Moving States & Remote Work

“I moved out of Connecticut and into Nevada this year, how do I file state taxes?”

CommonQuick Question · 30 min · $95

A move from Connecticut to Nevada often creates a part year filing question, since state tax treatment can depend on when the move happened, where income was earned, and whether any Connecticut source income remained after the relocation. Nevada does not have a personal income tax, but Connecticut often still looks at residency status, wage sourcing, and any income tied to Connecticut after the move. The filing picture can also change if there was remote work, a final Connecticut payroll withholding, or income from property or business activity connected to either state. A CPA who reads your specifics can usually tell you, in plain English, where this lands.

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.
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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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