Alaska, Florida, Nevada, S.Dakota, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. New Hampshire and Tennessee only tax dividend and interest income. Does that help you? Good luck.
Is this a question? If so, the answer is yes, most States in the U. S. require filing and payment of Federal and State Income Tax Returns.
If the 1099 income is Ohio-source income, then yes.
If you are talking about state income taxes, Washington does not have a state income tax so there would be no state income tax on the retirement income for Washington residents. Generally, there would be Federal tax though.
All states except Colorado, Texas, and Tennesee require a copy of the Federal tax return be attached when paper filing.
All states have state income taxes.
New York state ... If you live or work in the City of New York there is a local tax as will as in Long Island ...
be citizens of the United States and residents of the State.
True.
massachusetts
All of the states that have a personal income tax.
Yes. North Dakota is the only state that doesn't require residents to register to vote.
You file taxes in any state where you are a resident for tax purposes. The term "resident" has a different meaning for tax purposes than it does for other purposes such as in-state tuition or unemployment compensation. Each state has its own definition of a resident. If you lived in several states during the year, you would file in all of them. If you have very complicated affairs, it is even possible to simultaneously be a resident of two or more states. You also file in any state where you have what is known as "state source income." For example, if you worked in a state, owned income-producing property in a state, sold property located in a state, owned a business that operated in a state, won money in a casino operated in a state, then you need to file in that state. Each state can tax all income earned by its residents no matter where in the world it is earned. Each state can also tax state source income from non-residents. When two states tax the same income, generally the state of residence will allow its residents to claim a whole or partial credit for taxes paid to another state. Sometimes it is the reverse (for example California residents claim a credit on Arizona non-resident taxes for taxes paid to California). Sometimes two states have an agreement to exempt each other's residents from some taxes (for example, Ohio and Kentucky have an agreement not to tax each other's residents on wages only).
Both. States have the right to tax their residents on all income. States also have the right to tax income earned in their state (state sourced income). Therefore professional athletes (and entertainers and anyone else who works in various states) has to pay tax to their home state and anywhere they work. Lots of returns to fill out for a professional ball player.
Is this a question? If so, the answer is yes, most States in the U. S. require filing and payment of Federal and State Income Tax Returns.
If the 1099 income is Ohio-source income, then yes.
It depends on why you are filing in 2 separate states. Most states have special forms for non-residents or part-year residents to fill out. You would use whichever form applies to you. For example, if you live in one state and work in another state, you would fill out the non-resident form where you worked and the regular resident form where you lived. The state where you live probably also has a special form to fill out to claim credit for taxes paid to the state where you worked. Some pairs of states also have agreements not to tax each other's residents on wage income. If that applies to you and the state where you worked did not withhold taxes, you may not even have to file in the state where you worked.
If you are talking about state income taxes, Washington does not have a state income tax so there would be no state income tax on the retirement income for Washington residents. Generally, there would be Federal tax though.