The Florida Retiree’s Tax Playbook: What to Do Before You Move (and After You Arrive)

By Davis Private Wealth | Royal Palm Beach, Florida

Florida’s lack of a state income tax is one of the most powerful tax advantages available to American retirees. For someone moving from New York, New Jersey, California, or Illinois, the savings can easily reach tens of thousands of dollars per year on retirement income, capital gains, and Roth conversions.

But the move itself is the easy part. The hard part is doing it correctly — in a way that holds up if your former state’s Department of Revenue ever asks questions. We see too many new Floridians assume that buying a home, getting a driver’s license, and updating their address are enough. They aren’t. High-tax states have become increasingly aggressive about residency audits, and the burden of proof is on you, not them.

This playbook walks through what to do before you make the move, what to do after you arrive in Palm Beach County, and where snowbirds most often get tripped up.

Why the Stakes Are Higher Than Most People Realize

Before getting into the checklist, it’s worth understanding what you’re really protecting. Florida has no state income tax, no estate tax, and no inheritance tax. That means:

  • Your IRA withdrawals, pension income, and Social Security are taxed only at the federal level.
  • Roth conversions can be executed without a state-level tax bite — a meaningful difference if you’re converting six figures.
  • Capital gains on the sale of a business, real estate, or appreciated stock escape state taxation entirely.
  • Your estate passes to heirs without state-level estate or inheritance tax.

Now compare that to states like New York, where top marginal rates exceed 10%, or California, where they exceed 13%. On a $500,000 Roth conversion, the difference between being a Florida resident and a California resident can be more than $65,000 — in a single year.

That’s why states like New York, California, New Jersey, Illinois, and Massachusetts have entire audit divisions dedicated to challenging residency changes. If they can prove you didn’t truly leave, they’ll claw back years of taxes plus penalties and interest.

Before You Move: Building Your Case for Florida Residency

Establishing Florida domicile isn’t a single action — it’s a pattern of life that demonstrates intent to make Florida your permanent home. The earlier you start documenting that pattern, the stronger your case.

1. Understand the Difference Between Residency and Domicile

These terms get used interchangeably, but they aren’t the same. Residency is generally about where you spend your time — most states use a 183-day test. Domicile is about where your permanent home is, the place you intend to return to. You can have multiple residences, but only one domicile.

To break domicile from a high-tax state, you must demonstrate that you’ve abandoned the old domicile and established a new one in Florida. Both halves matter.

2. Time Your Move Strategically

Tax years are unforgiving. If you can structure a major taxable event — a business sale, a large Roth conversion, exercising stock options, or recognizing capital gains — to occur after you’ve clearly established Florida domicile, the savings can be substantial.

This often means moving earlier in the calendar year than you originally planned, or delaying a transaction by a few months. A conversation with your CPA and financial advisor before you finalize timing is worth far more than the same conversation afterward.

3. Run a Pre-Move Residency Audit on Yourself

Make a list of every meaningful tie you have to your current state — your home, business interests, club memberships, doctors, place of worship, drivers’ licenses, voter registration, vehicle registrations, mailing addresses, professional licenses, safe deposit boxes, and the location of important personal items (family photos, heirlooms, pets).

This list becomes your roadmap. Each tie that can be moved to Florida should be moved. Each tie that must remain (a vacation home, an adult child) should be documented as secondary, not primary.

After You Arrive: The Florida Domicile Checklist

Once you’re physically in Florida, the goal is to create a clean paper trail. The actions below should generally be completed within the first 30 to 60 days.

File for the Florida Homestead Exemption

This is the single most important step — and it’s often the first thing audit examiners look for. The Florida homestead exemption reduces the assessed value of your primary residence by up to $50,000 for property tax purposes, and it caps annual increases in assessed value at 3% under the Save Our Homes provision.

The application must be filed with your county property appraiser by March 1 of the year you want the exemption to apply. In Palm Beach County, that’s the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser’s office. You must own and occupy the home as your permanent residence as of January 1.

Equally important: if you previously claimed a homestead, STAR exemption, or similar primary-residence benefit in another state, cancel it. Continuing to claim a primary-residence tax benefit elsewhere is one of the fastest ways to lose a residency audit.

File a Florida Declaration of Domicile

This is a sworn statement filed with the clerk of the circuit court in your Florida county declaring that Florida is your permanent home. It’s inexpensive, takes only a few minutes, and creates a dated public record of your intent. It’s not legally required, but it’s strong evidence.

Update Your Identification and Registrations

  • Obtain a Florida driver’s license (required within 30 days of establishing residency).
  • Register your vehicles in Florida and obtain Florida plates.
  • Register to vote in Florida — and vote in the next election. Voting records are reviewed in audits.
  • Surrender your former state’s driver’s license and cancel its voter registration.

Update Your Estate Planning Documents

Have your will, revocable trust, durable power of attorney, healthcare surrogate designation, and living will redrafted under Florida law. Florida has its own quirks — for example, it doesn’t recognize out-of-state “springing” powers of attorney, and Florida homestead has unique inheritance restrictions when a surviving spouse or minor children are involved.

This isn’t just a domicile-evidence step; it’s a substantive planning issue. Out-of-state documents may not work the way you expect.

Move Your Financial and Professional Relationships

  • Change the address on every financial account — brokerage, IRA, 401(k), bank, credit card, insurance.
  • If your advisor is in your former state, consider whether they’re registered in Florida and whether continuing the relationship makes sense.
  • Establish relationships with Florida-based professionals: physician, dentist, attorney, CPA.
  • Update beneficiary designations and review them in light of Florida law.

Move Your Personal Life to Florida

Audit examiners look at where you actually live your life, not just where your mail goes. The “near and dear” test asks where the items most precious to you are kept — family photos, heirlooms, pets, the artwork you couldn’t replace. If those are still in your old state, your domicile claim is weaker.

  • Move pets, heirlooms, and irreplaceable personal items to Florida.
  • Join a Florida church, synagogue, club, or community organization.
  • Use Florida professionals for routine services, not just emergencies.

Pitfalls Specific to Snowbirds

Splitting time between Florida and a high-tax state is where most residency audits originate. The rules vary by state, but the patterns are consistent.

The 183-Day Rule Is a Floor, Not a Ceiling

Spending fewer than 183 days in your former state is necessary, but rarely sufficient on its own. Some states (notably New York) use a “statutory residency” test that can deem you a resident even if your domicile is elsewhere, simply because you maintained a permanent place of abode there and spent more than 183 days in the state. Any part of a day in the state generally counts as a full day.

Practical implication: keep a contemporaneous log of where you are each day. Phone location data, credit card receipts, and EZ-Pass records can all be subpoenaed in an audit. A simple calendar showing where you slept each night is invaluable.

Don’t Keep the “Bigger and Better” Home Up North

If your northern home is significantly larger, more valuable, or more central to your life than your Florida home, that’s a problem. Examiners compare the two properties — size, value, where you keep your primary belongings, where family gatherings happen. If Florida looks like the secondary home, it probably is one.

Watch Your Business Ties

If you own a business that operates in your former state, audit risk increases substantially. Consider whether board meetings, executive decisions, and key documents can be relocated to Florida. For business owners contemplating a sale, the location of the closing and where decisions were made in the months leading up to it can matter.

A Word on Federal Taxes — They Don’t Care Where You Live

Florida residency eliminates state income tax, but federal taxes still apply. The move doesn’t change your federal bracket, your RMDs, your IRMAA surcharges, or your capital gains rates. What it does do is widen the gap between your current and future tax rates, which often makes Roth conversions, charitable bunching, and other strategies meaningfully more attractive.

In other words: becoming a Floridian doesn’t reduce your need for tax planning — it changes the planning. The strategies that made sense in New York or California may no longer be optimal once the state-level tax disappears.

The Bottom Line

Moving to Florida is one of the most impactful tax decisions a retiree can make — but only if it’s executed correctly. The states you’re leaving have every incentive to keep you, and they have the tools to challenge a sloppy departure.

The good news: with the right preparation, the case for Florida residency is straightforward to build. A clean paper trail, consistent behavior, and timely action in your first year here will protect the savings you came for.

About Davis Private Wealth

Davis Private Wealth, LLC is an independent, fee-only registered investment advisor based in Royal Palm Beach, Florida. We work with Palm Beach County business owners and retirees on comprehensive financial, tax, and retirement planning. To discuss whether a Florida move makes sense for your situation, contact our team at davisprivatewealth.com.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. Tax laws change, and your individual circumstances will determine which strategies apply. Please consult with qualified tax and legal professionals before making decisions based on this information.

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