From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtax-freeˌtax-ˈfree adjective not taxed He was paid a tax-free cash sum as compensation. —tax-free adverb You can earn up to £65 per week tax-free.
Examples from the Corpus
tax-free• That tax-free allowance is currently $ 35 for Maricopa County legislators and $ 60 a day for the rest.• The average portfolio maturity of tax-free funds shortened to 51 days from 53 days, according to the newsletter.• The account simply needs to be registered with the Revenue as qualifying for tax-free interest.• Occasionally, a Bill will be abandoned as was the Judges' Remuneration Bill 1953, which proposed tax-free salaries for judges.• It would authorize tax-free savings accounts for school expenses from kindergarten through high school.• tax-free winningsFrom Longman Business Dictionarytax-freeˌtax-ˈfree adjectiveTAX tax-free income, investments, activities etc are not taxedMost municipal bonds are totally tax-free.He retired with a tax-free lump sum (=single large amount of money) of £80,000. —tax-free adverbEarnings can be withdrawn tax-free after seven years.