Choosing where to launch or expand a small business can be as consequential as your product strategy. “Best” isn’t one-size-fits-all: a solo consultant cares about marginal tax on pass-through income; a retailer sweats sales-tax compliance and licensing; a contractor watches workers’ comp and unemployment insurance costs; and everyone worries about red tape. Below is a practical, 2025-ready guide that blends tax competitiveness, licensing burdens, and core insurance requirements so you can pick a state that matches your business model—not just a headline ranking.
How we evaluated (and what changed for 2025):
1) Wyoming – Ideal for pass-throughs and asset-light firms
Wyoming ranks #1 overall and imposes no individual or corporate income tax. Many small professional services, consultancies, and holding companies prize that simplicity. Note that property taxes still matter for asset-heavy firms. Tax Foundation+1
2) South Dakota – Lean and simple, especially for services
No individual or corporate income tax, straightforward compliance, and a business-friendly tax mix. Strong fit for location-agnostic service businesses and back-office operations. Tax Foundation
3) Alaska – Great for in-state retail (no state sales tax) and pass-throughs
Alaska lacks both an individual income tax and a state-level sales tax (local sales taxes can apply). Good for local retail and hospitality where the absence of state sales tax lowers in-state checkout friction. Tax Foundation
4) Florida – Popular for solo pros and agencies; big market, no wage income tax
Florida’s top-tier ranking is driven by no individual income tax and competitive overall structure. Many pass-through owners like the personal tax treatment; corporations should still review the state corporate income tax. Tax Foundation+1
5) Montana – Retailers with storefronts love the no-sales-tax reality
Montana’s lack of a state sales tax is a genuine upside for in-state brick-and-mortar retail; e-commerce firms still face multi-state collection when they hit other states’ thresholds (post-Wayfair). Tax FoundationAvalara
6) New Hampshire – Now a true no-income-tax state (and no state sales tax)
As of January 1, 2025, NH repealed its Interest & Dividends tax, making it a no-income-tax state alongside no general sales tax—very attractive for pass-through owners and local retailers. Keep an eye on property tax levels when you own real estate. NH Revenue AdministrationTax Foundation
7) Texas – Big market, no individual income tax, unusual workers’ comp rule
Texas combines scale with no individual income tax. Unique twist: most private employers can opt out of workers’ comp (many still carry it due to contracts/risks). Property taxes and local sales taxes merit modeling for brick-and-mortar firms. Texas Department of Insurance
8) Tennessee – Strong for pass-throughs; watch sales tax on B2C
No individual income tax on wages, but high combined sales tax averages mean B2C sellers should price accordingly. Good environment for agencies and software consultancies with low taxable sales. Tax FoundationKiplinger
9) North Dakota – Balanced profile with competitive property tax rank
North Dakota pairs mid-pack sales tax with favorable property tax ranking—handy for firms with equipment or owned real estate. Economic Development
10) Indiana – Manufacturing-friendly mix with efficient UI & comp costs
Indiana’s stable, relatively low-cost environment—including competitive workers’ comp premium levels—appeals to manufacturers and logistics firms. Oregon
If you want a straightforward, low-tax default for a service business, the perennial leaders—Wyoming, South Dakota, Florida, New Hampshire, Texas, Tennessee—are hard to beat. If you’re a local retailer, Alaska, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Delaware can simplify in-state point-of-sale (but Wayfair still governs remote sales). Manufacturers and contractors should weigh property tax and workers’ comp alongside income taxes, which pushes states like Indiana and North Dakota up the list. And for high-growth firms that might cross Nevada’s $4M threshold, plan for the Commerce Tax as you scale.
Finally, ground your decision in your revenue mix, headcount plans, and where your customers (and risk) actually are. To validate assumptions with current data, check the 2025 SBA state profiles for your shortlist, then run a pro forma with your accountant and insurance broker. Office of Advocacy
Key sources for 2025 planning:
Tax Foundation 2025 State Tax Competitiveness Index and state pages; Sales Tax Rates (Midyear 2025); SBA 2025 State Profiles; Oregon DCBS 2024 Workers’ Comp Premium Study; Texas Department of Insurance WC guidance; Streamlined Sales Tax and Avalara on Wayfair economic nexus. Tax Foundation+2Tax Foundation+2Office of AdvocacyOregonTexas Department of InsuranceDefaultAvalara
Not legal or tax advice; confirm specifics with your CPA or attorney before forming or relocating.
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