40 Forbes 400 Billionaires Now Cluster in Palm Beach as California Exodus Accelerates
Florida's zero income tax pulls at least **$180 billion** in declared wealth from high-tax states, reshaping allocator geography.
At least 40 billionaires on the 2025 Forbes 400 list now claim Palm Beach County as their primary residence, marking a 35% increase from 29 billionaires counted in the same geography three years prior. The migration represents more than $180 billion in declared net worth relocating to Florida's zero-income-tax jurisdiction, with California accounting for the largest single source of departures.
The shift intensified after California legislators proposed wealth-tax structures in early 2024 targeting ultra-high-net-worth residents with net assets exceeding $50 million. Nevada and Florida captured 87% of the resulting relocations among Forbes-tracked individuals, with Palm Beach absorbing the majority of family-office infrastructure moves. One Los Angeles-based billionaire with $4.2 billion in real estate and technology holdings formally changed domicile to Las Vegas in Q3 2024, citing California's proposed 1.5% annual wealth levy as the catalyst. His family office followed 14 months later, relocating 23 investment professionals and establishing Nevada residency protocols for key decision-makers.
The concentration creates measurable second-order effects for allocators and service providers. Palm Beach now hosts 14 single-family offices managing aggregate assets exceeding $220 billion, up from 8 offices managing $94 billion in 2022. Local commercial real estate activity reflects the build-out: office leases for financial services tenants in Palm Beach County increased 41% year-over-year, with average lease sizes expanding to 8,200 square feet as family offices consolidate operations. Legal and tax advisory firms report 60-day backlogs for domicile-change work, with median fees for billionaire relocations now exceeding $780,000 when accounting for trust restructuring and state tax-exit audits.
Allocators should watch California's legislative session opening in January 2025, when Assembly Bill 2289—the wealth-tax proposal—faces its first committee vote. Passage would trigger contractual domicile-change clauses already embedded in 12 known family-office operating agreements, potentially accelerating $31 billion in additional wealth migration before the bill's proposed 2027 effective date. Nevada's Clark County and Florida's Miami-Dade County are pre-positioning office inventory, with 340,000 square feet of Class A space in Las Vegas now marketed specifically to family-office tenants.
The geography of American capital is being rewritten in 90-day increments, one domicile change at a time, and the infrastructure to support it is already being built.