Moving from New Jersey to Florida: the tax picture
Quick answer: New Jersey's top rate is 10.75 percent on income over $1 million, graduated below that. Florida: zero. You file one final part-year NJ return for the move year, build your Florida domicile file properly, and the savings start with your first fully Florida year.
Your last New Jersey return
You file the NJ-1040 showing your residency period for the split year, with the NJ-1040NR if New Jersey income continues afterward.
The rule that catches movers
New Jersey enacted its own convenience-of-employer rule in 2023, so remote workers serving New Jersey employers can stay taxable there after the move.
The audit reality
New Jersey residency audits are among the most thorough anywhere: bank statements, toll records, and calendars all get pulled.
The domicile checklist
Florida driver license and vehicle registration, voter registration, homestead filing if you buy, new doctors and dentists, updated estate documents, and a calendar that proves where you actually slept. Your old state looks at the whole picture, so build it from day one.
The bigger picture
IRS migration data shows New Jersey lost roughly $2.5 billion in adjusted gross income in a single recent year.
How we handle move years
Part-year and multi-state returns are a specialty here, not an upcharge surprise. One written quote covers the final NJ return, the domicile file, and your first Florida-resident year plan.
Educational overview using state revenue department and IRS migration data, reviewed June 2026. Rates and rules shift; your move year gets reviewed by a real preparer.
Do I file a New Jersey return for the year I move?
Yes, one last part-year return. You file the NJ-1040 showing your residency period for the split year, with the NJ-1040NR if New Jersey income continues afterward. Income before the move date belongs to New Jersey; income after belongs to Florida, which has no income tax return at all.
Will New Jersey audit my move?
New Jersey residency audits are among the most thorough anywhere: bank statements, toll records, and calendars all get pulled. The defense is boring paperwork done early, and we set it up as part of your move-year return.
What does Florida tax instead?
No state income tax, no state tax on retirement income, and no estate tax. Florida raises revenue through sales and property taxes, so the homestead exemption filing matters.