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Anyone
who files a state tax form must fill out federal forms first,
because states usually require your adjusted gross income
from the 1040 form before you can calculate whether you owe
any state tax money. The big question is whether you need
to pay state taxes beyond your resident state, especially
if you operate a small business online. The following examples
may help you decipher the answer to this question?
For instance,
say that you sell merchandise for another vendor online (an
example that was discussed in the previous article), and you
generate income from this venture. You reported your income
on your federal forms and state forms, but you live in Tennesse
and your income arrived from Florida. Does the origin of the
paycheck matter when it comes to Florida taxes? One way to
discover the answer to this question is to visit the IRS page
that connects the viewer to every
state Website you might need for this quest.
If you
click on the link for the Florida site, a page pops up within
the IRS site that contains links to various interests in that
state. Look under the subheading, "Taxation," and click on
the link for Florida's Department of Revenue. That action
will take you to a page where the IRS states that, "you will
leave the IRS web site..." Click on the "leave IRS site" button,
and you'll arrive at Florida's Department of Revenue site.
Once you arrive at the Florida site, click on the "Do you
owe tax?" link in the left menu. Now you'll
be presented with a list that will detail whether
you owe tax in Florida if you're a nonresident.
Fortunately,
it appears that a person who lives outside Florida and who
receives a paycheck from Florida may not need to pay Florida
state taxes unless that person collects sales tax or pays
Florida income tax. If that person is you, then you need to
register with the state and fill out the forms. Florida offers
the opportunity to conduct this business online.
Every
state in the U.S. offers information about nonresident tax
requirements for that state. You'll need to access any given
state's Website to answer your questions about that state's
nonresident stipulations. The way to access these sites is
exactly the same way that you accessed the Florida site from
the IRS site. However, each state site looks and operates
differently, and answers aren't always immediately apparent.
I'll take you to New York next so that you can compare this
state's site and nonresident tax payment requirements to your
experience with Florida.
Repeat
the steps on how to access the Florida site for New York.
When you arrive at New York's site, you may see that any immediate
information about whether you need to pay nonresident taxes
is less evident than it was on the Florida site. I already
fumbled around this site to find that information, so I'll
take you directly to the Individual
Taxpayer Answer Center page where you can find answers.
Wow -
New York's answer to the question about nonresident taxpayer
status seems intimidating, doesn't it? You first "must compute
a base tax as if you were a resident of New York for the entire
year," and you "must then divide your New York source amount
of New York adjusted gross income by your federal amount of
New York adjusted gross income," and yada, yada, yada.
But, before you commit yourself to state tax insanity land,
I'll show you another link that may help to eliminate your
confusion.
Further
down on that taxpayer page, click on a link to a popup window
entitled, "I am a nonresident of New York State. Do I have
to file a New York return? That link holds a table that shows
the amount of income a nonresident must earn before that person
should pay taxes in New York. Here's an example of a person
who may need to file taxes in her resident state as well as
in New York:
A writer
who lives in New Mexico is single, and she cannot be claimed
as a dependent on another taxpayer's federal return. She writes
articles for various magazines in New York and in other states
as well. The income that she derived over the past year from
all her writing sources totaled $25,000, but she earned only
$8,000 of that income from New York sources. According to
the table in that popup window, she earned more than $7,500
from New York, so she needs to file New York state income
tax forms.
She reads
down further on that page and she discovers that, "New
York adjusted gross income is simply federal adjusted
gross income increased or reduced by any required New York
additions and subtractions." She filled out her federal forms
with figures derived from all her income sources. However,
she doesn't want to pay tax on income she earned from her
home state to New York. Therefore, she now needs to extract
her New York income and any deductions that applied only
to the New York income, and then refigure her federal adjusted
gross income based only on those sums. The New York site provides
the information for these additions and subtractions in their
IT-203 Instructions, and a link is provided for her
convenience.
When this
writer files her federal income tax, she must include all
sources of income. When she files state taxes, however, she
only needs to pay taxes to that state based on income she
earned from that state, and only if the state requires this
money from her. This example demonstrates that "being in business
for yourself" always requires careful planning. If that writer
had turned down an article or two from New York, her requirements
to file and pay taxes in New York might have been eliminated.
But, who
wants to turn down money? I hope that this knowledge will
help you to write your business plan and that it will also
help you to price your goods and services according to any
given particular state tax laws.
Until
Next Week,
Linda Goin
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