Every year, roughly 22,000 people make the move from Connecticut to Florida — and the reasons stack up fast. Palm Beach County has an unusually high concentration of Connecticut and New York transplants — driven by finance and wealth management professionals. Here's what you need to know before you go.
The Financial Case for Leaving Connecticut
Connecticut's effective tax burden is among the top 3 in the US. Moving to Florida eliminates state income tax and estate tax — significant for high earners.
Florida has no state income tax. Connecticut has 6.99% state income tax. On a household income of $150,000, that gap represents $10,485/year that stays in your pocket. Over 10 years, that's a down payment on a boat.
Florida also has no estate or inheritance tax — a meaningful consideration for families transferring wealth. And with the Homestead Exemption and Save Our Homes cap, your property tax assessment increases by no more than 3% per year once you're locked in.
Where Connecticut People Move in Florida
The most popular destinations for Connecticut movers: Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Naples, Vero Beach, Jupiter. Jupiter, Palm Beach, and Vero Beach attract CT expats who want Florida without the South Beach scene — quieter, upscale, and close to good boating.
- Palm Beach — Most popular for Connecticut transplants; largest expat community
- Boca Raton — Second choice; strong job market and lifestyle balance
- Naples — Growing option for value-conscious buyers
Climate: What Changes, What Doesn't
Connecticut weather: cold winters, nor'easters, high heating and cooling costs. Florida weather: hot and humid May–September, warm and dry October–April. No snow, no ice, minimal heating bills. The trade-off is a real hurricane season (June–November) and summer humidity that takes 2–3 months to acclimate to.
Most Connecticut transplants say they adapt within one summer and never look back. The key is managing your home: good HVAC (sized right for Florida — ask for a Manual J load calculation), ceiling fans in every room, and blackout curtains on west-facing windows.
Home Services You'll Need Immediately
Florida homes have different service requirements than Connecticut. Prioritize these within the first 60 days:
- HVAC inspection — Florida AC runs 10–11 months/year. If the unit is 8+ years old, budget for replacement ($4,000–$8,000). Efficiency matters: every SEER2 point saves real money here.
- Pest control — Subterranean termites are present statewide. Annual termite bond ($250–$400/year) is non-negotiable for wood-frame homes. General pest treatment for roaches and ants: $40–$80/month.
- Roof assessment — Florida homeowners insurance is heavily roof-condition dependent. A roof over 15 years old may require replacement to get coverage. Get a certified inspection before buying.
- Water treatment — Florida has some of the hardest water in the US. A water softener ($1,800–$3,500 installed) protects your appliances, fixtures, and skin.
- Hurricane prep — Impact windows or hurricane shutters are worth the investment, especially within 50 miles of the coast. Insurance discounts of 15–40% often offset the cost over 5–7 years.
The Home Price Reality
Connecticut median home: $380,000. Florida statewide median: $410,000. Prices vary dramatically by location — Naples and Miami run $600K–$1M+ while Cape Coral, Port St. Lucie, and Ocala offer solid homes under $350K. Your Connecticut budget stretches further in central and southwest Florida than in the coastal metros.
Budget extra for: homeowners insurance ($3,000–$6,000/year on a $400K coastal home), flood insurance if in a FEMA zone ($800–$3,000/year), and HOA fees (common in Florida communities; $200–$600/month is typical).
Things Connecticut Transplants Usually Wish They Knew
- Buy in the fall or winter — Florida inventory increases and prices soften October–February when Northern snowbirds flood the market and competition is highest. Paradoxically, the best time to buy is when buyers are competing for fewer sellers.
- Understand flood zones before you buy — FEMA's flood map and your specific zone determine insurance cost dramatically. Zone X = low risk and cheap insurance. Zone AE = high risk and mandatory flood insurance if you have a mortgage.
- Screen enclosures (pool cages) are worth it — If you're buying a home with a pool, a screen enclosure reduces maintenance, keeps bugs out, and adds usable outdoor space. Expect $15,000–$30,000 if not already installed.
- Summer is slower, not dead — Restaurants, events, and traffic all quiet down June–August. That's actually a feature for locals. Embrace it.
Ready to Start Planning?
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