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Residents with high incomes in another predominantly Democratic state are leaving in significant numbers for Republican-led Nevada, following a new mayor’s promise to increase taxes on the wealthy.
According to experts, Washington is experiencing a significant migration of its affluent populace toward Nevada.
“In September, we started noticing a surge of people coming from Seattle, and it’s been growing ever since,” real estate agent Darin Marques shared with the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
This wave of departures follows Seattle’s newly elected socialist mayor, Katie Wilson, who is 43, and her pledge to impose higher taxes on the city’s wealthiest individuals and corporations.
Wilson, often likened to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, ran her campaign on a platform focused on increasing taxes to support social initiatives.
However, her proposed policies have prompted some residents to look for areas with fewer regulations and more favorable tax conditions, such as Las Vegas and its surrounding regions.
‘When a client from Bellevue, Washington, sells a $4million home and faces a potential $300,000-plus tax bill in Washington, Henderson becomes far more attractive,’ Marques said.
‘Nevada has no state income tax at all, so buyers keep more of what they earn, invest or make when selling a home, and they can often buy a comparable luxury home for about half the coastal price.’
Seattle’s new socialist mayor Katie Wilson, 43, campaigned on aggressively taxing the wealthiest to keep funding the city’s social programs
The richest residents of Washington state are said to be fleeing to Nevada in search of less regulations and more flexible taxes
Another real estate agent specified the trend was driven largely by affluent retirement age individuals setting their sights on Nevada.
‘The primary drivers are the significantly lower cost of living and, in particular, Nevada’s lack of a state income tax,’ Robert Little, who works with Re/Max Advantage in Henderson, told the outlet.
Little claimed that an unnamed senior tech executive preparing to retire was already researching golf communities in Nevada.
Little added: ‘He was genuinely surprised by the value and lifestyle options available in Las Vegas and has plans to visit soon to tour homes in person.’
Henderson — about 16 miles southeast of Las Vegas — has emerged as a popular destination for Washington residents leaving the state.
Mayor Michelle Romero welcomed the new arrivals and lauded what the population shift could do for the city.
‘Having manageable growth enables the city to thoughtfully plan for infrastructure, safety, and public amenities, while having a sustainable source of income from that growth,’ Romero said.
Michelle Romero, mayor of Henderson, Nevada, is welcoming the migration to her city which is fast becoming a popular choice for wealthy Washington and California ex-pats
Wealthy individuals approaching retirement are pushing to move from blue west coast states like Washington or California to Las Vegas and its surrounding areas
Wilson, a self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist, has said that Seattle must ‘raise new progressive revenue’ to keep funding things like libraries, parks and emergency responses.
Seattle is a massive tech hub, hosting corporate giants like Amazon and Microsoft.
‘Using the office to encourage organizing and building power is important,’ she told Jacobin. ‘But also, as a socialist, the more that we can move toward recognizing things that are public goods, and fund and provide them as such, the better, right?’
Meanwhile, Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson announced in December that he supported a so-called millionaires’ tax.
The measure would impose a 9.9 percent tax on those whose annual earnings exceed $1million.
It would go into effect in 2028 and presumably raise around $3.7billion per year that would go towards public education, child care and health care.
Wilson has said that tax reform and progressive revenue ‘at the state level is very, very important right now’.
Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson, a Democrat, announced in December that he supported a millionaires’ tax in the state
That suggestion echoes California’s billionaires’ tax proposal, which caused Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin to cut ties with California late last year
Washington’s tax proposal echoes California’s suggested billionaires’ tax, which would hit top earners in that state with a one-time tax worth five percent of their net worth.
The tax would apply to assets such as stocks, bonds, artwork and intellectual property but not income.
Billionaires in California would have five years to pay if the the proposal is signed into law.
The measure, proposed by the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West union, first has to gain enough signatures to make it onto the November ballot.
After that, it has to win voter approval. If that happens, the new tax would retroactively apply as of January 1, 2026.
California is estimated to have around 200 billionaires, but some of them have already made moves to leave the state as a result of this proposal.
Titans including the likes of Google cofounders Sergey Brin and Larry Page, venture capitalist Peter Thiel and tech investor David Sacks have all expressed their concern over the proposal.
California Governor Gavin Newsom has also spoken out against the suggested tax.