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@hansue555 wrote:
- Do I ask for a credit or return from Florida (a state where I live) or from Pennsylvania (a state where I worked)?
It is definitely not Florida since Florida does not levy a state individual income tax; there is no individual income tax form to send to the State of Florida.
If you need to file a Pennsylvania return, you can purchase that state from within the TurboTax program (assuming a free state was not included with your version of TurboTax).
@hansue555 wrote:
- Do I ask for a credit or return from Florida (a state where I live) or from Pennsylvania (a state where I worked)?
It is definitely not Florida since Florida does not levy a state individual income tax; there is no individual income tax form to send to the State of Florida.
If you need to file a Pennsylvania return, you can purchase that state from within the TurboTax program (assuming a free state was not included with your version of TurboTax).
The general rule is: your report all your income on your home state return, even the income earned out of state. You file a non-resident state return for the state you worked in and pay tax to that state. Your home state will give you a credit, or partial credit, for what you paid the non-resident state. You will have to file a non resident PA state return and pay PA tax on the income earned there.
Since FL does not have an income tax, you do not have a resident return to file. So, there will be no offsetting credit for the PA tax paid.
The question you didn't ask is "will PA consider you a resident for tax purposes?" That depends on the circumstances of how and why you are working there but consider yourself a FL resident. See https://www.revenue.pa.gov/FormsandPublications/FormsforIndividuals/PIT/Documents/rev-611.pdf
Just to clarify, the income you earned from work you carried out in PA is 100% taxable by PA, regardless of whether you are a non-resident or a statutory resident of PA.
The reference provided by @Hal_Al explains "statutory" residency.
There is no "double taxation" because Florida has no income tax.
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