Bye-Bye, Snowbirds: Wealthy Americans Are Relocating Permanently for Retirement — and This Financial Adviser Can't Fault Their Logic
Why head south for the winter and pay for two properties when you can have a better lifestyle year-round in a less expensive state? Permanent relocation is a much savvier retirement strategy, as this financial adviser explains.
The traditional snowbird retirement of splitting time between two homes is giving way to strategic, permanent relocation, as wealthy Americans discover they can lead a better life in a cheaper home state.
Wealth creators who plan a decade or more before retirement can lock in tax advantages, avoid audit complications and build a lifestyle that previous generations could enjoy only seasonally.
The financial logic behind permanent relocation
The tax advantages of relocation are well known. States with little to no income tax, such as Texas and Florida, have become wealth magnets, while states including California and New York are losing billions from outbound migration.
From just $107.88 $24.99 for Kiplinger Personal Finance
Become a smarter, better informed investor. Subscribe from just $107.88 $24.99, plus get up to 4 Special Issues
Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free Newsletters
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more - straight to your e-mail.
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice - straight to your e-mail.
For retirees, the difference in tax rate can have enormous implications for their estate, which is why the U.S. has started seeing such significant shifts in retiree behaviors.
About Adviser Intel
The author of this article is a participant in Kiplinger's Adviser Intel program, a curated network of trusted financial professionals who share expert insights on wealth building and preservation. Contributors, including fiduciary financial planners, wealth managers, CEOs and attorneys, provide actionable advice about retirement planning, estate planning, tax strategies and more. Experts are invited to contribute and do not pay to be included, so you can trust their advice is honest and valuable.
States like Wyoming and Idaho have become the new go-tos for retirees alongside traditional havens including Florida and Texas, owing in large part to their 0% estate tax.
Wealth creators are integrating long-term wealth planning into their financial strategy, and more permanent interstate moves are a large part of that.
Part of the reason permanence is overtaking snowbirding is because of tax and legal scrutiny. As wealthy individuals leave, higher-tax states are ramping up enforcement — clamping down on individuals who still spend a significant amount of time in their home state and use its infrastructure.
California, New York and New Jersey have all introduced regulations targeting residents who claim domicile changes while maintaining significant ties to their former residences. Auditors now examine days spent in-state, property ownership, voter registration and even where family heirlooms are stored. Retirees now need to demonstrate that they've fully relocated their lives — not just their mailing addresses.
It's a hard sell for many families, who have spent their lives building communities and raising families in the areas they're now looking to leave.
Besides, if a wealthy individual can afford to have two or more homes, why not keep a house for ease of convenience?
The issue is cost: Insurance costs and property taxes continue to rise across the country. Climate-driven losses have pushed insurance premiums up by more than 30% since 2020.
Property taxes, meanwhile, have risen 27% since 2019. While wealthy retirees may be able to float those costs while they're alive, it comes at a cost to the legacy and impact they want to leave behind.
If the convenience is worth the added expense, so be it, but with the rise of remote work and video conferencing, many of the traditional reasons for maintaining a footprint in the home state — whether for work or doctor's visits — have been erased.
How to plan for a permanent move
The most successful relocations begin several years before retirement so individuals can maximize timing and optimize liquidity.
Once an individual knows where they want to move — having explored a location in all seasons, researched tax structures, health care access and built some sense of community — the move can be a deliberate transition rather than a rushed financial maneuver.
Timing matters: Even in strong markets, selling a multimillion-dollar home can take longer than expected, and planning lets individuals control the sequence of sales and purchases rather than reacting to deadlines.
Looking for expert tips to grow and preserve your wealth? Sign up for Adviser Intel, our free, twice-weekly newsletter.
It's also crucial for tax purposes: Realizing capital gains can have significant tax implications, so coordinating sales with an income transition can help minimize tax burdens.
Liquidity planning is another overlooked step. Maintaining cash reserves or short-term instruments gives flexibility to fund the move without liquidating investments at the wrong time.
Families who build this flexibility in advance tend to move more smoothly — and preserve long-term portfolio performance.
Why are retirees falling out of love with Florida?
