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My fiance moved from PA to NJ on October 7th. Does he have to file taxes in both states, or just one?

2007-04-03 15:13:13 · 4 answers · asked by Grace1228 3 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

4 answers

For 2006 he will have to file as part-year residents in both states.

In 2007, if he lived in NJ and worked in PA, he would only need to file in NJ and report his wages. NJ and PA have a reciprocity agreement that allows taxpayers to file in their resident state even if they work in the other.

2007-04-03 15:28:10 · answer #1 · answered by tma 6 · 0 0

Where did he work, PA or NJ? If he was a resident of PA for 10 months of the year, he should pay PA for 10 months and NJ for 2 months.

2007-04-03 15:21:37 · answer #2 · answered by rb_cubed 6 · 0 1

My goodness. the position did a majority of those so-called "experts" get their tax practise, Walmart? Sheesh. you're a resident of recent Jersey. You earn earnings in huge apple. You document a nonresident go back for huge apple. You pay tax to huge apple (how can each and everybody imagine huge apple gained't make you pay tax there in case you artwork there?). You document as a resident of recent Jersey. on the recent Jersey resident go back, you declare a "credit for tax paid to a special state." pass to a tax professional who's conscious what they're doing. Out of state returns are messy.

2016-12-03 06:00:57 · answer #3 · answered by abila 4 · 0 0

He'll file as a part year resident in each state.

2007-04-03 16:57:50 · answer #4 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

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