Exit Strategy: Save Big When You Leave from a “No-Tax
State ”
By Nick Hodges
It’s one of the most overlooked aspects of tax planning. Put simply, there are states that are “no-income tax” states. If you move overseas from one of these, then you’ll pay no state income tax.
At a recent International Living conference I was talking with a couple from
Was he missing anything? As I flipped through the huge file Terry handed me, I asked him what he planned to do once he sold the company. He and his wife Sherry had long ago decided that they wanted to move to
There are eight other ‘no income tax’ states.”
Terry explained the various financial scenarios proposed and told me that what he really wanted was to reduce his taxes. With a possible $8 million payout from the sale due to him, I could see why this was a priority. So I told Terry about a way he could save nearly $800,000…a move he needed to make before the sale of the business and any move overseas.
Your state income-tax situation can make a huge difference in your liability. Not just on the sale of your business, but for future taxation once you move abroad. And it doesn’t matter if your income is $8 million or $80,000…you can save significantly.
Moving overseas from an income-tax state does not end your state income-tax relationship, even if you can prove foreign residency. Your only way to free yourself from your state income-tax relationship is to permanently leave that state.
But first, as part of the proof that you have permanently left a state, you must file a partial-year tax return in that state. And the only way you can file a partial-year tax return is to move to another
Of course, it takes more partial-year resident income-tax return to end your residency in a state. You also need to establish a domicile in another one—ideally, a “no-income tax” state. Establishing domicile in another state is subjective in that the state from which you leave determines whether you left that state permanently or temporarily.
Their big move to Florida
saved them $800,000.”
They compiled moving and mail-forwarding receipts, transferred medical records to new physicians, and opened new banking and investment accounts in their new home state:
They closed all their business and personal accounts in
If
Don’t pay a cent more in taxes than you need to. Understand the filing rules for overseas Americans, and you could save yourself hundreds—even thousands—of dollars this year. Find out how you can plug the hole your money could be draining into,
So you need to make a plan. You need to establish a new, permanent, and credible domicile from which to leave the U.S. Establishing a credible history of new-state domicile is generally something that takes about six months to complete and should encompass voting in your new state and filing a partial-year return with your former state before you leave the country.
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