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Old 01-28-2017, 12:56 PM
 
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I work in NYC moved to NJ in mid November when filing taxes can I leave it as full year residence of NYC for 2016?
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Old 01-28-2017, 05:26 PM
 
9,879 posts, read 7,209,711 times
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Originally Posted by aeropg View Post
I work in NYC moved to NJ in mid November when filing taxes can I leave it as full year residence of NYC for 2016?
No. You must file a part year resident return in NY and resident return in NJ.
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Old 01-29-2017, 07:09 AM
 
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There are various areas in the country that have simplifying reciprocal agreements that allow people to be taxed only once. New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut do not have such an agreement, so those who live in one entity while working in another will have to file taxes twice. There are credits in one state for taxes paid in another, but you will still have to double-file.

A reasonably up-to-date list of states that DO have reciprocal agreements can be found here...

States That Do Not Tax Certain Out-of-State Workers
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Old 01-29-2017, 11:27 AM
 
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I was told to file fullyear nyc. I know about working in one state and being taxed for both. I bought the home and was still going back and forth to my old apartment (which I still have and sub leasing) up until 1st week of January. So therefore I did full year resident
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Old 01-29-2017, 11:37 AM
 
106,668 posts, read 108,810,853 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pub-911 View Post
There are various areas in the country that have simplifying reciprocal agreements that allow people to be taxed only once. New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut do not have such an agreement, so those who live in one entity while working in another will have to file taxes twice. There are credits in one state for taxes paid in another, but you will still have to double-file.

A reasonably up-to-date list of states that DO have reciprocal agreements can be found here...

States That Do Not Tax Certain Out-of-State Workers
it can be very confusing too . live in pa and work in ny and ny gets paid first . you take any ny taxes off your pa taxes and pay any difference .

but live in pa and work in maryland and you pay pa taxes first .
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Old 01-31-2017, 01:18 AM
 
Location: Elsewhere
88,575 posts, read 84,777,093 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pub-911 View Post
There are various areas in the country that have simplifying reciprocal agreements that allow people to be taxed only once. New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut do not have such an agreement, so those who live in one entity while working in another will have to file taxes twice. There are credits in one state for taxes paid in another, but you will still have to double-file.

A reasonably up-to-date list of states that DO have reciprocal agreements can be found here...

States That Do Not Tax Certain Out-of-State Workers
That wasn't his question lol.
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Old 01-31-2017, 01:20 AM
 
Location: Elsewhere
88,575 posts, read 84,777,093 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aeropg View Post
I work in NYC moved to NJ in mid November when filing taxes can I leave it as full year residence of NYC for 2016?
I think there's a worksheet in the NYS forms for this. I file NYS non-resident, and it asks if you lived in NYS any part of the year.
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Old 01-31-2017, 07:46 AM
 
18,547 posts, read 15,584,312 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aeropg View Post
I was told to file fullyear nyc. I know about working in one state and being taxed for both. I bought the home and was still going back and forth to my old apartment (which I still have and sub leasing) up until 1st week of January. So therefore I did full year resident
When did you move your bed?

When did you change your mailing address?

Yes "where you lived" has some gray areas, granted, but be reasonable about it.
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Old 01-31-2017, 08:10 AM
 
4,224 posts, read 3,017,738 times
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Originally Posted by mathjak107 View Post
...but live in pa and work in maryland and you pay pa taxes first .
That would be because you won't owe any taxes in Maryland. You would have filed an exemption (Form-507) with your MD employer when you first started work affirming your PA residence. PA tax would then have been withheld for you while not a penny would have been taken out for MD taxes. Residents of Virginia, West Virginia, and DC enjoy this same treatment thanks to Maryland's reciprocal agreements.
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Old 01-31-2017, 08:11 AM
 
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Originally Posted by Mightyqueen801 View Post
That wasn't his question lol.
But that WAS his answer. Along with everyone else's.
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