California lifestyle?
#166
Under California law, a person who visits the state for other than a temporary or transitory purpose is a legal resident, subject to California taxation.
This includes renting a house a few months or more per year. The notion that you can just live 51% of the year in another state and avoid being taxed in California is not true anymore.
#168
Race Director
The definition is vague and I would contest it. The word "Visiting" and "Temporary" is subjective. I dont see how the wacko's in in Kali could uphold it if I can prove home ownership and 51% of my time is in Florida. My vehicles are registered in FL, drivers license, insurance, own multiple businesses, kids go to school there, ect.
#169
Rennlist Member
Airbnb it is.
None of the below applies to my particular case:
Europe and most states say 6 months..
None of the below applies to my particular case:
- Ownership or lease of real estate.
- Business interests or employment.
- Financial accounts, such as banks and investments, safe deposit boxes.
- A spouse's residency (they don't have to be the same)
- Schools children attend.
- Voter registration.
- Automobile registration and license
- Use of professional services such as a primary physician, dentists, accountants and lawyers.
- Professional licenses.
- Family ties and social life.
- Representations of residency in social media or websites (where does your Twitter account say you're tweeting from?).
- Address used on various tax documents, such as a federal return (form 1040) or W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, etc.
- Location of important personal belongings such as family heirlooms, art, or important documents.
- Membership in clubs and gyms.
Europe and most states say 6 months..
- And of course, where you spend most of your time.
#170
Rennlist Member
Oh, we have a ****load of stupid people here in Florida, that goes without saying.
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
#171
Race Director
Oh, we have a ****load of stupid people here in Florida, that goes without saying.
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
#172
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That is a good point about the women. Seriously, in Ohio the best looking woman I ever saw was a solid 7 in California. In fact, the women are so good looking and in such abundance, that unless you are a real disaster you can find a really good looking one. I am not tall, not dark and not really handsome, yet I was dating a poster girl for the Long Beach Grand Prix. We are talking smoking hot. Then I met my wife, who herself is still smoking hot. In Ohio I would have probably ended up with a 200 pound sweat hog that worked as a phone sex technician.
Find a good one, then get out.
Find a good one, then get out.
#173
Rennlist Member
Peter if you are escaping the Florida summers, come to Colorado. You won’t run out of twisty roads to conquer. Even if Colorado tries to screw with you, our state income tax rate is only 4.5%, not 13.3. Plus our mountain roads are usually light on traffic, and most people pull over and let you by if they see you are in a sportscar. Mad love for the GT cars out here. If you get bored there’s always Pikes Peak.
You know, sneak in and out of CA, pay cash (Bitcoin I guess?) for fuel and hotels, as to not get caught
#174
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Join Date: Feb 2006
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Oh, we have a ****load of stupid people here in Florida, that goes without saying.
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
Tons and tons.
Also many, many drunk girls at the bar, but at least here they don't pretend to be actors, VC, tech, bla bla.
Its Florida, have a good time and don't worry too much. Rent is cheap, gas is cheap, no tax. Doesn't take much to survive.
The air is warm and clean so that's something and it all looks pretty, but you cant see the humidity on those nice pictures June through Sept...
There are dryer quiet places in CA, like Napa, but with the mud slides, hippies, fires and quakes its all still a little more troubling then hurricane parties that time of the year.
So what about Northern AZ for the summer?
#175
Race Director
oh gosh Mr. Drt, maybe you like that sort of stuff in Kentucky where you live, but i'm not a big fan of Kambucha, makes my tummy rumble quite a bit. But your comment made me think, while i know you have great driving roads where you live, but not as great bar conversation.. you might for example fly over for a GT car drive with some of us here in SF. We have some fun roads, ocean view etc... normal stuff. Then we can go to a bar, or a tedtalk, or a networking event, or we can just walk down the street after our GT3 drive, and you can assess for yourself in person whether what I'm saying in true. Drinking Kambucha keyboard-warrior style on the other side of the country won't give you the perspective you seek, and more importantly than your choice of beverage though, is the fact that we are having a positive and as much as possible fact laden (not emotion laden) conversation.. why dont you contribute in a way which reflects that attitude?
I mentioned a concentration of intelligence, Pareto Effect. As you can see where you quoted me, I didn't say "everyone in SF and Silicone Valley is a genius"... you're right, that WOULD be an over-generalization! My "girl at the bar" example was intended to demonstrate a reality here, which is that of all the places I've travelled and lived in in the world, and it's many, when i arrived in the Bay Area i noticed an undeniable and immense concentration of highly educated people, and they seem to continue to attract more of their own kind. While we know that dense cities naturally attract higher earning and more educated individuals, LA, Boston, NYC as you say are very similar I'm sure, Anyway, i'm just the simpleton who snuck in and figured out how to blend among them. ;-D.
Let's keep the convo going in a logical and respectful direction please, it's an interesting one.
"I can attest to this personally.. almost everyone I meet here is really really smart. The random drunk girl at the bar is a PhD... you can turn in the other direction and someone is deep into "drunk" conversation about biotech, cancer treatments, or some other tech. and these are knowledgeable and in-depth convos. you simply can't this concentration of intelligence anywhere in the world. When i travel outside of the bay area, it's starkly apparent how the average individual is relatively uneducated, focused on sports or some other diversion, and simply not able to maintain the level of convo you get from the "average" bay area encounter. This is not an elitist type of comment, it's simply the self-evident truth, and a fascinating example of the Pareto Effect in action."
I respectfully disagree. NYC, Boston and LA - among others - are loaded with intelligent people. It is really the company you keep as much as anything. There are super sharp people from sea to shining sea. Honestly, I feel like I come across as many homeless people in the Financial district of SF as I do brainiacs. That place is teeming with homeless drug addicts who **** and crap on the street. It is a shame - I love SF but every time I go, it looks more and more dilapidated. LA has a terrible homeless crisis as well but to say everyone in SF and Silicone Valley is a genius is definitely an over-generalization.
