State Income Tax: Living in One State, Working in Another

Need to file state taxes when you live and work in different states?

Most people in the U.S. live and work in the same state, which makes state taxes pretty easy to understand – you pay taxes to the state where you live and work.

But what if you live in one state and work in another? Do you pay taxes to the state where you live? Where you earn an income? Both?!

You need to pay taxes to both. Most likely you will end up having to file a resident return in the state where you live and a nonresident return in the state where you work.

Resident return

Generally you need to file a resident return in the state where you are a permanent resident. This state has the right to tax ALL of your income, wherever it was earned.

Nonresident return

After you file your resident return in your home state, you then need to go about filing a nonresident return in every other state where you earned money. A nonresident return only taxes you on the money you earned in that state. What often happens is that you withhold some income for each state tax.

Let’s take a real-world example.

Let’s say you live in New Jersey and commute to your NYC job Monday through Friday. Come tax time, you would need to file a resident return in NJ (reporting all of your income) and a nonresident return in NY (reporting only the income you earned in NY).

Worried about being double-taxed? Don’t be. You will have an opportunity to claim a credit for taxes paid to the nonresident state. They will then divide whatever has been withheld between them and the state whose tax liability was not exactly met will either give you a refund or a tax bill.

States without an income tax

There’s always an exception to the rule. In this case, there are seven exceptions. The five states with no income tax and the two states that only tax interest and dividends are the exclusions:

  • Alaska
  • Florida
  • Nevada
  • South Dakota
  • Texas
  • Washington
  • Wyoming
  • Tennessee
  • New Hampshire

If you live in one of these states, you don’t need to file a resident return (unless you live in TN or NH and have interest and dividends income). But if you work in a state that does have an income tax you have to file a nonresident return in that state.

The same holds true when the situation is reversed. If you live in a state with an income tax, you must file a resident return there. But if you work in a state without an income tax, you don’t have to worry about filing a nonresident return.

Sound complicated? There’s a reason for that: it is. But let’s not stress because here’s all you really need to know. For this to work, every state needs to make agreements with every other state covering the income they could both theoretically tax. These agreements are structured to generate a minimum amount of paperwork and special cases: instead of having some workers who lives in a state but doesn’t pay taxes, the states have someone who lives in the state and pays taxes like everyone else — but gets a special tax credit at the end of the year.

In a situation like this, it’s often best to talk to your payroll department about how to proceed. In places with many out-of-state commuters (like New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, as well as cities near state borders), they will have the details on how each state treats out-of-state income.

Even if you have to file multiple state tax returns you can take care of them right here on RapidTax.

WATER SPORT (1)

 

1,553 Replies to “State Income Tax: Living in One State, Working in Another”

  1. My son lives and worked in WA (no income tax), but the company is registered in OR. No OR state taxes were withheld from the paychecks but his salary is entered in #16 of the W-2. Do we claim this #16 amount as OR income, or deduct that amount? (He had another OR job that he worked in OR and had state taxes withheld, so we’re filing the 40-N regardless).

  2. I live in Indiana but work in Illinois. I understand that I will have to file a non-resident return for IL and a resident return for IN, but which W4 do I fill out?

  3. Hi! My husband works in New Jersey and we live in New York (Westchester County). His job does not withdraw taxes for NY, which I see from your other responses is correct, and we do get a credit on the other state return for taxes paid in the other state. However, come tax time, we ALWAYS end up being several thousand short on our NY return (he makes no money in NY, but I do) and gets a modest return from NJ (~$400). What are we doing wrong? His job suggested that he pay estimated taxes to NY during the year to offset the expense when taxes are due, but as a full-time employee, it seems weird to us that he should have to estimate any taxes. Is there any way he can deduct more money through payroll rather than having to deal with it post-paycheck? This has been confusing us for years. Many thanks!

  4. We live in Mississippi and this has been my sons permanent address. He is a full time student at Auburn in Alabama and has a part time position there as a grad assistant. He also worked in Houston this past summer for 3 months with and they do not have state tax. Where would he file and does he get any tax benefit for being a full time student?

  5. I live in Alabama but worked for werner enterprises driving a truck corporate is in Omaha Nebraska which is where our checks came from so do I file a Alabama and Nebraska return

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