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I worked in NY for 6 months. I live in New Jersey. I was told by NJ Unemployment when I tried to claim benefits that I would have to claim my unemployment benefits in the State of NY.
It would be for the state you worked in, you can not draw unemployment from a state other than the one you worked in.
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.
lincroft nj
You can check, of course, but it is likely that your employer paid their unemployment compensation payments into the NY state unemployment pool and NOT the NJ pool.
1040 park avenue was in NY.
Both places. You file as a resident of NY, using that form, and as a non-resident in NJ, using that form (a 1040-NR I believe).
betty white did live in westchester enw york in chappaqua
live in NJ but dwai in ny
The next time they will be in the NY and NJ area is May I believe.
NY and NJ are constantly at war over reciprocal tax policy...you've probably seen articles about the "commuter tax". Basically, along an apportionment formula you will pay to both states. What you pay to NY should become a credit to what you would have paid to NJ on that same income. Because of a number of factors, like NY having a higher tax rate on that money, you will pay slightly more than if you had worked & lived in NJ only.
There are about 166.873 miles between Madison, NJ and Corning, NY.