You're confusing two different concepts here, source folders and packages.
A source folder is just that, a folder that contains sources. In most modern projects, you will find two such source folders, one for production code, the other for test code. In your example (standard Maven directory layout, that's src/main/java and src/test/java, respectively).
A package is a way of organizing classes, which is usually reflected in your source also. By convention, test and production code use the same package, e.g. a production class com.mypackage.Foo would usually be tested by a class named com.mypackage.FooTest . By convention, these package hierarchies also map to directory hierarchies in your sources. Note: while in 99.99999% of cases, you should stick with this convention for sanity purposes, it's not actually a requirement. You can organize your packages independent of the file system arangement (on the source side).
Anyway, in a standard setup, your directory layout may look like this:
src/main/java/com/mycompany/mypackage/SomeClass.java
src/test/java/com/mycompany/mypackage/SomeClassTest.java
So production and test class share a package, but live in different source folders. This setup is very powerful, because it lets your build tool export only your production code to the final output, while giving your test code package-level access to the code it's testing. Test and production code are compiled independently, the production code is unaware of the test code, which is how it should be.
In your situation, it seems you have production code in the test folder. To change that, moving the code to a different package is not the solution. Instead, you want to move the code to the same package, but in the production folder. If you're using IntelliJ, the move dialog allows you to select a different source root, which is exactly what you want, other IDEs will over similar features.