auburn/Opelika, Dothan, Gadsden, Huntsville, Jefferson/Shelby, Mobile, Montgomery, Shoals, and Tuscaloosa.
- Taxpayer Advocacy: If you have a notice, stuck refund, or wrong-office problem, use ALDOR Taxpayer Advocacy at 334-242-1055.
What to gather before filing or asking for help
- ☐ Photo ID for you and your spouse, if filing jointly
- ☐ Social Security numbers or Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers for everyone on the return
- ☐ Last year’s federal and Alabama tax returns
- ☐ All SSA-1099, RRB-1099, 1099-R, W-2, 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, and 1099-B forms
- ☐ Pension or IRA basis records if you made older after-tax contributions and think the whole withdrawal should not be taxed
- ☐ Your property tax bill, parcel number, deed, or mortgage papers if you are checking homestead relief
- ☐ Bank routing and account number for direct deposit
- ☐ Any ALDOR or IRS letters you received
- ☐ Proof of estimated payments or Alabama tax withheld from retirement income
- ☐ If you are helping a parent, any written authorization the office or preparer asks for
What to do first without wasting time
- Separate the problem. Is this an Alabama income-tax issue, a county property-tax issue, or a federal tax issue?
- Circle every 1099-R. In Alabama, that is usually where the confusion starts.
- Check exempt income first. Use the official Alabama exempt-income page before assuming a pension is taxable.
- If it is a private pension, ask whether it is defined benefit. The answer can decide whether Alabama taxes it.
- If you own a home, call the county office. Do not wait for a tax bill to discover you missed homestead relief.
- If you are overwhelmed, book free help. AARP, VITA/TCE, and Alabama nonprofit partners can often save you time and mistakes.
Most useful phone scripts
State income-tax help
Call: ALDOR Individual Income Tax, 334-242-1170 Option #1
“Hi, I’m helping my mother with her Alabama return. She gets Social Security and one 1099-R. Can you tell me if this retirement income is taxable to Alabama and whether we need Schedule RS?”
County property-tax relief
Start: County office finder
“I’m 67, this is my primary home, and I want to check senior homestead relief. Which homestead type should I ask for, what income proof do you need, and can I apply by mail or in person?”
Free tax-help appointment
Call: AARP Tax-Aide at 1-888-227-7669 or IRS VITA/TCE at 1-800-906-9887
“I’m over 60 and need free help with an Alabama return. Do you also prepare the state return, what documents should I bring, and do I need an appointment?”
Notice or wrong-office problem
Call: ALDOR Taxpayer Advocacy, 334-242-1055
“I got an Alabama tax notice and I do not understand it. Can you tell me which office handles it, what deadline I need to watch, and what papers I should have ready before I call back?”
Reality checks
- A 1099-R does not tell the whole Alabama story: the name on the form may not tell you whether the plan is exempt, defined benefit, rolled over, or partly after-tax.
- Homestead relief is local: county office names, proof rules, and local add-on relief can vary inside Alabama, even when the state rule is the same.
- Refunds and letters can cross in the mail: check dates before you panic, but do not ignore a notice.
- Scam calls happen: ALDOR says it generally handles official business by mail, not by demanding gift cards or same-minute payment over the phone.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Assuming all retirement income is exempt in Alabama
- Missing the up to $6,000 age-65 retirement exclusion on Schedule RS
- Forgetting that old after-tax contributions may create Alabama basis
- Using the 40EZ route even though you have retirement income or other non-wage income
- Calling ALDOR about a county homestead issue instead of your local county office
- Not filing when Alabama tax was withheld from income that turns out to be exempt
Best options by need
- I only receive Social Security: Alabama income tax may be minimal or zero, but still check filing rules if tax was withheld from another source.
- I have a private pension: Ask first whether it is a defined benefit plan.
- I took an IRA or 401(k) withdrawal: Use Form 40 with Schedule RS, not guesswork.
- I own my home and just turned 65: Use the county office finder and ask about H-2, H-3, and H-4.
- I need free human help: Start with AARP Tax-Aide or VITA/TCE.
- I got a notice and feel stuck: Call Taxpayer Advocacy.
What to do if overwhelmed or stuck
- Stop trying to solve state and local taxes in one pile. Alabama income tax and county property tax usually go to different offices.
- Make a one-page list of every income source. Write “Social Security,” “pension,” “IRA,” “property tax,” or “notice.”
- Take the list and your papers to a free preparer. That is often faster than guessing online.
- If the deadline is close, file or ask about an extension instead of doing nothing. The official filing FAQ explains that Alabama returns are generally due April 15 and that extra time to file does not erase tax due.
- If the problem is local property tax, use the county finder. The state income-tax hotline is not the best first call for homestead relief.
- If you cannot use the internet, use phone or in-person help. Alabama still has service centers, phone lines, and nonprofit tax-help routes.
Local resources in Alabama
- Alabama Department of Revenue Individual Income Tax: 334-242-1170 Option #1
- Refund status and online filing: My Alabama Taxes
- Refund hotline: 1-855-894-7391
- County homestead and property-tax offices: all 67 counties in the official office finder
- AARP Foundation Tax-Aide: site locator or 1-888-227-7669
- IRS VITA/TCE locator: IRS free-prep page or 1-800-906-9887
- Alabama Asset Building Coalition free-prep route: program information or 205-731-4000
- ALDOR Taxpayer Advocacy: 334-242-1055
Diverse communities
Low-income seniors: Alabama’s strongest verified tax help for low-income older adults is usually AARP Tax-Aide, VITA/TCE, and county homestead relief. If you own your home, ask about H-2 and H-3 first.
