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Finally left California


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2015 Nov 29, 12:06pm   55,857 views  236 comments

by joshuatrio   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

Took my west coast salary and profitable LLC with me - after I pay 2015 taxes to CA, the state won't get another dime from me.

Ended up moving to the Southeast. It's pretty nice here. Gas is dirt cheap, tons of food options, lots of jobs, good gun laws, friendly people, low taxes and seems like a decent place to set up shop. While the traffic sucks, I'm near bike trails that will get me directly to work.

I'll be paying cash for a house in the next few months, and then quitting my day job to pursue my own ventures. It's a lot easier to do that out here. No more slumlords.

F U California. And damn it feels good to finally get out of that state after 8 years. I'll miss your coastline, but nothing else.

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1   marcus   2015 Nov 29, 12:10pm  

I'm curious. Where exactly south east ? Can you say ? If not too specific, what state ?

2   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 29, 12:49pm  

Atlanta, GA metro area. We had Raleigh, NC and Charleston, SC in mind - but I had a killer job offer come through with relocation included.

3   Blurtman   2015 Nov 29, 1:08pm  

joshuatrio says

Finally left California

I had the sneaking feeling that when I lived there, that living in SF was impoverishing me. But I did like all that the area had to offer. It sounds like you are going to enjoy the benefits of a cosmopolitan city without the price gouging. And having someone pay to move you is the best.

4   Patrick   2015 Nov 29, 1:11pm  

i'm thinking oregon or washington state myself. i really do love the coastline in the west.

5   marcus   2015 Nov 29, 1:30pm  

joshuatrio says

but I had a killer job offer come through with relocation included

Nice. Congratulations.

6   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Nov 29, 1:42pm  

joshuatrio says

I'll miss your coastline, but nothing else.

And unlike California, you can go swimming without a wetsuit. And live a few blocks off the beach for what it costs to live in the Valley.

7   bob2356   2015 Nov 29, 1:46pm  

anonymous says

. Not sure when you are physically moving but beware California has a history of coming after you long after you have left. You want to sever all ties - bank accounts, anything and everything and when you do things is very important.

Very important to get your new drivers license, registrations, address changes (not forwarding actually change with the companies ), etc. right away to establish residency. If you let it go CA will consider you a tax resident long after you are gone.

8   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 29, 2:20pm  

Yes, we are aware of the California tax scheme in that they come after you for taxes. We are flipping our licenses, registration and other related paperwork before the year ends.... And yes, I'm in the market for an accountant. I did my homework before I made the move.

Looks like I'll be dissolving my LLC and reforming it in 2016.

Patrick, while I love the coastline, I can't stand the constant gouging tax wise. Income and sales tax is literally 1/2. Homes are 1/4 the cost and property taxes are pretty low. We looked at Oregon, but property tax is high and we know a lot of people looking to leave those states for the same reasons people are leaving California.

In order to live in CA, we have found that you need to be:

1. On government assistance with a housing voucher

2. Mommy and daddy gave you a house

3. Be willing to finance he next 30 years of your life away on a $500,000 - $1million terd house built in the 1950s that needs a complete rehab.

Since we met none of those qualifications, we left.

9   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 3:50pm  

joshuatrio says

In order to live in CA, we have found that you need to be:

1. On government assistance with a housing voucher

2. Mommy and daddy gave you a house

3. Be willing to finance he next 30 years of your life away on a $500,000 - $1million terd house built in the 1950s that needs a complete rehab.

Since we met none of those qualifications, we left.

You left out 2 other qualifications, which you meet:
4. Housing appreciation that can make you wealthy.
5. Weather you are guaranteed to miss.

Ironman says

One of the best reasons to leave CA. Being a wage slave to pay for an overpriced pile of 2x4's and sheetrock in CA is idiotic!

Investment, Ironman. Investment.

10   mell   2015 Nov 29, 4:12pm  

joshuatrio says

Looks like I'll be dissolving my LLC and reforming it in 2016.

Congrats. But if your new LLC will do business with any person or entity in CA I think they will demand that you pay their yearly fee as well. Total scammers.

Strategist says

Investment, Ironman. Investment.

Only as long as the music is playing, then the fat lady will sing again.

11   mell   2015 Nov 29, 4:50pm  

I have to agree, the SF bay area has quite a lot to offer nature-wise and a good climate, but that is by far not enough reason for the disconnect in prices. Interestingly Zillow has been pretty bearish lately, very unusual for a site making money off of real estate. IPO slowdown and a crashing chinese stock market could end this honeymoon rather quickly, or maybe at some point people will realize that they should not pay a million dollars for a rusty shack on prime earthquake territory. We're not there yet ;)

12   Ceffer   2015 Nov 29, 5:07pm  

They need to change the California logo from a bear to a San Quentin wedding dress.

