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February 27, 2021
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Filing a Non-resident California and Part Year North Carolina State Return

  • February 27, 2021
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I moved from CA to NC in July.  Can I allocate the respective percentage to each state of the combined Itemized deductions from my Federal Return OR do I separate and itemize the mortgage interest, real estate/personal property taxes, medical/dental expenses and charity donations for each state? I understand the allocation for Income but am at a loss with itemized deductions.

Best answer by MAK70

For the state allocation on deductions, if you can identify the source you would apply it to that state- for example, home mortgage interest for a home in CA would be allocated to California.  Anything that is received throughout the year can be entered pro rata according to percentage of time i each state.

1 reply

MAK70Answer
March 2, 2021

For the state allocation on deductions, if you can identify the source you would apply it to that state- for example, home mortgage interest for a home in CA would be allocated to California.  Anything that is received throughout the year can be entered pro rata according to percentage of time i each state.

jnbmccownAuthor
March 2, 2021

Thank you for the clarification, I have identified the amounts that should be allocated for CA and NC.  But to update, for my NC state return it was in my best interest to take the standard deduction and not itemize and was successful completing that return.  But for CA I still need to deduct the NC property and personal property tax dollars from the amount that was imported from the federal return into the CA state return, however I am not able to change the numbers on the CA (540NR) form itself in the program without “overriding” which I think is not what I should do?  But I also do not know where to go in the program to make the adjustment.  Any guidance would be really appreciated.  Again, thank you for your assistance.

March 2, 2021

You don’t need to adjust your deductions on the nonresident California income tax return (Form 540NR) because of how California calculates tax for part-year residents.

 

California begins with your total income everywhere, then subtracts your standard or total itemized deductions (because it is using total income) to come up with California taxable income.

 

The base tax rate is based on the total income less total deductions number. California then prorates the actual tax based on your percentage of CA income. For example, if you earned 25% of your income in CA, your CA tax would be 25% of the base tax on all income.

 

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