New York, California get 'aggressive' when residents try to flee high taxes
As an increasing number of residents are looking to leave high-tax states, such as California and New York, some of these state and local governments are not making the process easy.
The
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act introduced a number of reforms, including a
$10,000 cap on state and local tax deductions, which have caused
Americans to look into establishing legal primary residences in states
where they can limit their liabilities.
“California
… they don’t particularly like when people that were large taxpayers …
leave,” Marc Minker, lead managing director at accounting provider and
consulting firm CBIZ MHM, told FOX Business. “The state becomes very
aggressive with respect to making you prove that you essentially changed
your domicile.”
Changing a domicile requires an
individual to physically move with the intent to stay either permanently
or indefinitely. The state of domicile determines your income, estate
and other taxes.
Even when you change your
domicile, that is not always enough, Minker added. If you own a property
in the old state, you must be able to prove that you resided in the new
domicile for more than 183 days out of the year.
In addition to California, Minker said New York is “equally aggressive,” as are New Jersey, Connecticut and Ohio, among others.
Lance
Christensen, a partner at accounting firm Margolin Winer & Evens,
agreed that New York State and New York City are aggressive when it
comes to allowing taxpayers to leave. He said individuals must be ready
to “withstand New York State and New York City challenges.”
To
prove where they were throughout the year, Christensen recommends
people keep a detailed diary. He also told FOX Business taxpayers should
keep items like receipts, plane tickets – even EZ pass receipts.
“The
burden of proof is on the taxpayer to prove where he is, or she is, and
it can be very close,” Christensen said. “We’ve seen this come down to
where your pet is.”
He added that taxpayers
should make sure they have thoroughly planned and are prepared for the
move, adding for some clients with a lot of taxable income during a
certain year it may be cheaper to take a trip around the world than it
would be to return to New York and be hit with those taxes.
Christensen
has seen an increasing number of people in New York looking to domicile
in Florida as a consequence of the new tax law – which he says is
especially common among people who already have a second home there.
As
previously reported by FOX Business, while Florida received more movers
than any other state last year, New York's outflows to the Sunshine
State were the highest – 63,772 people. New York had the third-largest
outflows of any state, with 452,580 people moving out within the past
year. California, another high-tax state, had the largest outflow of
domestic residents – with the highest proportion of people headed to
Texas, Arizona and Washington. Washington and Texas collect no state
income tax.
New York was found to have the highest state and local tax burden of any of the 50 states, with the average individual paying nearly 13 percent of income toward those obligations.
President Trump said last month that residents were “fleeing” New York over high taxes, which he suggested were “oppressive.”
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