You are sitting at your kitchen table in San Jose, logged into a Zoom call with your New York-based employer. You are earning a California wage, but your W-2 says New York. You moved to California from Washington state two years ago, and your RSUs are vesting now from grants made while you lived in Seattle. You have been in California for 18 months and nobody has explained how your tax situation actually works.
The honest answer: you may owe tax in two states on the same income. And the credit that is supposed to prevent that double taxation only partially works, in ways that depend on each state's specific rules. Getting multi-state returns wrong is expensive. The IRS matching programs catch income sourced to one state that was reported in another. California is aggressive about auditing nonresident sourcing for high-income individuals. The notices arrive 12 to 36 months after the original return, with interest running the whole time.
Silicon Valley Tax prepares multi-state returns for Bay Area residents, remote workers, and tech employees with equity compensation vested across multiple states. Our office is at 2051 Junction Ave, San Jose. Call (408) 383-9870 or book a free consultation to discuss your specific situation.
California taxes income on two bases. First, if you are a California resident, California taxes your worldwide income for the period you are a resident. Second, even if you are a nonresident, California taxes income sourced to California. These two concepts operate independently and can apply to the same dollar of income.
Under California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 17014, a resident is any individual who is in California other than for a temporary or transitory purpose, and any individual domiciled in California who is outside California for a temporary or transitory purpose. Domicile means your permanent home, the place you intend to return to. Residence is a fact question based on where you actually live.
California uses a "closest connection" test for disputed cases. Factors include: location of your home, where your spouse and children live, where your vehicles are registered, where your bank accounts are held, where you are registered to vote, where you hold professional licenses, where your employer is located, and where you spend the most time. High-income individuals who try to claim Nevada or Texas residency while spending most of the year in California find that the Franchise Tax Board audits these claims aggressively.
If you move to California or leave California during the year, you are a part-year resident. You file California Form 540NR (Nonresident or Part-Year Resident Return). As a part-year resident, you owe California tax on:
The second point catches many people off guard. If you move to Texas in July and receive a bonus in October for work performed while you were in California, that bonus is California-sourced. If your RSUs vest in November based on a grant-to-vest period that includes California days, the California-apportioned portion of the vest is California-sourced income. You will owe California tax on those amounts even though you are now a Texas resident.
Wages are sourced to where you perform the services. If you are a California resident working from a home office in San Jose, your wages are California-sourced income, regardless of where your employer is incorporated or headquartered. This is the baseline rule.
The complication arises when you travel to perform services in other states. Business trips to New York, Texas, or any other state create a sourcing issue: the days you work physically in that state may be sourced there, not to California. Each state has its own rules about whether short-term business visitors are taxable, and most states have de minimis thresholds before they claim nonresidents.
RSU income is sourced to the states where you performed services during the period from grant date to vest date. California Franchise Tax Board Publication 1005 describes the apportionment method: divide California workdays during the grant-to-vest period by total workdays, then multiply that fraction by the total RSU vest income.
Example: You were granted 1,000 RSUs on January 1, 2022, while living in Austin, Texas. The RSUs vest on January 1, 2025 (three-year cliff vest). You moved to San Jose in January 2024. At vest, the stock is worth $80,000.
Many tech employees moving to California mid-vesting period do not realize they are creating California tax exposure on grants that predate their California residency. Conversely, employees leaving California carry a California-source tail on unvested grants that continues until vest date.
Incentive stock options present a more complex sourcing picture. For AMT purposes, the ISO spread at exercise is sourced to where services were performed during the grant-to-exercise period (similar to the RSU apportionment). For California regular income tax, California applies the same grant-to-exercise apportionment to the ISO spread on the California nonconforming income recognition (since California taxes ISOs at exercise as ordinary income).
For nonqualified stock options (NSOs), the spread at exercise is ordinary income sourced to where services were performed during the grant-to-exercise period. If you were in California for any portion of that period, California will claim its proportionate share.
When you eventually sell the shares, the gain on sale (the appreciation from the FMV at exercise to the sale price) is investment income sourced to your state of residence at the time of sale, not to where you worked during the option period.
The most aggressive multi-state tax doctrine that affects Bay Area remote workers comes from New York. Under New York's convenience of the employer rule, if you work from home in California for a New York employer, New York asserts that your wages are New York-sourced income unless you work from home because of a necessity required by your employer, not merely for your own convenience.
New York's standard for employer necessity is strict. The fact that your employer allows you to work remotely, or that your position is listed as remote, is not enough. You generally need to show that your employer has a legitimate business reason requiring you to work from a location outside New York, such as needing to serve a California client base or having a California-based operation that requires your physical presence.
States that apply convenience of the employer rules (with variations):
California provides a credit for taxes paid to other states on Schedule S. But the credit is limited to the California tax computed on that income, and the computation is proportionate. If the other state has a higher rate than California's effective rate on that income, the credit does not fully eliminate the double taxation.
California Schedule S calculates the credit available for taxes paid to another state on income also taxed by California. The credit is designed to prevent double taxation, but it does not always achieve that result because the credit is capped.
The credit formula:
If you paid $8,000 to New York and California's proportionate tax on that same income is $9,300, you get the full $8,000 credit and pay $1,300 net to California. If California's proportionate tax is only $6,500, you get a $6,500 credit and effectively have $1,500 of double taxation on the New York side.
