Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
Tax law is just that - a set of laws that you can read and follow. If you're legitimately a resident of a lower tax State, then file in that State. You aren't violating the letter or the spirit of tax law. Pathetic is being dumb money who pays more than the laws require them to. You'd be better off just donating the excess to charity if you wanted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have rental properties in DC which are the main source of my income. Honestly after all the write offs my income state tax is under $5K/year. DC gives benefits like FMLA for example where you can get the city pay 6 weeks of ANNUAL leave to take care of a family member. I just took one and will do so next year. Also, DC has free preschools
Also the Obamacare healthcare options are better than in most states.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have any experience with attempting to extricate oneself from DC residency while still owning a home in the city? I understand it's more complicated than just "don't spend six months in DC".
The state I've bought in has really lenient residency rules, so it's all about trying to remove myself from DC's rolls while still spending some of the year in a DC home I own.
If I were to rent out my DC home full time, would DC still glare at me for owning a house here?
I know,. I need to talk to a lawyer, but was just wondering if anyone has any personal experience.
Anonymous wrote:I have rental properties in DC which are the main source of my income. Honestly after all the write offs my income state tax is under $5K/year. DC gives benefits like FMLA for example where you can get the city pay 6 weeks of ANNUAL leave to take care of a family member. I just took one and will do so next year. Also, DC has free preschools
Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
If you ever needed those benefits, you better believe they will question whether you are actually a resident if you are living in another state.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a home in a low tax state during covid and spend almost all of our time here. Still, I would never give up my DC residency because the benefits of being a resident are much more generous than just about anywhere else. You never know what kind of help you might need in the future.
I’m also very glad that I’m not so cheap and tight that I have to make residency decisions on things like state taxes. It’s pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:For starters, your real estate taxes would double as a non-resident home-owner.