The 30-Day Rule for Washington Income Tax Residency (and Why It’s Confusing)

By Joe Wallin,

Published on Mar 25, 2026   —   2 min read

Waashington’s 9.9% income tax begins January 1, 2028. That means residency isn’t a theoretical question — it determines whether your household pays 9.9% on income above $1 million. The confusion stems from Washington’s two separate tests for being treated as a resident and the narrow safe harbor that applies to those who already live here.

Two ways Washington can treat you as a resident

Washington looks at two independent tests:

  1. Domicile – You have your permanent place of abode in Washington (and intend to return here). A Washington domiciliary is generally a resident unless they meet the strict safe‑harbor described below.
  2. 183‑day rule – Even if you’re not domiciled in Washington, you become a resident if you maintain a place of abode here and spend more than 183 days in the state during the year.

A day includes any portion of a day. That means an overnight stay or even a few hours in Washington counts as a full day.

The 30‑day safe harbor for domiciled individuals

If you are domiciled in Washington, there’s only one way to avoid being treated as a resident: satisfy all three prongs of the 30‑day safe harbor. You must:

  • Not maintain a permanent place of abode in Washington at any time during the entire taxable year;
  • Maintain a permanent place of abode outside Washington during the entire year; and
  • Spend no more than 30 days in the aggregate in Washington during the year.

Fail any of those conditions — for example, keep a Seattle condo or spend 40 days visiting — and the safe harbor is unavailable.

Example 1: WA domiciliary who fully moves

You sell your Seattle house in December 2027, buy a home in Nevada, and spend 20 days visiting friends in Washington in 2028. You maintain no place of abode in Washington, you maintain a permanent home in Nevada, and you spend fewer than 30 days here. Result: the safe harbor applies.

Example 2: WA domiciliary who keeps a Washington condo

You move to Texas but keep a condo in Seattle and spend only 10 days in Washington. You still maintain a permanent place of abode in Washington, so you fail the safe harbor even though you were here fewer than 30 days.

Example 3: Non‑domiciliary who winters in Washington

You live in Oregon but rent a cabin in Washington and spend 200 days here in 2028. Even though your domicile is Oregon, you maintain a place of abode in Washington and spend more than 183 days here. Result: you’re a Washington resident under the 183‑day rule.

What to document

If you plan to rely on the 30‑day safe harbor, keep an audit‑ready file that shows:

  • When you gave up and established permanent places of abode (deeds, leases, utility records).
  • Travel days in and out of Washington.
  • Lease, registration, banking, voting and license records for your new domicile.

{ "}}

Bottom line

Washington’s new income tax raises the stakes on residency. The safe harbor is not about your mailing address; it’s about your place of abode and days in the state. To qualify, you must not maintain a home in Washington, must maintain one elsewhere, and must be here 30 days or less. Partial days count. Build a model now so you know where you stand, and document every step along the way.

Share on Facebook Share on Linkedin Share on Twitter Send by email

Subscribe to the newsletter

Practical updates on QSBS, Washington taxes, equity compensation, and startup law — for founders, investors, and startup employees.

Subscribe
})