California Residency Audit: How the FTB Decides If You Really Left

Kugelman Law

A California residency audit is one of the most factually invasive and financially consequential examinations a taxpayer can face. The Franchise Tax Board (FTB) has become aggressive in auditing high-income residents who claim they moved — to Texas, Nevada, Florida, Washington, Tennessee, Wyoming, or anywhere else without a state income tax — and it has the tools, the data, and the multi-year window to build a case against a change of residency that was not properly executed.

At Kugelman Law, we represent clients through every stage of California residency audits — from the initial FTB 4600 notice through protest, appeal, and, when necessary, Office of Tax Appeals litigation. This guide explains how the FTB analyzes residency, what evidence matters, which mistakes are fatal, and when to bring in counsel.

What Triggers a California Residency Audit?

The FTB does not audit every person who leaves California. It audits the ones it believes did not actually leave. The most common triggers include a part-year return showing a departure to a no-income-tax state, a large drop in reported California income following a pre-departure liquidity event (IPO, acquisition, large stock sale, business sale, or restricted stock vesting), continued ownership of a California home, California-based business interests, California professional licenses, California-registered vehicles, or California dependents enrolled in California schools. Cross-referenced data from the DMV, county recorders, employers, brokerages, and even utility companies gives the FTB a remarkably detailed picture of where you actually live.

The FTB also routinely audits former residents who sold California real estate, exercised stock options, received deferred compensation, or recognized a large capital gain in what they claimed was their first non-resident year. The pattern-matching is mechanical, and the departures that look financially motivated rather than life-motivated draw the most scrutiny.

California taxes residents on worldwide income and non-residents only on California-source income. The statutory definition of “resident” in California Revenue and Taxation Code § 17014 has two prongs: (1) every individual who is in California for other than a temporary or transitory purpose, and (2) every individual domiciled in California who is outside the state for a temporary or transitory purpose.

The first prong is about physical presence and intent. The second prong is about domicile — the concept of a person’s true, fixed, permanent home and the place to which they intend to return whenever absent. You can have only one domicile at a time. Establishing a new domicile requires both physical presence in the new location and the intent to remain there indefinitely, while simultaneously abandoning California domicile. The FTB examines both.

The Closest-Connection Test: What the FTB Actually Examines

California does not use a simple day-count rule. Instead, the FTB applies a closest-connection analysis — sometimes called the 18-factor test — drawn from FTB Publication 1031, the Appeal of Stephen D. Bragg, and decades of Board of Equalization and Office of Tax Appeals precedent. No single factor is controlling. The examiner builds a weighted picture of where the taxpayer’s life is actually centered.

Key Factors in a California Residency Audit

The FTB will request documentation on, among other things:

  • The location, size, and value of your California home versus your out-of-state home
  • Whether the California home was sold, rented at arm’s length, retained for personal use, or left furnished and available
  • Time spent in California versus elsewhere, documented by credit card statements, cell phone records, EZ-Pass and FasTrak records, airline records, and calendar entries
  • Location of spouse and minor children
  • Where children attend school
  • Location of personal items of significant sentimental or economic value — artwork, collectibles, heirlooms, vehicles, boats, aircraft
  • State of driver’s license, voter registration, vehicle registration, and jury duty registration
  • Location of primary bank accounts, safe deposit boxes, and investment accounts
  • Location of professional licenses and business affiliations
  • Location of doctors, dentists, accountants, attorneys, and other personal advisors
  • Location of religious, social, and civic memberships
  • Declarations of residency on legal documents — wills, trusts, loan applications, homestead exemptions, and real estate closings
  • Address used on tax returns, passport, and federal filings

The FTB will issue an Information Document Request (IDR) seeking years of records. Our firm handles the production strategically through our California tax audit practice, because how the evidence is presented often matters as much as what the evidence contains.

Common Mistakes That Lose Residency Audits

Most failed departures share the same handful of patterns. Each of these is fixable in advance; each is difficult to repair after the FTB has flagged the return.

Keeping the California House “Just In Case”

Retaining a California residence — especially one kept furnished, staffed, or available for personal use — is the single most common fact that sinks a residency claim. Renting it at fair market value on a long-term lease to an arm’s-length tenant is defensible. Letting a family member live there, using it during visits, or leaving it vacant is not.

Children in California Schools

If your children remain enrolled in California private schools — particularly with in-state tuition treatment — the FTB will presume the family’s center of life remains in California. The same applies to colleges where California residency determines tuition rates.

Paper Moves Without Real Moves

Changing your driver’s license and voter registration is not enough. The FTB has seen every version of the “paper move” — the Texas LLC, the South Dakota mail forwarding service, the Nevada address at a virtual office. Without genuine physical relocation, these moves fail every time.

Bad Timing Around Liquidity Events

If you claim a move date of December 28 and recognize a $15 million capital gain on January 3, the FTB will scrutinize every fact. Courts and the OTA have consistently found that moves timed around liquidity events require particularly clear evidence of intent. Planning the departure six or twelve months in advance — and documenting it — dramatically changes the outcome.

Continuing California-Source Income

Remaining a partner in a California law firm, serving on a California corporate board, holding California rental properties, or continuing to earn W-2 wages from a California employer without properly allocating workdays all keep California tax exposure alive — and provide the FTB with arguments that your connection never broke.

