If You Work Remotely Where Do You Pay Taxes?

You work from home…but where do you pay taxes?

In our post “Living in One State, Working in Another“, we explained how to file state taxes if you work in one state but live in another.

However, with all the (exciting) advances in technology, more and more individuals are trading in their commutes to the office to instead work remotely from home.

If you work remotely and the company you work for is in a different state than you live in, then your tax situation will differ from someone who physically travels to another state for work.

We understand that you may have no idea how to file your state taxes. We’re here to help!

File taxes to one or two states?

Depending on your specific tax situation, you may need to file two state tax returns; a resident return and a non-resident return.

As a refresher:

  • resident-state: the state where you live. Your resident state taxes ALL of your income, regardless of what state it’s earned in.

  • non-resident-state: a state you did not live in over the past year. Different states have different non-resident tax laws on who is required to pay non-resident taxes.

Although certain states have varying non-resident tax laws, generally, if you live in one state and work in another remotely (so you don’t physically travel to another state for work), then you would only file and pay taxes to your resident state.

That means, if you’re working remotely you’ll only have to file a resident tax return to the state you live in.

However, if your W-2 form (that form you receive at the end of the year or beginning of January) lists a state other than your resident state, then you’ll need to also file a non-resident tax return to the state listed. In other words, you’ll file two state tax returns; a resident return to the state you live in and a non-resident return to the state listed on your W-2 (the state your company is located in).

Report ALL earnings on your Resident Tax Return!

The most important thing to keep in mind if you work remotely is that you’ll need to report your income earned (no matter what state it’s from) on a resident state tax return (unless of course, you live in a income tax-free state).

For example, let’s say you work remotely from your home in New York for a company located in California. When you receive your W-2, you see that there’s no reference to CA withholding. In this case, you would not have to file or owe CA state income tax. You’d report all of your income earned from your remote work (and any other earnings) on a New York resident state tax return.

Here’s another example- If you’re working remotely from your New York home for a company in California and receive a W-2 form with two states listed, both NY & CA, then you’ll also need to file a CA non-resident tax return. On this non-resident return, you’ll report only the information  listed on that W-2 form.

If you end up being double-taxed, your resident state entoitles you to a credit for the taxes paid to the non-resident state. This should be a dollar-for-dollar reduction.

Who Doesn’t Need to File a State Return (income tax-free states)

You’re off the hook from filing a resident tax return if you live in one of the following income tax-free states;

  1. Alaska
  2. Florida
  3. Nevada
  4. New Hampshire
  5. South Dakota
  6. Tennessee
  7. Texas
  8. Washington
  9. Wyoming

So, if you work remotely from your home in Florida, you won’t need to file a resident tax return. In fact, you probably won’t need to file any state tax returns, unless your W-2 form indicates another state’s tax withholding.

Let us do the state calculations for you.

We know that state taxes are a lot to wrap your head around. Rather than trying to figure out what you owe, we’ll do all your federal and state calculations for you at once. You’ll simply enter the information listed on your W-2 form(s).

Calculating state taxes can be a headache- avoid all tax headaches with RapidTax!

If you work remotely for your employer, file your taxes with RapidTax to avoid a headache.

407 Replies to “If You Work Remotely Where Do You Pay Taxes?”

  1. I lived and earned income in OH from Jan-Aug.
    I lived and earned income in CA from Sep-Dec.
    My wife lived and earned income in NY for the entire year.

    As I understand, the OH status must match the Fed status. I believe NY and CA both states give options to file separately or joint. Although for NY the filing status clause for when a spouse lives separately for the full year is difficult to interpret.

    Can I file Fed, OH and CA joint and NY separate? If so, then for NY calculations would I use a fake federal separate return and a fake CA NR for my wife? Meaning that the fake ones will not be submitted.

    The CA income is a community income and must be split between us. But where CA is joint or not, does the tax for the CA income go to CA, or does NY get taxes for half of that income?

    Sorry, if this is confused. I guess the NY filing status rules and community income in CA are together leading to a lot of confusion. Help appreciated.

  2. I moved to Florida from Wisconsin on 1/1/2017. I have a sub s corp that was created in Wisconsin 20 years ago. It is an online business that is run by a part time employee in Wisconsin where orders are processed. Sales to wisconsin residents are less than 1% of total. I know my salary is subject to Florida taxes only are the earnings of the s-corp taxed anywhere other than Wisconsin?

  3. Hi,

    I worked in CA, where my company is headquartered at, from January 2017 through end of September 2017.. then relocated to LA (Louisiana) after my wife got a full time job there. My wife did not work in CA at all in 2017, but only in LA starting October 2017.

    I’ve worked remotely from LA starting Oct 2017 through Dec 2017. My company provided W2 only has CA listed & the tax withheld shows only for CA, although I had informed the company of moving to LA and have my LA address on the pay stubs etc.

    Given LA is not listed on my W2 at all, I’m wondering if I should be contacting my employer to correct the W2 to reflect LA residency or I should just file part CA and part LA taxes? Also should I be filing CA taxes as a non-resident or resident (I’ve lived there for majority of 2017).

    Lastly, what implications does my situation have to be able to file jointly?

    Thank you.

  4. I live and work in Florida (a no income tax state), for a company in Maryland (a high income tax state). Am I required to pay MD state taxes.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *