Brotman Law — residency and multi-state tax attorneys

Tax Strategy

Residency & Multi-State Tax
Leave California. Keep Your Money.

California doesn't let you go easily. We help individuals and businesses navigate residency changes, multi-state income allocation, and the FTB's aggressive pursuit of departing taxpayers.

Sam Brotman Sam Brotman, J.D.|Last updated April 2026

California Will Follow You When You Leave.

Moving out of California should mean you stop paying California income tax. In practice, the FTB has other plans. They audit departing residents aggressively, challenge domicile changes, and claim California-source income on everything from deferred compensation to partnership distributions.

If you're earning income in multiple states — whether through remote work, multi-state business operations, or investment properties — you face a maze of competing tax obligations. Each state has its own rules for sourcing income, determining nexus, and claiming you as a resident.

We help clients plan their departure from California, defend against FTB residency audits, and structure their multi-state tax obligations to minimize total liability. For a deeper understanding, see our resources on California FTB defense.

What We Handle

Multi-State Tax Services

Residency Change Planning

Before you move, we help you document your departure and sever California ties in a way that withstands FTB scrutiny.

FTB Residency Audit Defense

Already under audit? We build comprehensive residency defense packages using the FTB's own 'closest connections' framework.

Multi-State Income Allocation

We determine which states can tax your income and structure your affairs to minimize overlapping state tax obligations.

Nexus Analysis

For businesses operating across state lines, we analyze where you have tax nexus and develop compliance strategies that avoid surprises.

Telecommuter Tax Issues

Remote work has created new multi-state tax complications. We help employers and employees navigate these evolving rules.

State Tax Credit Optimization

When you owe taxes to multiple states, credit mechanisms can prevent double taxation. We ensure you're claiming every available credit.

Understanding the Process

Multi-State Tax: What You Need to Know

What triggers a California residency audit?

Common triggers include: filing a part-year return, changing your mailing address, registering a vehicle in another state while maintaining California connections, selling California real estate, or receiving a tip from a third party.

The FTB examines dozens of factors including where you sleep, where your family lives, where you're registered to vote, where your doctors are, and where you spend your time.

How does California determine residency?

California uses a 'closest connections' test that weighs multiple factors holistically. No single factor is dispositive. The FTB looks at where you maintain your primary home, where your spouse and children live, where you're registered to vote, where your vehicles are registered, where you have professional licenses, and where you spend the majority of your time.

Safe harbor: spending fewer than 9 months in California and maintaining a domicile elsewhere creates a rebuttable presumption of non-residency — but the FTB can still challenge it.

What is multi-state income sourcing?

Each state has rules for determining which income is 'sourced' to that state. For employees, it's generally where you perform the work. For business owners, it's based on where your customers or sales are. For investors, it depends on the type of investment and where the underlying assets are located.

These rules vary significantly by state, and some states claim the right to tax income that other states also claim — creating potential double taxation.

Can I avoid California tax by moving to Nevada or Texas?

Yes — if you do it properly. Nevada, Texas, Florida, and other no-income-tax states are popular destinations for California residents. But the FTB will scrutinize your move, especially if you maintain business interests, real estate, or family connections in California.

Proper planning before your move date is essential. We help you document your departure and establish your new domicile in a way that withstands FTB examination.

Why Brotman Law

Multi-State Tax Expertise Rooted in California Defense

Residency Specialists

California residency disputes are core to our practice. We've helped dozens of clients prove their departure and eliminate millions in proposed assessments.

Pre-Move Planning

The best residency defense starts before you move. We plan your departure to minimize audit risk from day one.

Multi-State Coordination

We understand the tax rules in all 50 states and help you navigate competing obligations across jurisdictions.

FTB Track Record

We've handled hundreds of FTB disputes. We know their agents, their procedures, and how to win at the Office of Tax Appeals.

Business + Personal

Multi-state issues often involve both business and personal taxes. We handle both.

Nationwide Practice

Based in San Diego, but we represent clients moving to and earning income in every state.

Free Guide

Read our CA Residency Guide

A comprehensive, attorney-written resource covering everything you need to know about this topic.

Related services: Business Tax Optimization  •  Individual Tax Optimization  •  Exit Planning

Also consider: IRS Audits  •  Criminal Tax Defense

Frequently Asked Questions

Multi-State Tax FAQs

How long does it take California to audit my move?

The FTB typically initiates residency audits 1-3 years after the move. They may wait until you've filed your first full-year non-resident return before opening an examination. This is why documentation at the time of your move is so important.

Can both California and my new state tax the same income?

Potentially, yes. Most states offer credits for taxes paid to other states, but the credit mechanisms don't always fully eliminate double taxation — particularly for business income and deferred compensation.

I work remotely for a California company. Do I owe California tax?

Generally, non-residents who perform work outside California for a California employer do not owe California income tax on that work. However, the rules have nuances — particularly around stock options, deferred compensation, and temporary California workdays.

What about my California rental properties?

Income from California real estate is always California-source income, regardless of where you live. You'll continue to file a California non-resident return reporting this income. We can help structure your real estate holdings to minimize California tax.

Do I need to file returns in every state I earned income?

Generally yes, though many states have minimum income thresholds. We analyze your multi-state income and determine exactly where you have filing obligations and how to minimize your total state tax burden.

What if I split time between two states?

Part-year and dual-residency situations are the most complex. We help you document your time in each state, determine your domicile, and file returns that accurately reflect your residency status while minimizing audit risk.

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