The state where you work and earn the income wants to collect some state income tax on the income that you earn in that state.
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.
it is residential
Yes the state where the source of the rental income is from wants some income tax on that rental income that you have received from the nonresident state. A nonresident state income tax return will have to filed with the state where the rental property is located.
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.
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.
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.
it is residential
Yes the state where the source of the rental income is from wants some income tax on that rental income that you have received from the nonresident state. A nonresident state income tax return will have to filed with the state where the rental property is located.
Yes..only on that portion of income properly allocated or attributable to that State.
From personal experience, if you live in Oklahoma and your workplace is in a different state, you are obligated pay Oklahoma state income taxes on those wages. This is probably true for all other state income tax states.
The labor laws of the state in which you work are the ones that apply to you. If a company is headquartered in one state, you live in another state, and work in still another state, the state you work in has jurisdiction.
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.
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.
Generally speaking, you owe income tax in both the state where you work and the state where you live. Since the state you live in does not have an income tax, you would owe tax in the state where you worked only. You would file a non-resident return in that state.
No because Illinois will want some state income taxes paid on the income that was earned in Illinois.
Yes you will have to file the Pa state income tax return correctly to determine if you have to pay any PA state income tax.
The general rule is that you income is taxable in BOTH the state where you work and the state where you live. Some states have reciprocal agreements, but NY and NJ do not. But NY has its dreaded telecommuter tax. If your employer requires you to work in NJ, the income you earned in NJ would not be taxable in NY (unless you live in NY). If your employer gave you the option of where to work, for example if they let you telecommute from your home in NJ, NY still considers the income to be taxable by NY. NJ would consider any income earned while working in NJ to be taxable in NJ and all income earned by a NJ resident, no matter where, to be taxable in NJ. Yes, it is possible for the same income to be taxable in two different states. If you live in NY or NJ, the state where you live will give you some credit for the taxes paid to another state to offset some of the double taxation. But if you live in a third state, you could be really screwed if you have income taxable by both NY and NJ, since your state would not let the credit they give you exceed the amount charged by that state.