Important limits on Schedule S:
Bay Area residents who own businesses operating in multiple states face a different set of rules from wage earners. Business income is generally apportioned among states based on formulas that look at the ratio of a business's sales, payroll, and property in each state to its total sales, payroll, and property nationwide. California uses a single-sales factor apportionment formula for most business types under California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 25128.7.
For Bay Area entrepreneurs, consultants, and small business owners:
The classic situation since 2020: Bay Area tech worker hired by a New York, Seattle, Austin, or Chicago company under a remote arrangement. They live and work in San Jose or Oakland but their W-2 is issued in the employer's home state. For employers in no-income-tax states (Washington, Texas, Florida), there is no double taxation issue for wages. For New York and Massachusetts employers, the convenience doctrine creates real risk.
We prepare the California resident return, file the other state's nonresident return where required, and compute Schedule S to claim the credit. We also advise on whether it is worth making the employer necessity argument to New York, which requires documentation from the employer about the business rationale for the remote arrangement.
Tech workers move into California for a new job at a Bay Area company and leave California when they take a remote role or move for family reasons. The move-in scenario creates immediate issues with RSU vesting on grants that began before they arrived. The move-out scenario creates ongoing California-source exposure on unvested equity.
We build a multi-year projection of California-sourced income for clients who are planning to leave California, so they understand the tail of state tax obligations that follows them even after establishing residency elsewhere.
An engineer joins a Bay Area company in 2021 on a four-year RSU grant. In 2022 they take an internal transfer to the Austin office. In 2023 they return to San Jose. By 2025, each annual vest tranche has a different California apportionment fraction based on where they worked each year during the grant period. All four vests in the same year can have four different California percentages.
We track the grant-to-vest apportionment for each RSU tranche and reconcile it against the brokerage's 1099-B and supplemental statement. Brokerage houses routinely get the state apportionment wrong on the supplemental statements, either over-reporting California income or under-reporting it. Accepting the brokerage's number without checking it is one of the most common errors on tech-employee returns.
Bay Area residents who own rental property in other states must file nonresident returns in those states to report rental income. Conversely, nonresidents who own California rental property owe California tax on that income even after leaving the state. If you sold your California home when you moved and are wondering whether the gain is California-sourced after you leave: yes, gain from the sale of California real estate is always California-sourced, regardless of where you live at the time of sale.
Our multi-state return process includes:
We see these errors most frequently on returns that come to us for second opinions or after a state notice arrives:
Silicon Valley Tax is located at 2051 Junction Ave Suite 200, San Jose CA 95131. We handle multi-state returns for clients throughout the Bay Area and work with clients virtually across the country who have California-sourced income from equity compensation, rental property, or business activities.
Multi-state returns take more time than single-state returns because of the sourcing analysis and the ordered preparation of returns. We typically begin multi-state return engagements earlier in tax season to allow time for state-level questions and to ensure other-state returns are completed before the California Schedule S is finalized.
Call (408) 383-9870 or use the online booking form to schedule a free consultation. If you have already received a notice from California or another state, bring that too. Post-audit cleanup is one of the most common entry points for new multi-state clients.
California taxes all your wages because you are a California resident performing services from California. New York may also assert tax under its convenience of the employer doctrine, claiming your wages are New York-sourced unless your remote arrangement is a business necessity required by the employer. California provides a credit for taxes paid to New York on Schedule S, but the credit may not fully eliminate the double taxation if California's effective rate is lower than New York's. We evaluate the employer necessity argument and model both tax outcomes before filing.
RSUs are sourced proportionately to where you worked during the period from grant date to vest date. California workdays during the grant-to-vest period divided by total workdays equals the California apportionment fraction. That fraction multiplied by the total vest income equals California-sourced income. If you were in California for two of three years in a vesting period, roughly two-thirds of the vest is California-sourced, even if you are now living in another state. We track and compute this apportionment for each RSU tranche separately.
California Schedule S credits you for income taxes paid to another state on income also taxed by California. The credit is limited to the lesser of what California would tax on that income (at California's rate) or what you actually paid to the other state. If both states want the same dollar of income, this credit significantly reduces but may not fully eliminate the double taxation. We compute Schedule S manually to verify that software-generated amounts are correct, especially when multiple states are involved.
You owe California tax on income earned while you were a resident, and on California-sourced income earned after you left. California-sourced income includes wages for services performed in California, RSU vest income apportioned to California days during the grant period, and gain from selling California real estate. Income from a new job in your new state, performed entirely from the new state after departure, is not California-sourced. The analysis depends on the move date and the specific income types.
Yes. California taxes wages earned while you are a California resident performing services from California, regardless of where your employer is headquartered. Washington has no state income tax, so there is no second state claiming your wages. This is actually a cleaner situation than having a New York or Massachusetts employer: you pay California tax on your wages, but there is no double taxation or convenience doctrine issue. Only California applies here for your wage income.
For more on equity compensation sourcing, see our pages on equity compensation tax and AMT tax planning. For city-specific coverage, see our pages for San Jose tax accountant and Palo Alto tax accountant. If your multi-state situation involves a business, see our pages on entity tax and CFO advisory services.
Remote work, equity vesting across state lines, and mid-year moves create double-tax risk. We'll untangle your state obligations and claim every credit available.