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8 answers

You need to file in both states as a part year resident. There are special forms to use for both states.

2007-01-22 06:41:07 · answer #1 · answered by spicertax 5 · 1 0

The one that your home is in. If you live in a hotel in one and your parents house in the other, declare the state with your parents house. You have to pay taxes, make sure the tax money go to the state that will take care of you or your family.

I live in PA, and Work in NJ sometime. NJ will not send any state troopers to my house if someone needs a state trooper. Taxes are paid so that you have protection don't let a 2% difference affect your ability to be smart.

2007-01-22 06:57:29 · answer #2 · answered by whatevit 5 · 0 0

right here in MN, we've some snowbirds too (for sure!) i presumed I had study interior the newspaper which you had to declare the living house you lived in for the main time as your usual place of living. i'm no expert, yet i presumed I study it! on account that there are 12 months consistent with 12 months, one place of living ought to be lived in greater effective than the different...whether by skill of a million day!

2016-11-26 19:21:21 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Exactly? To the day? If you live in one of them even a day longer than the other, then that would be your home state.

But for federal tax purposes, it doesn't matter. And for state, you'd be a part-year resident in each.

2007-01-22 07:01:56 · answer #4 · answered by Judy 7 · 1 0

They would both be part-year resident returns. Where do you live NOW. That's your home state.

2007-01-22 07:17:45 · answer #5 · answered by Dizney 5 · 0 0

How about South Dakota? I have a buddy that does exactly what you are doing. However, for tax purposes, he claims SD as his residence. There are people/businesses that will provide you with an address & forward mail to you. Apparently, SD offers attractive tax savings.

2007-01-22 06:44:50 · answer #6 · answered by mike s 5 · 0 1

For taxes, it doesn't matter. You would simply be a Part-Year Resident in each state. You allocate your income based on the dates you lived or worked in each state .

..."If a plane crashes on the US/Canada border, where do they bury the survivors?...
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...They don't bury survivors.


Tax Advisor

2007-01-22 06:41:46 · answer #7 · answered by WealthBuilder 4 · 0 0

AZ. You are not a CO resident until you have lived in CO for a whole year.

2007-01-22 06:43:48 · answer #8 · answered by T.M. 2 · 0 1

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