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I live in TX, but have less than $500 taxable income in Ohio where there is a state income tax. It does OH tax on all my income! Anyone know how this can work?

 
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I live in TX, but have less than $500 taxable income in Ohio where there is a state income tax. It does OH tax on all my income! Anyone know how this can work?

If you correctly file a non resident OH return and only allocate the OH income to OH then only the OH income will be taxed in OH. 

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3 Replies
Hal_Al
Level 15

I live in TX, but have less than $500 taxable income in Ohio where there is a state income tax. It does OH tax on all my income! Anyone know how this can work?

What is the source of your Ohio income?  That is, why do you think it's taxable there?

I live in TX, but have less than $500 taxable income in Ohio where there is a state income tax. It does OH tax on all my income! Anyone know how this can work?

If you correctly file a non resident OH return and only allocate the OH income to OH then only the OH income will be taxed in OH. 

Hal_Al
Level 15

I live in TX, but have less than $500 taxable income in Ohio where there is a state income tax. It does OH tax on all my income! Anyone know how this can work?

It only appears that Ohio is taxing all your income. 

Ohio does a convoluted tax calculation for non-residents/part year residents. It calculates tax on total income, then it calculates a non resident/part year resident credit, which it subtracts from the tax it calculated on the total income. The credit is calculated as your non-Ohio income divided by Total adjusted Income multiplied by the total tax. TurboTax (TT)   does this by allocating your income as either Ohio or non-Ohio. W-2 income will be allocated by the state name abbreviation shown in box 15 of your W-2. TT will ask you, item by item, in the state section, how much of your other income is Ohio or non-Ohio income. Make sure that your non-Ohio wages show TX (Other state postal abbreviation)  in box 15 of your W-2 screen, with the TX amount in box 16. Since TX does not have an income tax, boxes 15-17 may be blank on your actual W-2. But at the W-2 screen, in TT, fill in those boxes.

This system allows Ohio to apply their highest tax rate, based on your total income, while only taxing your Ohio income.

Ohio has a nonresident credit allocation form.. IT NRC

http://www.tax.ohio.gov/portals/0/forms/ohio_individual/individual/2017/PIT_ITNRC.pdf (

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