EPISODE · May 28, 2026 · 11 MIN
50 State Series: How to move your LLC or corporation out of New Mexico and keep your EIN
from #LegalBytes: The Official Podcast of Cummings & Cummings Law · host Cummings & Cummings Law
New Mexico has fallen from 20th to 28th on the Tax Foundation’s 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index, making it one of the five most-declined states over the last six years. In this presentation, Chad D. Cummings, CPA, Esq., explains why New Mexico is losing ground, including its 2025 corporate tax increase to a flat 5.9 percent rate, 5.9 percent top individual income tax rate, gross receipts tax that pyramids through business-to-business transactions, combined state and local gross receipts tax rates reaching 9.44 percent, high per capita tax collections, energy-revenue dependence, and public pension plans funded at only 68 percent. The discussion also explains why New Mexico’s low property taxes and absence of an estate or inheritance tax do not offset the burden imposed on business owners through income taxes and gross receipts taxes. On $500,000 of annual pass-through income, New Mexico’s 5.9 percent income tax produces $29,500 of state income tax, compared to zero in Florida and zero in Texas. The presentation also explains how business domestication can transfer a company’s legal domicile to Florida or Texas without dissolving the company, forming a new entity, losing its EIN, disrupting contracts, or sacrificing business credit history when handled with proper legal and tax formalities. Learn more: https://www.cummings.law/redomestication/
What this episode covers
New Mexico has fallen from 20th to 28th on the Tax Foundation’s 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index, making it one of the five most-declined states over the last six years. In this presentation, Chad D. Cummings, CPA, Esq., explains why New Mexico is losing ground, including its 2025 corporate tax increase to a flat 5.9 percent rate, 5.9 percent top individual income tax rate, gross receipts tax that pyramids through business-to-business transactions, combined state and local gross receipts tax rates reaching 9.44 percent, high per capita tax collections, energy-revenue dependence, and public pension plans funded at only 68 percent. The discussion also explains why New Mexico’s low property taxes and absence of an estate or inheritance tax do not offset the burden imposed on business owners through income taxes and gross receipts taxes. On $500,000 of annual pass-through income, New Mexico’s 5.9 percent income tax produces $29,500 of state income tax, compared to zero in Florida and zero in Texas. The presentation also explains how business domestication can transfer a company’s legal domicile to Florida or Texas without dissolving the company, forming a new entity, losing its EIN, disrupting contracts, or sacrificing business credit history when handled with proper legal and tax formalities. Learn more: https://www.cummings.law/redomestication/
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50 State Series: How to move your LLC or corporation out of New Mexico and keep your EIN
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