Moving States & Remote Work
“I recently moved from New Jersey to New Hampshire, and I'm not sure how to file state taxes?”
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 moved from New Jersey to New Hampshire this year, so how do I file taxes in both states?”
“How do I file state taxes if I lived in New Jersey and then moved to New Hampshire this year?”
“I had income in New Jersey and then moved to New Hampshire, how do I file both state returns?”
“I moved states from New Jersey to New Hampshire this year, do I file in both places?”
“I moved from California to Texas this year, how do I file taxes in both?”
“I moved from California to Florida this year, how do I file taxes in both?”
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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