Larry Page Larry Page is reportedly considering a move to Florida as a result of the growing momentum for a wealth tax in California – Jeff Chiu/AFP Photo

Larry Page, the Google co-founder and world’s second-richest person, has reportedly left California amid concerns about a wealth tax on billionaires.

Mr Page has moved the registrations of several entities, including his family office and flying car business from California to Delaware, according to filings with the states.

He has also personally moved out of the state ahead of a potential vote on a 5pc wealth tax, according to Business Insider, which first reported the move.

Mr Page, who founded Google in 1998, is the world’s second-richest person with a net worth of $270bn (£200bn).

The world’s richest person, Elon Musk, left California for Texas in 2020.

Momentum for a wealth tax to fund healthcare is growing in California. A healthcare union has proposed a referendum on the measure at the same time as November’s mid-term elections, and is currently gathering signatures to have the measure put on the ballot.

California laws allow the public to vote on proposed laws if they gather enough signatures, even if they are opposed by the state’s politicians.

Gavin Newsom, the Democrat governor of California who is seen as a frontrunner for his party’s nomination in the 2028 presidential election, has opposed plans for a wealth tax, and it is unclear if it will pass.

However, the proposed law would apply retrospectively from Jan 1 2026, meaning California residents would have had to have left last year to avoid the tax.

Mr Page’s organisations and companies that moved late last year included Koop, his family office; Flu Lab, which funds research into flu vaccines; and One Aero, a shell company that has funded his flying car ventures.

Flu Lab was contacted for comment, while the other companies and Mr Page could not be reached.

The proposed wealth tax would be a one-off 5pc tax on people with assets above $1bn, so it could cost Mr Page $13.5bn.

Other high-profile billionaires in California, such as the venture capitalist Peter Thiel, have reportedly considered leaving the state.

In contrast, Jensen Huang, the chief executive of AI chip company Nvidia, who has become the world’s ninth-richest person, has said he is “perfectly fine” with a wealth tax.

“We chose to live in Silicon Valley and whatever taxes, I guess, they would like to apply, so be it,” he told Bloomberg on Tuesday. “I’m perfectly fine with it. It never crossed my mind once.”

Mr Page had told friends he was considering moving to Florida as a result of the wealth tax, The New York Times reported last month.

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