Destinations are diversifying beyond Florida. Arizona added more than 20,000 retirees aged 60+ in 2023, ranking third nationally behind Florida and North Carolina.
Several states offer the same tax advantages Florida once did, without the rising insurance and climate risks now reshaping its market.
Even so, Florida's story is instructive. The heyday of Baby Boomer migration is peaking, and younger generations are making choices based on affordability, climate resilience and a balance of lifestyle rather than tradition.
Its experience underscores a broader truth: Every relocation strategy must evolve with economic and environmental conditions.
The key to successful relocation
Relocation strategies should evolve with changing financial, demographic and environmental conditions.
The core principle is simple: Treat domicile as a strategy, not sentiment. Knowing what you want to leave behind is as important to guiding your strategy as knowing what you want your retirement to look like.
Commit fully when you relocate and plan liquidity early enough to act on your own timeline.
Visit potential destinations, build relationships and evaluate tax, insurance and health care systems as part of one integrated plan.
Seasonal migration is no longer necessary. Retirees can build a long-term lifestyle, but they need to plan now.
Related Content
- The 24 Cheapest Places to Retire in the US
- States That Won't Tax Your Retirement Income in 2026
- States That Won't Tax Your Death
- Mamdani Millionaire's Tax: Let the New York Exodus Begin?
- You've Built Your Wealth, Now Make Sure Your Family Keeps It
Profit and prosper with the best of Kiplinger's advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and much more. Delivered daily. Enter your email in the box and click Sign Me Up.

Brandon Summers serves as Executive Director of Wealth Planning at First Western Trust, bringing over two decades of experience helping clients navigate complex financial landscapes. With a background that includes leadership roles at Goldman Sachs and Charles Schwab, Brandon specializes in comprehensive financial planning, investment management and tailored strategies for high-net-worth individuals and families. His approach blends deep industry insight with a commitment to personalized service, ensuring each client's goals are met with precision and care.
-
Consider These 4 Tweaks to Your 2026 Financial PlanThere's never a bad time to make or review a financial plan. But recent changes to the financial landscape might make it especially important to do so now.
-
Why You Should Show Your Insurance Some LoveSure, it's pricey, the policies are confusing, and the claims process is slow, but insurance is essentially the friend who shows up during life's worst moments.
-
Dow Adds 292 Points as Goldman, Nvidia Soar: Stock Market TodayTaiwan Semiconductor's strong earnings sparked a rally in tech stocks on Thursday, while Goldman Sachs' earnings boosted financials.
-
Consider These 4 Tweaks to Your 2026 Financial Plan, Courtesy of a Financial PlannerThere's never a bad time to make or review a financial plan. But recent changes to the financial landscape might make it especially important to do so now.
-
We Know You Hate Your Insurance, But Here's Why You Should Show It Some LoveSure, it's pricey, the policies are confusing, and the claims process is slow, but insurance is essentially the friend who shows up during life's worst moments.
-
Dow Adds 292 Points as Goldman, Nvidia Soar: Stock Market TodayTaiwan Semiconductor's strong earnings sparked a rally in tech stocks on Thursday, while Goldman Sachs' earnings boosted financials.
-
Turning 65 in 2026? Here Is Exactly How to Sign Up for MedicareWhether you’re months away from your 65th birthday or plan to work past retirement age, here are the steps to secure your Medicare coverage and avoid costly mistakes.
-
I'm 61 and Want a Divorce, but I Worry About My Finances. Should We Live Separately but Stay Married?We asked Certified Divorce Financial Analysts for advice.
-
What's in Store for the Stock Market in 2026?Wall Street expects the bull market to keep running in the year ahead.
-
Is a Caregiving Strategy — for Yourself and Others — Missing From Your Retirement Plan?Millions of people over 65 care for grandkids, adult kids or aging parents and will also need care themselves. Building a caregiving strategy is crucial.
-
6 Financially Savvy Power Moves for Women in 2026 (Prepare to Be in Charge!)Don't let the day-to-day get in the way of long-term financial planning. Here's how to get organized — including a reminder to dream big about your future.