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No, you should not. In fact, if no PA income tax was withheld, you do not need to file a PA tax return at all. NJ and PA are reciprocal states: they agree that you only pay tax in the state you live (NJ) and not where you work (PA). If PA state tax was mistakenly withheld, you then file a PA nonresident return and select the option "make this income non-taxable in PA". This way you receive a full refund of PA taxes withheld (but you will pay state NJ taxes instead.
If PA local taxes are withheld (for example, Philadelphia), please comment this. There is a credit you can claim on your NJ resident return for local taxes you pay to PA. Those are not a part of the reciprocal agreement, but NJ will allow you to use them to reduce NJ tax on your income if you paid them.
No, you should not. In fact, if no PA income tax was withheld, you do not need to file a PA tax return at all. NJ and PA are reciprocal states: they agree that you only pay tax in the state you live (NJ) and not where you work (PA). If PA state tax was mistakenly withheld, you then file a PA nonresident return and select the option "make this income non-taxable in PA". This way you receive a full refund of PA taxes withheld (but you will pay state NJ taxes instead.
If PA local taxes are withheld (for example, Philadelphia), please comment this. There is a credit you can claim on your NJ resident return for local taxes you pay to PA. Those are not a part of the reciprocal agreement, but NJ will allow you to use them to reduce NJ tax on your income if you paid them.
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