I respectfully disagree. NYC, Boston and LA - among others - are loaded with intelligent people. It is really the company you keep as much as anything. There are super sharp people from sea to shining sea. Honestly, I feel like I come across as many homeless people in the Financial district of SF as I do brainiacs. That place is teeming with homeless drug addicts who **** and crap on the street. It is a shame - I love SF but every time I go, it looks more and more dilapidated. LA has a terrible homeless crisis as well but to say everyone in SF and Silicone Valley is a genius is definitely an over-generalization.
Let's keep the convo going in a logical and respectful direction please, it's an interesting one.
#176
Here is the bottomline; A state income tax, or any tax for that matter, should not dictate where you live. You have to consider other factors. Could you make the same amount of money elsewhere? For example, it's not uncommon for a software engineer to make 300-500k working for one of the big tech companies here. That same engineer would be lucky to make 150k-200k in another state. Does it make sense for that software engineer to flee over an income tax of about 8-9%? Of course not.
Then there are other factors like happiness and fulfillment. Would you be as happier living some where else? If not, then the premium you pay for being happier here is probably worth it.
Sure if you make 150k a year in CA and you could make the same 150k in FL and you don't particular care for CA one way or another, it would make sense to stay where you are at. But usually the salaries here do reflect the cost of living differences (at least the tax differences) when it comes to most professions.
My wife and I can run our businesses anywhere but we choose to do it from CA. We are happier here and prefer the lifestyle that CA has to offer. We pay a premium for that and don't think twice about it. At the end of the day, this entire game of life is about happiness and limiting chances for regret. Do what makes you happy and if you fear you may regret not trying something (like moving to another state), give it a shot. What's the worse that's going to happen? You might have to start over? I have started over more times than I can count and don't regret any of the chances I have taken because I know if I wouldn't have taken them, I wouldn't be where I am today and would just end up an old man wondering "what if?"
#177
Race Director
#179
Race Director
It is what it is. Coming from IL, my state income taxes more than doubled. With the new Trump tax plan, we can now only deduct up to 10k of income and property taxes from our federal taxes when before you could deduct the entire thing. However, several states are currently suing the federal government over this cap (SALT) and it's looking good that it may get overturned due to the midterm elections.
Here is the bottomline; A state income tax, or any tax for that matter, should not dictate where you live. You have to consider other factors. Could you make the same amount of money elsewhere? For example, it's not uncommon for a software engineer to make 300-500k working for one of the big tech companies here. That same engineer would be lucky to make 150k-200k in another state. Does it make sense for that software engineer to flee over an income tax of about 8-9%? Of course not.
Then there are other factors like happiness and fulfillment. Would you be as happier living some where else? If not, then the premium you pay for being happier here is probably worth it.
Sure if you make 150k a year in CA and you could make the same 150k in FL and you don't particular care for CA one way or another, it would make sense to stay where you are at. But usually the salaries here do reflect the cost of living differences (at least the tax differences) when it comes to most professions.
My wife and I can run our businesses anywhere but we choose to do it from CA. We are happier here and prefer the lifestyle that CA has to offer. We pay a premium for that and don't think twice about it. At the end of the day, this entire game of life is about happiness and limiting chances for regret. Do what makes you happy and if you fear you may regret not trying something (like moving to another state), give it a shot. What's the worse that's going to happen? You might have to start over? I have started over more times than I can count and don't regret any of the chances I have taken because I know if I wouldn't have taken them, I wouldn't be where I am today and would just end up an old man wondering "what if?"
Here is the bottomline; A state income tax, or any tax for that matter, should not dictate where you live. You have to consider other factors. Could you make the same amount of money elsewhere? For example, it's not uncommon for a software engineer to make 300-500k working for one of the big tech companies here. That same engineer would be lucky to make 150k-200k in another state. Does it make sense for that software engineer to flee over an income tax of about 8-9%? Of course not.
Then there are other factors like happiness and fulfillment. Would you be as happier living some where else? If not, then the premium you pay for being happier here is probably worth it.
Sure if you make 150k a year in CA and you could make the same 150k in FL and you don't particular care for CA one way or another, it would make sense to stay where you are at. But usually the salaries here do reflect the cost of living differences (at least the tax differences) when it comes to most professions.
My wife and I can run our businesses anywhere but we choose to do it from CA. We are happier here and prefer the lifestyle that CA has to offer. We pay a premium for that and don't think twice about it. At the end of the day, this entire game of life is about happiness and limiting chances for regret. Do what makes you happy and if you fear you may regret not trying something (like moving to another state), give it a shot. What's the worse that's going to happen? You might have to start over? I have started over more times than I can count and don't regret any of the chances I have taken because I know if I wouldn't have taken them, I wouldn't be where I am today and would just end up an old man wondering "what if?"
#180
People complaining about cost of real estate being high here in California. Yes it is true but we need to look at the full picture case by case. I owned a bunch of homes in chicago ( primary and rentals ) almost all of them were basically flat after 10 years , to make it worse the property taxes were 2 percent or more.
California housing is crazy , but some of these homes appreciate at a much greater level than anywhere else and taxes are generally 1 percent ( newer areas have mello Roos etc ). From a long term perspective I have come ahead here on housing. At least until now the demand is strong 800 k to 3 m price range in good parts of CA.
California housing is crazy , but some of these homes appreciate at a much greater level than anywhere else and taxes are generally 1 percent ( newer areas have mello Roos etc ). From a long term perspective I have come ahead here on housing. At least until now the demand is strong 800 k to 3 m price range in good parts of CA.