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Moving Expense Deduction when moving out of California

Ephesians3-14
Level 8

I have a client who has approx $20,000 in taxable moving expenses paid for by his employer. He took a job in California in late 2018 and most of his moving expenses were paid in early 2019. Turns out he got canned in the summer of 2019 (6 months in to the job!) and moved from CA back to Illinois. 

I know that you cannot deduct moving expenses on the Federal return, but California is one of a few states that still allow the moving expense deduction. 

My question is....since my client moved OUT OF California in 2019, can he still deduct those moving expenses on the CA 540 individual tax return. Or does CA only allow that moving deduction if you are moving into CA?

 

Good luck to all - the floodgates open in about 2 weeks!

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Ephesians3-14
Level 8

Looks like you also get a partial deduction (based on the ratio of CA wages to all wages) even if you move out. www.ftb.ca.gov/forms/2018/18-540nrca-instructions.html

Page 56:

Line 26 – Moving Expenses

California law and federal law are the same for moving expenses. If you moved:

  • Into California in connection with your new job, enter the amount from line 26, column D, in line 26, column E.
  • Out of California in connection with your new job, enter -0- on line 26, column E.

If you moved out of California in connection with your new job and received compensation from that job attributable to a California source, your moving expense adjustment will be limited by the ratio of California source compensation from the new job to total compensation from the new job.

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7 Comments 7
Just-Lisa-Now-
Level 15
Level 15
CA gives it when you're moving INTO California.

♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥Lisa♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪
Ephesians3-14
Level 8

Looks like you also get a partial deduction (based on the ratio of CA wages to all wages) even if you move out. www.ftb.ca.gov/forms/2018/18-540nrca-instructions.html

Page 56:

Line 26 – Moving Expenses

California law and federal law are the same for moving expenses. If you moved:

  • Into California in connection with your new job, enter the amount from line 26, column D, in line 26, column E.
  • Out of California in connection with your new job, enter -0- on line 26, column E.

If you moved out of California in connection with your new job and received compensation from that job attributable to a California source, your moving expense adjustment will be limited by the ratio of California source compensation from the new job to total compensation from the new job.

rbynaker
Level 13

@Ephesians3-14 wrote:

I have a client who has approx $20,000 in taxable moving expenses paid for by his employer. He took a job in California in late 2018 and most of his moving expenses were paid in early 2019. Turns out he got canned in the summer of 2019 (6 months in to the job!) and moved from CA back to Illinois. 

It's not clear to me what move was being reimbursed.  Was the $20K for the 2018 move from IL to CA but not reimbursed until a 2019 pay cycle?  Or was the $20K some kind of severance for the 2019 layoff move back to IL?

itonewbie
Level 15

Couple things...

  1. Turns out he got canned in the summer of 2019 (6 months in to the job!) and moved from CA back to Illinois: IRC §217 generally requires taxpayers claiming the deduction to satisfy both the time and distance tests.  The regulations do provide for limited exceptions and my presumption here is that your client had reasonable expected these test to have been met if not for an involuntary separation that must be be the result of willful misconduct.
  2. I have a client who has approx $20,000 in taxable moving expenses paid for by his employer: My big question is what was paid exactly.  Doesn't matter at all for federal but it sure does for CA purposes because qualified moving expenses need to be distinguished from all else, which would remain fully taxable.
  3. California is one of a few states that still allow the moving expense deduction: That doesn't tell the whole story, CA also conforms to IRC §312(g) effective as of Jan 2015.  This means your client has nothing to deduct so long as the employer administered an accountable reimbursement plan (if not direct payment) for qualified moving expenses and excluded those fringe benefits from taxable CA wages.
  4. Looks like you also get a partial deduction (based on the ratio of CA wages to all wages) even if you move out: No, you generally don't.  By case law, moving expenses have their nexus with the new job and, therefore, a forward attribution.  To the extent the new job's compensation is not taxable to CA, no deduction should be allowed.  This could be different if reimbursement for relocation expenses from CA to IL were covered by the employment terms with the CA employer.
  5. If you moved out of California in connection with your new job and received compensation from that job attributable to a California source, your moving expense adjustment will be limited by the ratio of California source compensation from the new job to total compensation from the new job: The key phrases in this are "attributable to a California source" and "California source compensation", which jive with what I explained in #4.  If your client's IL employer paid for the move, employment with that employer commenced only after the termination of CA residency, that employer made no payment to your client during his CA residency, and your client did not perform any services in CA for or on behalf of that employer at any time, there is generally no CA source income as defined in the CA R&TC and its regulations.  Hence, the numerator of that ratio will be $0 and that will result in $0 deduction.
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Ephesians3-14
Level 8

Illinois employer did not pay for his move back to IL, the CA employer paid the moving expenses.

All of the taxable moving expenses were included in his W-2. These were primarily expenses for transporting goods.

 

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itonewbie
Level 15

@Ephesians3-14 Then see #2 and #3.

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Anku
Level 1

So let's say I love from California to wa under same employer and I was granted RSU in CA, some of which vested in WA which were attributed to California income. Now do I get to partially deduct my moving expenses?

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