Yes, you can file them all together. Form W-2 is Wage and Tax Statement. There's a Notice to Employee with Copy B (filed with federal return). The Notice says to correct your name on Copies B, C (kept with your records), and 2 (filed with your state/local return). The Notice tells you to ask your employer to file Form W-2c (Corrected Wage and Tax Statement) with the Social Security Administration to correct your name.
There is an IRS form that you can complete so that you are considered free of responsibility for the arrears.
No, each year has to be filed separately
There are separate forms for each year. Each year's taxes must be accounted for separately and filed separately.
Yes but each year has to be filed separately and sent separately to the correct address.
Do I have to file personal taxes if I own a small LLC? Or just file business taxes.
Sure
The state is like a colony of it's country! It receives taxes benefits from it's country but lives separately from the other states!
yes it is them that filed separetly NOT YOU
Answer is YES! If you have taxes withheld from the UIB amount you still have to put the amount on your 1040 and add the withheld taxes to other withheld taxes.
no way totally wrong
No. If you are Married Filing Separately, then you only can claim your personal exemption. Your wife's personal exemption only can be claimed by her if you're Married Filing Separately. Your spouse, whether filing jointly or separately, can't be considered your dependent.
No. EBITDA is a measure to simulate operating cash flow. If you have no earnings or profits you will not pay Income Taxes, but you are still required to pay payroll taxes and other taxes such as property and franchise taxes