One of the most overlooked—but critical—aspects of Act 60 compliance is not how you establish Puerto Rico residency, but how you end it.
The IRS doesn’t take kindly to people hopping between tax jurisdictions at will. If you eventually move back to the mainland U.S., your reason for doing so matters. A lot.
To avoid scrutiny or reclassification of your tax status, the IRS typically expects a clear, well-documented “event” or life change to justify the shift in residency. Think of this as the inverse of proving a bona fide move to Puerto Rico—except this time, the burden is on you to show why you’re leaving.
What Counts as an “Event”?
“Getting tired of Puerto Rico” isn’t enough. Instead, the IRS wants to see something significant and definable:
- A major health issue requiring long-term care near specialized providers
- Selling a business or retiring
- Having new grandchildren you want to live near
- Accepting a new job or starting a new business stateside
- Death or illness of a spouse or close family member
The key is that the change is specific and time-bound, not a slow drift back to your previous lifestyle. For example, if health concerns cause you to start visiting Florida more often, but you don’t formally reestablish residency until a year or two later, the IRS may challenge:
Why now? Why not when the health concerns began?
Without a clear event, you run the risk of failing the IRS’s residency tests retroactively, which could result in Puerto Rico-sourced income being taxed at full U.S. federal rates.
Takeaways
- If you plan to exit Puerto Rico, document the reason clearly.
- Time your move to coincide with a discrete life event, not a gradual lifestyle shift.
- Work with experienced advisors to ensure your transition out of Puerto Rico is just as carefully managed as your move into it.
- Leaving Puerto Rico is a tax-sensitive decision. Treat it with the same strategy and structure that brought you here in the first place.