I’m filing late because I temporarily lost one of the W2s, whatever. And unfortunately DISCLAIMER I DIDNT PAY LAST YEAR because I also lost a W2 and gave up (will file anyway if I can after this because I need to get on a computer but I don’t have one).

    Anyway, I currently live in NY, and I have a job here which I earned 35k. I also visited my home state Ohio for a month and worked a DIFFERENT job there where I earned 2.5k. Each job was only worked in its respective state. I’m filing as a New York resident with Ohio as my nonresident state. My QUESTION is, is it true ohio is going to tax me on all of the 37.5k~ I earned?? I’m working on H&R Block and that’s what it’s saying. It seems crazy I have to pay all the taxes in a state I wasn’t a resident of for a job that I didn’t work there. Does that make sense? The program mentioned I’ll need form IT NRC but then it disappeared and I can’t get back to that page anymore and I’m just not sure how to include it anyway. It seems like I need some sort of nonresident tax credit form which does make sense. Should I abandon H&R Block and just do the ohio taxes on the state website?

    I just want to know if that’s the correct taxation for Ohio. And do I need to file them all on the same program? (Because of the resident vs nonresident statuses)

    2 jobs in 2 states, taxes on both?
    byu/anatomystatistician intax



    Posted by anatomystatistician

    1 Comment

    1. Organic_Gas4197 on

      What should happen: Ohio gets tax on Ohio earnings only. New York gets tax on all income, but will give you a credit for tax paid to Ohio. So it’s best to use same software for federal, state and city returns, so you get credit for Ohio tax on New York return.

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