What Rhode Island residents actually pay
Rhode Island taxes ordinary income at a top marginal rate of 5.99%. RSU settlement value, NSO exercise spread, and ESPP discount income all count as ordinary wages for this purpose and flow through the state's normal brackets.
Establishing the break
Leaving Rhode Island cleanly for tax purposes means proving you changed domicile, not just changed address. Domicile audits look at: where you vote, where you hold your driver's license, where your doctors and dentist are, where your family lives, where you spend holidays, whether you sold (or stopped using) your Rhode Island residence.
Trailing-grant rules
Even after a clean break, most high-tax states claim a workday-sourced share of equity that vested after you moved but was earned while you were a resident. Plan the move timing around known vesting and exercise events; moving in January before a year of vesting is cleaner than moving in June mid-vest.
Records to keep
Three years of records, minimum. Calendar (for day-count defense), payroll history (showing work location each pay period), real estate transactions, travel receipts, medical and professional records. If audited, the burden is on you to prove the new residency.
Frequently asked
- Does Rhode Island tax RSU income the same as wages?
- Yes. Rhode Island treats RSU ordinary income as wages, taxable at the state's top marginal rate of 5.99%. Supplemental-wage federal withholding (22%, or 37% above $1M YTD) does not adjust for state withholding, so you often owe extra at filing.
- What happens if I exercise ISOs while living in Rhode Island?
- Rhode Island does not run a separate state AMT, so only federal AMT applies. You still need to model the bargain element carefully if you plan a cashless exercise-and-sell.
- I moved to Rhode Island from another state. Who taxes my vesting RSUs?
- Most high-tax states (CA, NY, MA) source RSU ordinary income to workdays between grant and vest. If your grant pre-dates your Rhode Island move, expect the old state to tax the portion of each tranche attributable to workdays earned there. Rhode Island taxes the remainder.
- Can I reduce Rhode Island taxes by timing my RSU sales?
- Rhode Island taxes long-term capital gains at the same rate as ordinary income, so timing alone does not produce a state savings — only federal. Holding for 12 months still halves the federal rate on gains above basis.
Related
- RSU taxes — Rhode Island
- ISO exercises and AMT — Rhode Island
- Capital gains tax — Rhode Island
- QSBS — Rhode Island
- Moving to or from Rhode Island with unvested equity: trailing nexus rules — Rhode Island
- RSU vesting schedules — Rhode Island
- ESPP taxation — Rhode Island
- NSO exercises and state tax — Rhode Island
- 401(k) and retirement accounts — Rhode Island
- Rhode Island equity-comp overview