Veteran seniors: Alabama’s exempt-income list includes military retirement pay and disability retirement payments paid by the Veterans Administration. If a disability affects your home or income, also ask your county about the disability side of homestead relief.
Rural seniors with limited access: Use phone-based help first. The ALDOR Help Center, AARP locator, and IRS locator can help you find the nearest office, drop-off site, or phone number.
Seniors with disabilities or limited English: The Alabama Asset Building Coalition says free VITA help is available for people with disabilities and some limited-English taxpayers. Ask when you book whether the site can provide accessibility help, remote help, or language support.
Frequently asked questions
Do seniors pay Alabama tax on Social Security?
No. Alabama lists federal Social Security benefits as exempt income. That means Alabama does not tax your Social Security check. But do not stop there. If you also received pension income, IRA withdrawals, or had Alabama tax withheld from another payment, you may still need to file to settle the full picture or claim a refund.
Does Alabama tax IRA and 401(k) withdrawals?
Often, yes. Alabama’s current Form 40 booklet and Schedule RS instructions say IRA, SEP, Keogh, 401(k), and 403(b) distributions must be reviewed on the retirement schedule. Some rollovers are not taxable. Some older accounts have Alabama basis. And if you are 65 or older, you may exclude up to $6,000 of retirement income taxable to Alabama.
Are pensions and annuities taxed in Alabama?
Some are, and some are not. Alabama exempts many named retirement systems and also exempts payments from a qualifying defined benefit retirement plan. But pensions or annuities that are not on the exempt list can still be partly or fully taxable. If you have a private pension, ask the administrator whether it is a defined benefit plan and compare it with Alabama’s official but incomplete plan list.
What is Alabama’s retirement exclusion for people age 65 and older?
Alabama’s current Form 40 and Schedule RS allow each taxpayer who is 65 or older and who receives retirement income taxable to Alabama to exclude up to $6,000. The exclusion cannot be larger than the amount of retirement income Alabama is actually taxing. It is not a blanket exclusion for every kind of retirement money, so you still need to classify the income first.
How do I apply for property-tax relief if I own a home in Alabama?
Start with the official county office finder, not the state income-tax portal. Alabama’s homestead exemption page explains the main categories, including H-2, H-3, and H-4 for many older homeowners. Ask the county which homestead type applies, what income test they use for your case, and what proof they need from you.
Does Alabama have a renter rebate or circuit breaker for seniors?
We did not verify a statewide Alabama renter rebate or property-tax circuit-breaker program on current income-tax and property-tax pages as of April 2026. If you rent, your best tax steps are making sure you are not overpaying Alabama income tax, using free filing help, and checking whether you are due a refund from withholding or another filing issue.
Where can I get free tax help in Alabama?
Your best verified options are AARP Foundation Tax-Aide, the IRS VITA/TCE program, and Alabama nonprofit partners such as the Alabama Asset Building Coalition. AARP can be reached at 1-888-227-7669, and the IRS VITA/TCE line is 1-800-906-9887. Most sites also prepare the Alabama state return, but always ask first.
Does Alabama still have an estate or inheritance tax?
For most families, no. Alabama’s estate and inheritance tax page says estates where the decedent’s date of death is after December 31, 2004 are not required to file with Alabama. That does not mean every trust or estate issue disappears, but it does mean most older adults and adult children are dealing with income tax and property tax, not an Alabama estate tax return.
Resumen en español
En Alabama, los beneficios del Seguro Social no pagan impuesto estatal sobre la renta. Muchos pagos de pensión también están exentos, incluyendo el retiro militar y muchos planes de beneficio definido, pero los retiros de IRA y 401(k) muchas veces sí requieren revisión. Si usted tiene 65 años o más y recibe ingreso de jubilación que Alabama sí considera tributable, el estado permite una exclusión de hasta $6,000 por persona en el Formulario 40 y Schedule RS.
Si usted es dueño de su casa, revise la información oficial sobre exenciones de homestead y busque su oficina local en el directorio de oficinas del condado. Si necesita ayuda gratis para preparar impuestos, use AARP Tax-Aide, la ayuda gratuita del IRS, o la Alabama Asset Building Coalition. Si prefiere presentar la declaración usted mismo, puede usar My Alabama Taxes para la declaración estatal.
About This Guide
This guide uses official federal, state, and other high-trust nonprofit and community sources mentioned in the article.
Editorial note: This guide is produced based on our Editorial Standards using official and other high-trust sources, regularly updated and monitored, but not affiliated with any government agency and not a substitute for official tax, legal, or financial advice. Individual outcomes cannot be guaranteed.
Verification: Last verified April 9, 2026, next review August 9, 2026.
Corrections: Please note that despite our careful verification process, errors may still occur. Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections and we respond within 72 hours.
Disclaimer: This article is informational only. It is not legal, financial, tax-preparer, or government-agency advice. Tax rules, deadlines, local filing routes, and relief programs can change. Confirm current details directly with the official tax office, assessor, or filing-help provider before acting.