Part-Year Residents and the “Safe Harbor” for Overseas Work

California offers a narrow safe harbor under R&TC § 17014(d) for taxpayers absent from the state under an employment-related contract for at least 546 consecutive days. This is the so-called overseas employment safe harbor, and it has rigorous requirements — including that income from intangibles not exceed $200,000 during the taxable year, and that the absence not be for the principal purpose of avoiding California tax. The safe harbor rarely applies to typical domestic moves and is misunderstood often enough that we recommend counsel review before relying on it.

How a California Residency Audit Proceeds

A residency audit typically begins with an FTB 4600 notice or a narrowed audit letter specifically addressing residency status. The examiner will issue an IDR and request an interview. The taxpayer produces records, answers questions, and — in many cases — provides a sworn statement or affidavit. The FTB then issues a Notice of Proposed Assessment (NPA) if it determines California residency continued.

From there, the taxpayer has 60 days to file a written Protest. If the Protest is unsuccessful, the matter proceeds to the California Office of Tax Appeals (OTA), which conducts independent hearings before a three-judge panel. OTA cases are public, and the OTA has decided dozens of high-profile residency cases in recent years — many of which we monitor closely and cite in ongoing representations.

The Stakes: Why California Residency Audits Are So Expensive

California’s top marginal rate (including the mental health surcharge) exceeds 13.3%. A taxpayer who recognized a $5 million gain after what the FTB rules was an invalid change of residency faces roughly $665,000 in primary tax, plus penalties and interest. Multi-year audits can reach seven and eight figures. The Gilbert P. Hyatt v. FTB litigation famously extended for over two decades, and while most cases resolve faster, the financial exposure justifies early, careful representation.

Our firm has represented clients in residency matters ranging from modest part-year disputes to multi-million-dollar audits. Founder Alex Kugelman serves on the Marin County Assessment Appeals Board and has nearly two decades of federal and California tax controversy experience. Results depend on specific facts. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

Planning Before You Leave — and What to Do If the Audit Has Started

The best residency audit is the one you prevent. If you are planning to leave California and have a significant liquidity event approaching, the planning work — documentation, timing, severing of ties, and substantive relocation — needs to begin six to twelve months before the move. We handle pre-departure planning as part of our tax advisory services.

If the audit has already begun, do not produce records or respond to the FTB’s interview request without counsel. Residency audits are driven by narrative as much as documents, and a poorly managed interview can permanently damage the case. The production itself — what to produce, in what order, with what accompanying legal argument — is strategic work.

Speak with a California Residency Audit Attorney

Kugelman Law offers paid, privileged consultations with founder Alex Kugelman — fully protected by attorney-client privilege. We do not offer free consultations. We provide boutique, white-glove representation in FTB residency audits, protests, and OTA appeals.

Call (415) 968-1780 or schedule your consultation here. Our offices are in San Rafael, San Francisco, and Irvine; representation is provided remotely throughout California.

Frequently Asked Questions About California Residency Audits

How far back can the FTB audit my California residency?

The FTB has four years from the date a return is filed to assess additional tax (extended to six years in cases of substantial understatement and indefinitely if no return is filed). In residency cases, the FTB often examines multiple years at once — particularly the pre-departure year, the departure year, and the first full non-resident year.

Does spending fewer than 183 days in California make me a non-resident?

No. California does not use a bright-line day count. You can spend fewer than 183 days in the state and still be treated as a California resident if your closest connections remain in California under the closest-connection test.

I moved to Texas, changed my license, and bought a house there. Am I safe?

Not necessarily. Those are positive facts, but the FTB examines whether California ties were genuinely severed. Retaining a California home, California business interests, California family presence, or California professional affiliations can still result in a residency finding.

What if I split time between California and another state?

You will almost certainly be treated as a California resident. Split-time arrangements — particularly where California remains the place of the primary home, family, and business — are among the weakest residency defenses.

Can the FTB audit me after I’ve moved if I’m no longer a resident?

Yes. The FTB has jurisdiction over former residents for years in which California residency is disputed, and over non-residents who recognized California-source income. Moving does not terminate FTB audit authority over prior years.

What’s the difference between the FTB and the IRS in a residency matter?

The IRS does not care about your state of residency — it taxes worldwide income regardless. The FTB cares exclusively about whether you were a California resident in the years under audit. These are parallel systems, and California residency audits are handled by the FTB alone.

How long does a California residency audit take?

Typical audits take 12 to 24 months through the initial FTB examination and Protest stage. Matters that proceed to the Office of Tax Appeals often take an additional 18 to 36 months.

Does Kugelman Law offer free consultations for residency audits?

No. We offer paid, privileged consultations with Alex Kugelman. The paid-consultation model ensures that everything discussed is fully protected by attorney-client privilege from the first conversation — something a free intake call cannot guarantee.

About the Author: Alex Kugelman

Alex Kugelman is the founder and managing attorney of Kugelman Law, a boutique tax controversy and cryptocurrency tax firm serving clients throughout California and nationwide. Admitted to the California Bar in 2008 (No. 255463) and the U.S. Supreme Court, Alex has nearly two decades of federal tax controversy experience, including litigation in U.S. Tax Court and U.S. District Court. He served as San Francisco Chair of the Federal Bar Association’s Tax Division in 2018 and is a member of the Marin County Assessment Appeals Board. He is a nationally recognized cryptocurrency tax authority, featured on the Bitcoin.tax podcast and The Mark Milton Show. J.D., Chapman University Fowler School of Law (2007); B.A., University of Colorado at Boulder (2001). Read Alex’s full bio.

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