If you lived in Arizona or were a resident of Arizona, you may have to file in Arizona even if you worked in another state or derived all of your income from another state. Arizona residents are subject to Arizona tax on all of their income from anywhere in the world.
The filing requirements are explained at the beginning of the instructions for Arizona income tax returns. If your gross income (for Arizona filing purposes,"gross income" means gross income as defined in the Internal Revenue Code, minus income included in gross income but excluded from Arizona taxations) is at least $15,000, you must file an Arizona income tax return. Also, you must file an Arizona income tax return if your Arizona adjusted gross income is at least $11,000 for married filing jointly or $5,500 for those filing as single, head of household or married filing separately.
yes
you can only file your taxes in the state you live in unless you work in another state and you are filing a income tax.
No you don't, Only the state u live and work in
Federal income tax is the same no matter which state you live in or work in. If you worked in PA, you will have to file a state tax return for PA if they have state income taxes. If you live in one state and work in another you may have to file in both states. As a resident on one and a non-resident in the other. If you move in the middle of a calendar year you may have to file in both as a part year resident.
It doesn't matter from where you file (mail) your taxes. However, you don't get to pick what state you want to file a tax return for.In general, you are required to file a state return for the state in which your primary residence is. If you have income that derives from a source in another state (for example, you live in Connecticut, but work in New York) you have to file a return for the state(s) where your income is from in addition to the one for the state where you live.
didnt work but have a child can you file
yes
Arizona is a right-to-work state.
Yes
Yes
You probably have to file in both states. You will file as a Non-Resident in the state where you work, and then file as a resident in the state you live. You should be able to claim a credit for the tax you pay to the other state.
Luckily Nevada has no state income taxes, otherwise you could be responsible for two state taxes! Arizona is going to tax your out of state income, so if you have a balance due, the best thing to do is to make estimated payments with Form 104ES. Then you will not have a huge state tax debt when you file your return next year.
Yes this could be possible but Florida does not have a state income tax .
you can only file your taxes in the state you live in unless you work in another state and you are filing a income tax.
You can actually file in both, especially if you live in one state and work in another. <><> If you file in your state of residence, the employment office there will cooperate in your filing with the "liable" state (where you work, as they are the ones who collected the employer's payroll taxes and are responsible for paying your claim). Otherwise, file with the state's office where you worked.
The answer will be different depending on which state you lived in and on whether you moved from one state to another. The general principle is that income is taxable in BOTH the state where you earned it and the state where you were a resident at the time. If, for example, you were a resident of Arizona and occasionally traveled to Iowa to do work, then you would claim all of the income earned in Iowa on an Iowa non-resident income tax return. On you Arizona full-year resident return, you would claim all of the income you earned all year in BOTH states. Then you would attach Arizona Form 309 to claim a credit for taxes paid to Iowa. On the other hand, if you moved from Arizona to Iowa, then you would file an Arizona Part Year Resident income tax return and pay taxes to Arizona on the income you earned while living in Arizona. You would also file an Iowa Part Year Resident income tax return and pay taxes to Iowa on the income you earned while living in Iowa.
No you don't, Only the state u live and work in