13   lostand confused   2015 Nov 29, 5:12pm  

Ironman says

The weather isn't bad in GA and you can swim in the ocean without turning blue!

It is called Hotlanta for a reason. CA does have something the others don't-well at least coastal CA. if you move to Bakersfield or some place in the imperial valley-it is hell on earth and the prices reflect that.

it used to be reasonable at the start of the century-but too high now. How long this will last-who knows.

I myself moved out, thought I could spend 10-15 years here in the upper Midwest, have a paid off house and a ton of savings/investments-on paper it looks good. At my current rate, should be able to retire in 10-15 yrs, But then I don't want to stay indoors for the next 10-15 years, so am looking again. I am looking for warmer climes and this time really looking, as I don't want to move again. I don't like the humidity of the east coast or Louisiana. I think Phoenix or even Vegas are fine-dry heat even though above 100s in summer. For me I am fine with upto 110 as long as it is dry heat-over 90/95 in humidity is torture. Phoenix seems to have a lot of IT job openings.

I did look at Oregon/Seattle, but the grey skies will do you in. I am a very outdoorsy type -though warmer outdoorsy.

CA is really nice, move away from the coast and you even have right leaning folks and Orange county is quite right leaning-though I don't like the religious nuts. I don't care-people are people. But what I care is this incessant hike in taxes and encouraging the lawbreakers/illegals . Phoenix might be a nice fit for me-though prices have gone up-still within my budget . Another factor, my house I can break even or actually make a small profit-which is unheard of over here in one year!

Sometimes it is about money, where you want to live and a mix of other factors-lets see what works out for me ! Life is one grand adventure!!!

14   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 6:19pm  

Ironman says

Strategist says

You left out 2 other qualifications, which you meet:


4. Housing appreciation that can make you wealthy.

But you're missing this part:

He can stay in CA and pay $4K - $5K a month on a mortgage payment...

or

He moves to GA and pays $2K a month on a mortgage payment and invests the other $2K - $3K a month that he would be blowing on the mortgage payment in CA in a nice index fund.

Where does he end up better off??

California is the easy answer.
The $5,000 per month gets him a $1 million home, with lots of tax write offs, and in 10 to 12 years it will be worth $2 million.
The $2,000 or so mortgage in Atlanta will get him less tax benefits, and a third of the appreciation.
The higher appreciation is the number one factor that makes California worth every penny. example....My aunt in a small town in Illinois built a custom home 18 years ago on a golf course for $400,000. She can't sell the well kept home for even $375,000 today. Homes in So Cal have increased about 3 fold since then. Now tell me, which place will lead you to being better off?

Ironman says

Strategist says

5. Weather you are guaranteed to miss.

The weather isn't bad in GA and you can swim in the ocean without turning blue!

I have visited friends in North Atlanta. Summer is very humid, winter is cold and wet. I love the woods in Atlanta, but California is better. No one from Atlanta will drive from Atlanta for a dip in the ocean.
Joshua, I do not mean to discourage your move. I'm sure it was a good move based on your circumstances. You sound very happy, and I am happy for you. I am only debating my crazy friends on Patnet for the fun of it, because this is what we do on Patnet. I wish you and all the best. The freedom do make choices, and the freedom to move are some of the benefits a country like ours offers, and what contributes to us being Number One.

15   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 29, 6:28pm  

Strategist says

5. Weather you are guaranteed to miss

Not sure if I agree. Cold mornings and cold and windy afternoons. The central coast is a fog bank half the time. From 9am-12pm was the sweet spot but when you have to work you don't get to enjoy it.

Swimming? Only indoor pools in the Monterey area. Otherwise you'll freeze your ass off.

Believe it or not, my wife and I were tired of the weather.

16   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 29, 6:30pm  

Ironman says

He moves to GA and pays $2K a month on a mortgage payment and invests the other $2K - $3K a month that he would be blowing on the mortgage payment in CA in a nice index fund.

Wrong. Pay cash for the place. Then save 95% of my six figure salary and 100% of what my LLC makes.

I drive a civic now but was joking to my wife that I may just buy a Porsche for the hell of it.

17   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 6:37pm  

joshuatrio says

Ironman says

He moves to GA and pays $2K a month on a mortgage payment and invests the other $2K - $3K a month that he would be blowing on the mortgage payment in CA in a nice index fund.

Wrong. Pay cash for the place. Then save 95% of my six figure salary and 100% of what my LLC makes.

I drive a civic now but was joking to my wife that I may just buy a Porsche for the hell of it.

So you can pay cash for a home in Atlanta, and you drive a Civic. Sounds to me like you should be the one giving advice.

