The State Atlas · Crossing Brief

What changes when a household crosses state lines.

An operating brief for one move — not an explainer. It reads the reasoning graph from origin to destination and returns what the household must coordinate: the priorities that change, the standing decisions the move makes stale, and the actions to take before, during, and after the crossing.

OriginVirginia
DestinationFlorida
Prepared as an illustrative operating brief · 2026 edition
Executive summary

Relocating from Virginia to Florida eases the state's drag on every realized gain, shifting coordination toward asset titling for step-up.

The operating environment that changed

Only the dimensions the move actually changes — origin on the left, destination on the right.

What changedIn VirginiaIn Florida
Capital-gains rate5.75%Loss treatment conforms to federal: capital losses net against gains and carry forward. Top effective long-term rate 5.75%.0%No state tax on capital gains — and a harvested loss is worth only the federal rate here.
Basis step-upUDCPRDACommon-law state that has adopted the UDCPRDA — it preserves the community-property character (and the potential full step-up) of assets a couple brought from a CP state.opt-inOffers an elective community-property trust: a couple can opt in to obtain a full (double) basis step-up at the first death.
Marriage treatment1xOne bracket schedule applies to both single and joint filers — a structural marriage penalty for two earners.No state income tax — no marriage penalty on the state return.
Loss treatmentfederalCapital losses carry forward under the federal Section 1212 rules — a harvested loss nets against gains and rolls forward until used.No state tax on capital gains, so a harvested loss carries no state benefit; its value here is only the federal offset.
Municipal bondsin-stateOnly in-state municipal-bond interest escapes state tax; bonds from other states are taxed. The classic in-state muni preference that rewards a home-state ladder.exemptMunicipal-bond interest is exempt from state tax whether the issuer is in-state or out-of-state — the broadest muni preference (states with no tax on investment income, plus a few that exempt all munis by statute).
QSBS (§1202)§1202 okConforms to IRC §1202 — the federal qualified small business stock gain exclusion carries through to the state return.no §1202No distinct state QSBS position applies here — either the jurisdiction levies no tax on the gain, or it does not separately recognize the §1202 exclusion. Confirm with a tax advisor.
Coordination priorities

What the household coordinates in the new environment — who owns it, how soon, and what it depends on. New marks a priority the move opens.

PriorityReasonUrgencyOwnerDepends on
Asset titling for step-upNewTitling assets to capture the fullest basis step-up the marital-property regime allows at the first death.Near-termestate attorneybasis step-up
Standing decisions to reconsider

Decisions calibrated to the origin's environment that the move makes stale — worth revisiting, not assuming.

Opportunities the move opens
The action register

Sequenced by the move — what to do before, during, and after the crossing.

Before the move

  1. Model domicile alternativesadvisor
    Model the after-tax and estate outcome of the current vs a lower-tax domicile, and list the domicile facts to establish before any move.

During the move

  1. Establish the new domicilehousehold
    Take up residence at the destination and begin severing origin-state ties — days present, the primary home, registrations, and affiliations — so the change of domicile is a fact pattern, not a mailing address.

After the move

  1. Set basis titlingestate attorney
    Title (or elect the trust) to capture the fullest first-death basis step-up the regime allows.
Questions worth asking

Not answers — the questions this move puts on the table, to open the conversation with the household's advisors.

  1. Is the household titled to capture the fullest first-death step-up the new marital-property regime allows?
  2. Which advisors — CPA, estate attorney, custodian — need updated instructions reflecting the new domicile?
  3. Should the timing of charitable gifts or large realizations shift across the move?
This brief becomes one entry in a household's operating file.
The Household Record binds the move to the family's standing decisions, coordination priorities, and advisors — the place this brief is coordinated, not filed.
Prepare this as your Household Record → Start a conversation

State law reflects 2025 tax-year law; last reviewed 2026-07-07. Every classification is a summary of state law; where a primary-source citation has been verified, it is linked on the card.

What changed
  • 2026-07-07 — First law-review date and honest per-cell source labeling; primary-source citations verified for Illinois, California, New York, Texas, and Florida (more in progress).
  • 2025 — Washington's 7% (+2.9%) excise on long-term capital gains reflected (enacted 2022).
  • 2025 — New Hampshire's Interest & Dividends tax reflected as fully repealed, effective 2025.
  • 2025 — Illinois estate-tax detail tracks the pending SB 2970 as of the review date.
Illustrative / hypothetical — not a real track record and not advice. The tax-management impact figure is a hypothetical, after-tax result from the retroactive application of a tax-management model to ~30 years of proxy-spliced market data on a single illustrative path; no client capital was invested, and hypothetical performance does not guarantee future results. Intended for sophisticated investors; it may not be relevant to your situation, and your actual figure depends on your own holdings, basis, and bracket. State tax facts reflect tax year 2025 and can change — confirm with a tax advisor. Driftwood Wealth is a registered investment adviser; Form ADV and Form CRS are available at adviserinfo.sec.gov.
Driftwood. State tax law reflects 2025 tax-year law; last reviewed 2026-07-07. A Crossing Brief is a view of the reasoning graph — it authors no facts of its own.