Tax Address ChangeNot the IRS · uses the official IRS form

Change your address for state taxes

When you move, two tax authorities need your new address — the IRS (federal) and your state tax agency. They keep separate records and don’t update each other, so you have to do both. Pick your state below for its exact process; for the federal side, we can mail your IRS Form 8822 for you.

Find your state

Two records, two updates

Updating the IRS does not update your state, and updating your state does not update the IRS — several states say so outright (Indiana, for one, reminds filers to notify the IRS separately). The one partial exception is New Jersey, which accepts a copy of federal Form 8822 for its own change. Everywhere else, they’re two errands.

What we do: we fill and mail the federal IRS Form 8822 — the part with no online option — to the correct IRS office, nationwide. For your state change, use the official link on your state’s page; we don’t file state forms.

Common questions

Do I change my address with my state and the IRS separately?

Yes. Your state tax agency and the IRS keep separate records and don’t share address updates. Update your state with its own process, and update the IRS with Form 8822.

Does changing my IRS address update my state taxes?

No. Updating the IRS (Form 8822) changes only your federal record. Your state has its own change-of-address process — pick your state below.

Can this site change my state tax address?

No — we handle the nationwide IRS change (Form 8822) only. For your state, use the official process linked on your state’s page; we point you to it.

Each state page links that state’s official tax-agency change-of-address page, checked against the live state site. We are not affiliated with any state agency or the IRS.