Compare taxes and see how much you save moving from Florida to California
Florida is California's most common mainland relocation destination for business owners — particularly from Southern California (Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County) to Miami, Tampa, and the Treasure Coast. The income tax comparison is stark: Florida has zero personal income tax; California has the highest personal income tax in the United States at up to 13.3%. For a sole proprietor or LLC owner earning $150,000 in business profit: California income tax is approximately $12,400/year plus the $800 entity fee; Florida is $0. Beyond income tax, Florida and California differ significantly on corporate structure: Florida's corporate income tax rate is 5.5% (with the first $50,000 exempt), versus California's 8.84%. S-corporations pay 0% personal income tax in Florida on distributions versus up to 13.3% in California, plus California imposes a 1.5% S-corp net income tax. California's LLC gross revenue fees add $900–$11,790/year on top of the $800 minimum — costs that Florida does not impose. For creative professionals, tech workers, consultants, real estate investors, and service businesses operating remotely: Florida offers a genuinely comprehensive tax advantage over California. The genuine California advantages are the talent pool, venture capital ecosystem, and certain industry clusters. For businesses that can operate without those advantages, Florida's zero personal income tax is a substantial and compounding benefit.
No Personal Income Tax, Low Corp Rate
Zero personal income tax; 5.5% corporate income tax on C-corporation net income (first $50K exempt); no franchise tax; no LLC revenue fees
Highest US Rates + Entity Fees
Personal income tax up to 13.3%; 8.84% corporate income tax; S-corp 1.5% net income tax; $800/year minimum franchise tax; LLC gross revenue fees up to $11,790
At $150,000 business profit income:
Florida saves approximately $13,200+/year vs California at $150K net business profit for a sole proprietor/single-member LLC. California also charges $800/year minimum entity fee plus LLC gross revenue fees. Florida has no personal income tax and no entity revenue fees.
| Income | FL Tax | CA Tax | Savings | 10-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $75,000 net profit | $0 | ~$5,200 CA + $800 entity fee | FL saves ~$6,000/yr | $60,000 |
| $100,000 net profit | $0 | ~$7,500 CA + $800 entity fee | FL saves ~$8,300/yr | $83,000 |
| $150,000 net profit | $0 | ~$12,400 CA + $800 entity fee | FL saves ~$13,200/yr | $132,000 |
| $250,000 net profit | $0 | ~$22,500 CA + $800 + LLC fees | FL saves ~$23,300+/yr | $233,000+ |
| $500,000 net profit | $0 | ~$51,000 CA + $800 + $11,790 LLC fees | FL saves ~$63,000+/yr | $630,000+ |
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Moving your business from California to Florida requires navigating California's FTB audit process, LLC conversion, and nexus analysis. Taxhub connects you with a CPA who specialises in California exits for business owners. Virtual meetings, fixed pricing.
⚠ Not for simple single-state returns. Free filing is fine for straightforward W-2 situations.
Get Matched With a Small Business Tax CPA →Miami leads for finance, fintech, crypto, and VC-backed startups — particularly from San Francisco and Silicon Valley. Brickell (Miami's financial district) has seen Citadel, Point72, and several VC funds relocate since 2020. Tampa attracts tech, healthcare, and logistics businesses from Southern California (LA, San Diego). Fort Lauderdale and the Treasure Coast see significant CA entrepreneur migration. Orlando and the I-4 corridor attract digital businesses and real estate investors. For Southern California business owners specifically, Florida's Gulf Coast (Naples, Sarasota, Fort Myers) has a long-established California expat community.
California's Franchise Tax Board is among the most aggressive state tax enforcement agencies in the country. When a high-income business owner claims to leave California for Florida, the FTB examines: credit card records (where are they being used?), healthcare providers (which state?), professional licenses, club and gym memberships, where their children attend school, and how many days they spend in California. Driving to California for client meetings, attending California events, or maintaining a California home while claiming Florida domicile can trigger a full audit. To pass FTB scrutiny: get a Florida driver's license and vehicle registration, register to vote in Florida, and document spending fewer than 183 days in California.
Florida does not impose a personal income tax on S-corporation distributions to shareholders. For pass-through purposes, S-corp income in Florida is tax-free at the state level. Florida also does not impose an S-corp level tax (unlike California's 1.5% S-corp net income tax). S-corp shareholders in Florida pay no Florida income tax on their distributive share of S-corp income. In California, S-corporation shareholders pay California income tax at full progressive rates (up to 13.3%) on their share, plus the corporation itself pays 1.5% on California net income.
Yes. Semiconductor design and manufacturing (TSMC relationships, chip ecosystem in Silicon Valley), Hollywood entertainment and production, defence tech (BAE, Northrop, Lockheed in Southern CA), and biotech/biopharma (UCSF, Scripps, LA biotech corridor) have deep ecosystem advantages that can outweigh the tax cost for businesses that rely on proximity to those networks. For companies raising institutional VC, California's Sand Hill Road remains the dominant capital source. For businesses that can operate remotely or have national/international clients, the California ecosystem advantage is substantially lower and the Florida tax saving is decisive.