Moving States & Remote Work
“I changed states from New York to Georgia this year, how do I handle my tax return?”
Moving or working across state lines can mean filing in two states. Getting residency and allocation right keeps you from paying tax twice.
In your 30-minute session, the KGOB advisor handling it will:
- Read your exact situation and tell you, in plain English, what’s actually going on.
- Lay out your options and the trade-offs — no jargon, no judgment.
- Give you a clear next step you can act on, whether that’s with us or on your own.
“I lived in New York and then moved to Georgia, how do I file state taxes?”
“How do I handle my state taxes if I moved from New York to Georgia this year?”
“I moved states from New York to Georgia, how do I file my state tax returns?”
“I paid for business supplies using my personal credit card on behalf of my Florida non-profit, can I still legally use the DR-14 exemption certificate for that purchase?”
“I hold significant assets in foreign bank accounts, what are the severe penalty risks if I accidentally fail to file my FBAR and FATCA disclosures on time?”
“I am moving my permanent residence from a high-tax state to a state with zero income tax, how many days must I live there to survive a residency audit from my former state?”
This page is a prompt to start a conversation, not tax or legal advice, and states no tax-law specifics as fact. A consult session does not by itself create an ongoing engagement. We do not promise specific outcomes or savings. Kohari Gonzalez Oneyear & Brown PLLC — Charlotte, NC.
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