Financial Advisors for Tax Relocation Planning

Kimberly Green | 2026-04-06

Financial Advisors for High-Tax State Residents Planning a Tax-Motivated Move California has a 13.3% vetted marginal income tax rate. New York City residents pay up to 14.8% combined state and city tax. New Jersey's vetted rate is 10.75%. For high earners and business owners, the potential tax savings from relocating to a no-income-tax state (Florida, Texas, Nevada, Washington, Wyoming) can be substantial — sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars over a decade. But a tax-motivated move is not as simple as changing your mailing address and calling yourself a resident. States aggressively audit residents who claim to have moved, and the financial and personal requirements for establishing domicile are more demanding than most people realize. A move done wrong can generate $50K–$200K+ in audit assessments and penalties. State Domicile Rules and Physical Presence Requirements Moving for tax purposes requires more than buying a condo in Florida. States look at a long list of factors when determining where you're actually domiciled, and the burden of proof typically falls on you: The 183-day rule : Most states use a "183-day rule" — spend more than 183 days in the state and you're presumed a resident for state tax purposes. But your old state may still claim you as a domiciliary even if you spend less than 183 days there, based on domicile factors (primary residence, intent to return, etc.). The two states can't both be wrong in their views, but they often both assert claims. Domicile factors courts examine (applied under common law domicile doctrine across most states): Where is your primary home? Where do your kids go to school? Where is your primary doctor, dentist, attorney? Where do you vote? Where do you maintain driver's license and vehicle registration? Where are your social and recreational ties (clubs, religious organizations, friends)? Where do you keep your most important possessions? A high-earner who buys a $2M condo in Miami, but keeps a $3M home in California, sends kids to school in California, maintains California professional licenses, and spends 200+ days/year in California is going to lose a domicile audit with California every time. California specifically (Revenue and Taxation Code § 17014) : California requires you to establish that you have no present intent to return. This is a higher burden than most states — it's not enough to be a Florida resident; you have to affirmatively prove you're NOT coming back to California. Simply buying a house in Nevada while keeping a California home, maintaining California professional licenses, or...

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