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June 3, 2019
Question

Living and working in NYC but work for a NJ company and NJ taxes (no NY taxes) are being taken out of check every week b. How do I file my taxes?

  • June 3, 2019
  • 1 reply
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I have been working for a company that is located in New Jersey for the last four years and every year I want blow my brains out come tax time. I can never get the right answer. 

My employer taxes NJ taxes out of my check every week and no NY taxes. How do I file my taxes? This year I found an article stating if you work remotely you file your non resident return and put you earned $0 since you didn't earn any money there. By doing that you will get all the taxes you paid back in a refund, which sounds great. But what about NY? It shows I would owe NY close to $6300 for the year and I was only getting back $2,768. I am already in the hole for $6000 in taxes I owe NY for the same problem but I filed those return showing that I worked in NJ which I never did.

I keep getting different stories about how to file correctly. Please help!!!!!

1 reply

DanielV01
Employee
June 3, 2019

You need your employer to take out taxes for both NJ and NY.  Since you are telecommuting, NJ is one of 5 states that does consider your income to be taxable in NJ.  It is always taxable in your resident state, which is NY, and as a NYC resident you are taxed there also.  What you actually need to is file a NJ nonresident return, and then NY will give you a credit for the amount of tax you pay to NJ on that same income.

The end result is the same.  You'd get less NJ refund, but your NY tax due is reduced by the same amount.  In order to cover the shortfall, you need to have your employer take out additional taxes to NY, and thus you don't have this issue going forward.

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June 3, 2019
Thats what I did the last two years but what I don't understand why is the balanced always so much? Always over $3000. So what does the credit do?