18   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 29, 6:46pm  

Strategist says

I have visited friends in North Atlanta. Summer is very humid, winter is cold and wet. I love the woods in Atlanta, but California is better. No one from Atlanta will drive from Atlanta for a dip in the ocean.

Joshua, I do not mean to discourage your move. I'm sure it was a good move based on your circumstances.

All good. No offense taken.

I agree that the west coast offers more in terms of natural beauty. I hike, cycle and surf so this was a big decision for us.

However. I loved in Monterey and spent many weekends down big sur, yosemite, Tahoe and so forth. Sure the coast and the sierras are beautiful but everything else in the state is a dump/wasteland/desert - which is about 80% of the state. Not to mention, I drove through 11 states getting out here and the roads in CA were the worst. The minute I got out of state, my car felt like a new car because of the roads.

lostand confused says

It is called Hotlanta for a reason

Which is why you don't live in Atlanta itself. The suburbs are very nice, upscale and clean. Look at Marietta and Kennesaw. That's my plan.

I've driven all over the Atlanta burbs and have yet to see piles of trash all over the sides of the roads or large hoards of homeless people which were common sights in CA.

19   lostand confused   2015 Nov 29, 6:59pm  

joshuatrio says

Not to mention, I drove through 11 states getting out here and the roads in CA were the worst

This is true. I live in the upper Midwest, with snow and salt on roads and snow ploughs-and the roads here are far better. Just a shame. Maybe the road money goes to the 300# welfare freaks.

20   lostand confused   2015 Nov 29, 7:07pm  

joshuatrio says

Which is why you don't live in Atlanta itself. The suburbs are very nice, upscale and clean. Look at Marietta and Kennesaw. That's my plan.

I lived in Lawrenceville for 6 months-still hot. But much better than Midwest!

21   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 7:21pm  

Ironman says

Strategist says

The $5,000 per month gets him a $1 million home,

What if you don't have the salary/income to afford a $5k mortgage payment?

Buy a half million dollar condo, and let that double.

Ironman says

Strategist says

The $2,000 or so mortgage in Atlanta will get him less tax benefits, and a third of the appreciation.

and he'll need a third of the income to pay for it, which means he can enjoy life and not be a wage slave to pay for the house.

You are assuming bigger homes bring more happiness. Not so.

Ironman says

Strategist says

and in 10 to 12 years it will be worth $2 million.

So, in 10 years, you think that house will double in value? Really? There will be people in the next 10 years (based on the last 10 years) that will be able to afford a $10K a month mortgage?

Yup. Most buyers will use their equity to move up. Income is not always relevant to high net worth families.

Ironman says

Will wages double in the next ten years or will mortgage rates be declining by a lot?

I doubt if wages will double in the next 10 years. The net worth of Californians and Americans will explode. Chinese, Indians and other Asians will buy like crazy.

22   anonymous   2015 Nov 29, 7:23pm  

well, this is a wise choice. well done. not many people can leave for one reason or another. you will miss it here but there are enough positives to counter that feeling. with all of the extra money there is always a resort suite on the coast that will welcome your business.

23   Booger   2015 Nov 29, 7:27pm  

joshuatrio says

While the traffic sucks, I'm near bike trails that will get me directly to work.

Traffic sucks everywhere.

24   Booger   2015 Nov 29, 7:31pm  


i really do love the coastline in the west.

Exactly how is the West Coast any different from some other coast, except for the west coast colder water temperature.

25   Y   2015 Nov 29, 7:54pm  

McAllen, TX....40 minute drive to the gulf for beach activities....5 minute ride to Reynosa for $10 hookers and $10 ounces...
course you need to smoke the whole ounce to get high, but that's besides the point.

26   FortWayne   2015 Nov 29, 8:02pm  

I do have to say though, as a CA resident, money doesn't go as far as it should out here. It's easier to make money in CA, but it's value is much less if spent in CA. There is always a trade off somewhere.

27   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 8:28pm  

Ironman says

But they still will be able to buy today's $1 million home for $2 million in 10 years (and have the 20% ($400K) available for the down payment?

No, you don't get my point. Those who benefit from stocks, investments, business owners, rich foreigners, and those with existing real estate holdings will easily afford those homes. It's not always income that counts, but the assets and net worth a family owns can also count.

28   Strategist   2015 Nov 29, 8:29pm  

FortWayne says

I do have to say though, as a CA resident, money doesn't go as far as it should out here. It's easier to make money in CA, but it's value is much less if spent in CA. There is always a trade off somewhere.

Make money in California, and spend it elsewhere. Now that's a plan.

29   bob2356   2015 Nov 30, 7:15am  

Strategist says

The $5,000 per month gets him a $1 million home, with lots of tax write offs, and in 10 to 12 years it will be worth $2 million.

The $2,000 or so mortgage in Atlanta will get him less tax benefits, and a third of the appreciation.

I'm guessing that you haven't heard of AMT and don't make enough money for it to matter. If you make good money AMT wipes out your tax write offs totally.

30   bob2356   2015 Nov 30, 7:26am  

SoftShell says

McAllen, TX....40 minute drive to the gulf for beach activities....5 minute ride to Reynosa for $10 hookers and $10 ounces...

course you need to smoke the whole ounce to get high, but that's besides the point.

Why would you want to be 40 minutes away from the beach in McAllen? Laguna Vista, Laguna Heights, and Port Isabel are dirt cheap right on the Laguna Madre. Like 350k waterfront with a dock. http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/918-Trout-Ave_Port-Isabel_TX_78578_M89863-72384?row=1&ex=TX604215807. A 2 minute drive puts you in south padre for surf, sand, sun, and nightlife. Bonus points, lawn, pool, domestic help is incredibly cheap.

Matamoros has better hookers than Reynosa I've been told.

31   Strategist   2015 Nov 30, 9:01am  

bob2356 says

I'm guessing that you haven't heard of AMT and don't make enough money for it to matter. If you make good money AMT wipes out your tax write offs totally.

Smart people pay no taxes.

32   Dan8267   2015 Nov 30, 9:11am  

Strategist says

Smart people pay no taxes.

So the smartest people are the homeless then?

33   NuttBoxer   2015 Nov 30, 9:18am  

Thanks for the post Josh, been thinking about moving myself for years. The only reason we're still here is our income has increased faster than taxes/cost of living, and our rent is $300/month under market.

The federal taxes are the ones I really want to get away from though, meaning a much bigger move...

34   B.A.C.A.H.   2015 Nov 30, 9:59am  

Welcome to The Bay Area, Cool And Hip, ground zero for Obnoxious Folks from all over the USA and all over the world.

Here's Another Obnoxious Phenotype easily found in the Bay Area: The Obnoxious A**hole who will argue to prove you wrong (and being stupid) for not "building Bay Area house equity" in tradeoff for so many other quality of life aspects. Hah-hah! Gotcha you Podunk Devil.
Too much time focusing on The Equity and The Cool and Hip Silicon Valley career, and we may find ourselves scraping the flesh of our teenager from the Caltrain Rails, or blaming everyone and everything else but ourselves when they get caught and disciplined for cheating on exams.

35   zzyzzx   2015 Nov 30, 10:03am  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Here's Another Obnoxious Phenotype easily found in the Bay Area: The Obnoxious A**hole who will argue to prove you wrong (and being stupid) for not "building Bay Area house equity" in tradeoff for so many other quality of life aspects

36   Strategist   2015 Nov 30, 11:11am  

---So the smartest people are the homeless then?---
...The DUMBEST people are homeless.....

Why do I always have to fix Dan's screw ups?

37   B.A.C.A.H.   2015 Nov 30, 11:20am  

Build Bay Area Home Equity, or BE HOMELESS, you dumbest haolie!

38   bob2356   2015 Nov 30, 11:36am  

Strategist says

Smart people pay no taxes.

I always suspected you were in prison.

39   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 30, 11:38am  

NuttBoxer says

Thanks for the post Josh, been thinking about moving myself for years. The only reason we're still here is our income has increased faster than taxes/cost of living, and our rent is $300/month under market.

We were sorta in the same boat. Incomes kept rising and our LLC took off, but our rent was not under market and it kept increasing. Plus, the property management companies we've used in CA have been horrendous and we were tired of dealing with them all.

Ultimately we just want a flexible lifestyle, paid off house and to be self employed. In California, we were doing fine on our LLC income, but it always felt like I had to maintain a typical career in IT because the cost of living seems to keep going up and we like saving $$ each month - not spending.

Like I said, I love the coast, but it just wasn't worth it to us. Plus the pay raise I got and relo bonus were enough to tip us to make the move.

Right now, it is mostly about finances, because being mortgage free will allow us a more flexible lifestyle so we can do whatever we want - rather than having to work for the man long term.

We were on the central coast 8 years. The last 2-3 we were really considering moving. Keeping your west coast salary and enjoying it on the east coast is a wonderful thing

40   joshuatrio   2015 Nov 30, 11:43am  

Dan8267 says

So the smartest people are the homeless then?

I would say they are pretty damn smart. The "bush man" on the wharf in San Fransisco makes $70k a year, tax free, and just scares people for a living.

Because he has no real income, he gets free healthcare, section 8 housing voucher, wic, food stamps and all sorts of government aid.

This guy doesn't report to anyone, takes home 100% of his income and gets everything else for free - while the rest of us slave away and try to do things the "right way."

You tell me who's smarter?

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