States Targeting Snowbirds Fleeing to Tax-Friendlier Climates
Wealthy taxpayers who split time between states should be prepared to prove where their true home lies.
You’re lounging by the pool of your second home in Florida, chuckling as you think of your friends back home braving the blizzard in Massachusetts. And you’re musing: Perhaps it’s time to escape your state’s tax bite as well as the bite of winter — by claiming your Florida home as your permanent residence.
Snowbird: Prepare for battle. Tax auditors in California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York and other states that impose income taxes are unlikely to let you off the hook without a fight. Retirees who buy second homes in states with low or no income tax and claim they’ve changed their legal residence can face months of intense scrutiny from state tax auditors — perhaps even litigation.
If you’re tapped for an audit, expect an aggressive probe into many corners of your personal and business life. “They’ll ask for your bank statements, the clubs you belong to, descriptions of both homes and where you keep your personal items,” says Philip Olsen, a tax lawyer at Pierce Atwood, in Boston, who represents clients who seek to change their permanent residence. Olsen is a former litigation supervisor for the Massachusetts Department of Revenue.
Of course, most people who switch states are not targets of state audits. But if you are wealthy and keep your social and professional contacts and large homes in your longtime state, don’t be surprised if tax collectors come calling — especially if you decide one year to file a partial state tax return or no return at all.
Many snowbirds, including a growing number of aging baby boomers, claim they’re changing their formal residence for the relaxed lifestyle. But the tax savings can be a big enticement as well — even more so as California, Maryland, Minnesota and other states have hiked income taxes on the wealthiest in recent years.
In Illinois, for example, Steven Siebers, a lawyer in Quincy, says he knows many people who “started saying it’s time to move someplace else” when the state income tax rose to 5% in 2011 (it dropped to 3.75% in 2015). “A 5% tax on $800,000 or $500,000 in dividend income is a lot of party money in Florida,” he says.
Whether they’re looking for sunshine or a sunnier tax climate, these migrants are taking a load of tax revenue with them. More than 173,000 residents who moved from Illinois to Arizona, Florida and Texas, for example, took with them more than $8.5 billion in adjusted gross income between 2000 and 2010, according to an analysis of federal tax returns by the nonpartisan Tax Foundation.
Eyeing those numbers, state tax auditors have a lot of incentive to get tough. At the core of most audits: whether the taxpayer can prove that he has established a “domicile” in a new state, even if he keeps a residence in the old state. Although state laws and definitions differ, a domicile is basically the place where you intend to remain permanently and return to from your travels. If you own a house in Buffalo, but claim a domicile in Boca Raton, “you have to prove that in your heart you’re not a New Yorker,” says Allan Lipman, a lawyer who advises New Yorkers on domicile cases from his offices in Williamsville, N.Y., and Boynton Beach, Fla. (He claims domicile in Florida.)
It’s not enough to emote to hard-nosed tax examiners about your passion for your new state. If you get audited, you’ll need to back up your state of mind with a suitcase full of cold facts. In Minnesota, the goal of its audits is to ensure “that taxpayers are reporting and paying the correct amount of tax — no more, no less,” says Ryan Brown, spokesman for Minnesota’s Department of Revenue, which completed 488 residency audits from 2013 to 2015.
In its 128-page guide for its auditors, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance suggests that they can collect bank ATM receipts that note the location of withdrawals, insurance policies that show where valuable items are kept, utility bills for both houses that “may reflect regular or seasonal use,” employment contracts and personal calendars.
New York conducts about 3,000 audits on nonresident income tax returns a year — just a small percentage of the annual 1.1 million nonresident returns it receives. “We have historically taken tax compliance seriously, and we continue to do so,” says Geoffrey Gloak, spokesman for the state’s taxation department.
States also are turning to technology for clues, according to lawyers and accountants in several states. Enforcers may scour online news accounts to see if a high-net-worth snowbird won a recent civic award in the high-tax state — evidence of a deep connection. An auditor may use Google Earth to compare the size and features of houses in both the new and the old state. And examiners could check Facebook — looking for public postings of travel plans and photos.