Changing State Residency
RV enthusiasts who spend a considerable time away from their home state may come to ponder if another state would be a better place to call home. This page gives an overview of the things to consider before and after deciding to change your legal state of residence, or state of domicile, in legalese.
Changing state residency in the United States is a right we enjoy and there is nothing sinister about one's desire to live in a state most inline with his goals, as long as no state is defrauded in the process.
Among recreational vehicle dwellers, the primary reasons to change home state are:
Moving from one state to another
Fulltimer or snowbird changing residency to take advantage of state benefits, often relating to taxation (see States With No Income Tax)
What is a Resident and a Domiciliary?
The word resident is well understood, but domiciliary is rarely used outside legal circles, so let's take a brief look at both.
Resident
A state resident is a person living within the boundaries of a state, meeting certain criteria as defined by the state for receiving benefits and being subject to various forms of taxation. A resident may or may not consider the state his legal state of residence.
Domiciliary
A domiciliary is a person claiming the state as the location of his fixed and permanent legal residence (domicile), and meeting certain criteria as defined by the state for the recognition of this status.
The difference between the two was explained well by the State of New York Court of Appeals:
Residence means living in a particular locality, but domicile means living in that locality with intent to make it a fixed and permanent home. Residence simply requires bodily presence as an inhabitant in a given place, while domicile requires bodily presence in that place and also an intention to make it one's domicile.
It is important to know the difference between the two terms because you will see them in various contexts when dealing with states and other legal proceedings.
However, in informal conversations "resident" is used to mean either term. As such, the remainder of this page and most of this web site will use resident to refer to both cases, except where the difference is worth pointing out.
Common State Residency Qualifications
States, and even agencies within the same state, have different residency qualifications. Below is a list of the most common qualifications, but check with your new state to be certain.
Intent to make the state one's permanent and legal residence
When absent from the state, intent to return
Resided within the state for at least 30 days
Have a fixed and permanent address within the state
Addresses provided by mail forwarding services qualify in some states, but not in others; check with the mail forwarding service.
Obtained driver's license from state
Registered vehicles with state (including recreational vehicles)
Became gainfully employed within state
The above is not a recipe on how to become a state resident. In certain cases a single item above may be sufficient for residency status; in other cases completing all may still not meet all requirements.
State Residency Qualifications Vary
An important point to remember is that what you consider your home state may be different from a state's view of your residency status.
A state will be eager to classify you as a resident to levy taxes and other fees upon you. For example, states that collect a considerable income from vehicle registrations will want you to re-register with them as quickly as possible.
On the other hand, it is in the state's interest to classify you as a nonresident in order to deny you a tax-funded benefit. A good example are states that provide free or low-cost vehicle registration subsidized by other taxes, where you must meet more stringent requirements to be allowed to register a vehicle as a resident.
Keep the following points in mind:
Agencies within the same state may have different residency qualifications
If you maintain ties with more than one state, you may qualify for taxation in all
It is considered fraud to avoid taxes or to gain benefits by claiming residency in multiple states
Best way to avoid problems is by doing a clean break from your old state
Here is a great illustration of varying residency criteria, as seen on the Alaska election web site (August 2005):
You are a resident for voting purposes if you are in Alaska with the intent to remain here and have the intent to return when you leave, and are not registered to vote in another state or are willing to cancel that registration. This does not mean that you meet residency requirements for other state agencies and programs. Other agencies or organizations can have different criteria to define Alaska residency.
Clean Break
To avoid residency issues, do a clean break from your previous state, preferably at the end of a calendar year to avoid income tax complications.
What is a clean break? It is the intention to change state residency and severing all relevant official ties with the previous state. This action is feasible for people completely moving out of the state and fulltimers.
To sever relevant official ties with a state, you:
Sell the primary residence in the old state
Buy or rent a home in the new state
Move all belongings to the new state
If still working, become employed in the new state
Get a driver's license in the new state
Register all vehicles in the new state
Register to vote in the new state
Ties to Multiple States
For many RV operators a clean break is not feasible and ties to multiple states must be maintained. This in itself is not a problem as long as you take care not to defraud the states. Multiple ties may also complicate other aspects of your life, such as paying taxes, so be prepared to dedicate time to the proper handling of these responsibilities.
Below are some points to consider by those who wish to change home state, but need to maintain significant ties with the old state. These lists are intended as guides to help you avoid charges of fraud; however, they are by no means comprehensive.
Things to Do
Recognize that the new state is now your domicile and conduct your life accordingly
Acquire new licenses in the new state (driver's license, etc.)
If the new state does not offer certain licenses, re-apply in the old state for nonresident licenses, if available (handgun permit, etc.)
Change mailing address on all official and financial documents to the new state
Register all vehicles with the new state
Pay nonresident fees in the old state when participating in activities such as fishing, hunting, etc.
If still employed in the old state or receiving other income, file income taxes as a nonresident
Things to Avoid
Stop participating in programs available only to residents of the old state (reduced school tuition, welfare programs, tax breaks, reduced fishing and hunting license fees, etc.)
Stop voting in old state
Stop providing address in old state to gain financial benefits for insurance, etc.
A Case to Consider
For those who plan on maintaining residences in the old and new states, it would be worth a few minutes of your time to review the case of a snowbird couple transitioning from New York to Florida, who have been denied their petition for property tax refund based on residency status. There is no indication that a recreational vehicle was involved, but it is still relevant to the topic at hand.
The official document can be found here: State of NY, Determination No. 817952
Our interest in the above determination is not the legal aspects of the case, rather the items considered for determining residency. A few points of interest from the determination:
The issue: "Whether the Division of Taxation properly determined that petitioners were domiciliaries of New York State for the year at issue and were, therefore, taxable as resident individuals."
From our layman perspective, it appears that the action which started the trouble was the inconsistent filing of official documents—initially filed as New York residents and subsequently as Florida residents.
The State of New York considered the following in determining the couple's residency status:
"Existing domicile continues until a new one is acquired and the burden of proof to show a change in domicile rests upon the party alleging the change."
To test intent with regards to a new domicile, sentiment may also be considered.
"Moves to other locations in which permanent residences are established do not necessarily provide clear and convincing evidence of an intent to change one's domicile."
Taxpayer's general habits of living demonstrate a change of domicile, or in this case the retention of domicile.
The couple retained a permanent place of abode in New York.
The couple continued business activity in New York.
The couple maintained social and family ties in New York.
The couple continued to spend a significant amount of time in New York.
The couple did not take any of their furniture from their New York house to Florida.
"There is no indication in the record that petitioners intended to sever their New York ties or that they possessed the requisite intent to make Florida their fixed and permanent home."
Even though the couple took formal actions to declare Florida as their new domicile, New York found their formal declarations "less persuasive than the informal acts of an individual's general habit of life".
Could this case have been overturned on appeal? Perhaps, but it provides lessons to the RV community in how to avoid common pitfalls while maintaining ties with more than one state.
DISCLAIMER: While we believe that all information on this web site is accurate, we can not guarantee that it is applicable to You specifically or to Your situation.
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