Yes you would file a Alabama nonresident income tax return. Alabama Individual Income Tax Return Form (Nonresidents Only) Form 40NR .
Go to the Alabama Department of Revenue website
You will have to file a non resident or part year resident PA state income tax return correctly to determine if you will have to pay PA. state income taxes.
no
You'll file as a resident of NC and a non-resident of SC. The non resident filing will apportion part of your income to that state and the tax you pay will be a credit for tax due in the other State.
Generally speaking, you owe income tax in both the state where you work and the state where you live. Since Florida does not have an income tax, you would owe tax in Georgia only. You would file a Georgia non-resident return.
Generally speaking, you owe income tax in both the state where you work and the state where you live. Since Florida does not have an income tax, you would owe tax in Alabama only. You would file an Alabama non-resident return.
Both places. You get a credit for the tax paid to the non-resident state (or to eliminate the income already paid...depending on circumstances).
You will have to file your resident state income tax return and your nonresident or partial year resident income tax return at the end of your tax year. It is possible that each state could get some income tax from your earnings.
One federal 1040 income tax return combining the income from both state on it. Your nonresident or part year resident state tax return and your resident state income tax return filled out correctly and you may get a tax credit on your resident state income tax return if you had to to pay any income tax to the nonresident state if the returns are completed correctly.
I assume you are saying you own a rental unit that is located in another state and you sold it. If you are a US Citizen or permanent resident, you must pay federal income tax on any profits derived from a sale anywhere in the world. If you are a resident for tax purposes of a state that imposes an income tax, you must pay state income tax to the state where you are a resident. If the state where the property is located has an income tax, you must also file a non-resident return in that state and pay any appropriate income tax to that state. This can create a situation where you must pay income taxes to two different states (the one where you live and the one where the property is located) on the same profit. Ordinarily the state where you live will grant you a credit for the amount of tax you paid to the other state. The credit however will not exceed the amount the resident state would tax the same income.
If you were a resident of either state or you had income from a source in either state, then yes.
You will have to fill out completely and correctly a nonresident or part year resident and also your resident state income tax return correctly and completely to determine the amount of taxes if any that will be owed on each completed state income tax return. You would only file one federal 1040 income tax return to report all of your gross worldwide income from all sources on the federal income tax return.
it is residential