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Per the State of Ohio, you can take this credit only if each spouse has qualifying Ohio Adjusted Gross income of $500 or more.
Qualifying Ohio Adjusted Gross Income
Example: Bob and Sue file a joint return. Sue earned $200,000 from her current employment. Bob’s only source of income is $500 from his state and municipal income tax refunds included in Federal Adjusted Gross Income. This $500 should be deducted as a Schedule A deduction and is not included in Bob and Sue’s Ohio Adjusted Gross Income. Therefore, they do not qualify for Ohio’s joint filing credit.
Be sure you assigned your income items (such as W-2 forms) to the correct person.
I have the problem that Turbo tax is GIVING me the Ohio joint filing credit, yet, my wife earned no income in Ohio. I reviewed my federal return and indeed no income was assigned from Ohio. She did have unemployment compensation from New York that was identified as New York
So, how do I override that error I am describing? I want to remove the credit, yet there appears to be no way to do that.
Larry
To clarify-
Was your wife a resident of Ohio or New York when she received unemployment?
If she was a resident of Ohio, the unemployment (paid by any state) would be claimed and taxed by Ohio.
That may be the reason you are getting the credit, and if that is the case, you also need to pay the state tax on that unemployment income.
If she was a New York Resident, the unemployment would be claimed, and taxes paid, to New York.
Thanks for clarifying questions...
My wife lives in NY full year
and her unemployment was received from the state of NY
$0 income in Ohio for her.
Please reply
Larry
It depends. Filing jointly in Ohio (OH) you can get the joint filing credit ONLY if each of you have at least $500 in OH adjusted gross income. If your wife has no income in OH, then this credit is not allowed.
You can file jointly in OH, even if your wife has no OH income.
Your wife must also file the New York (NY) return as resident and pay tax on her income in her resident state. None of her income should be taxed to OH, only NY.
Review the step-by-step process in the OH state return to be sure you answer all the questions correctly and to remove your wife's income. Also be sure from the federal section that the income is appropriately assigned to the correct spouse.
I appreciate the answer
But, I did and reviewed all that
And looking at Ohio forms view it assigned the NY unemployment income as ohio income for some reason on the ohio state return forms.
My wife does her own NY state return and of course will pay the due NY tax requirements.
There seems to be a problem with the TT program itself.
The unemployment income was assigned as from the NY labor department when entered in the federal step by step.
My spouse has no ohio income at all.
And the Ohio state step by step process is not providing any Ohio income step by steps or income allocation steps. The TT program is pulling all income from the Federal step by step
There are no questions to answer in TT Ohio State
Where are these allocation questions you state in your reply?
Thank you
Please advise.
Larry
I understand the situation. It would be helpful to have a TurboTax ".tax2021" file that is experiencing this issue.
You can send us a “diagnostic” file that has your “numbers” but not your personal information. If you would like to do this, here are the instructions:
Go to the black panel on the left side of your program and select Tax Tools.
We will then be able to see exactly what you are seeing and we can determine what exactly is going on in your return and provide you with a resolution.
[Edited: 03/16/2022 | 7:49a PST]
This is answered at poster's other post https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/state-taxes/discussion/turbo-tax-state-return-for-ohio-is-in-error...
TT is doing it correctly. There is nothing to fix.
Ohio's method of tax calculation, for non-resident's is convoluted, and hard to understand and/or explain. Ohio first calculates what the tax on all your income would be, applying all deductions and credits, including the Joint Filing Credit (JFC). So, the JFC is only used to reduce the tax calculated on all the income ("Ohio Adjusted Gross Income", which includes the NY income). Then it applies the separate non-resident credit, to effectively tax only the OH income.
Thank you for your offer, Diane
I have generated and sent a diagnostic copy
My token number is 958877
Look forward to your suggestions.
Larry
Thank you for your offer, Diane
I have generated and sent a diagnostic copy
My token number is 958877
Look forward to your suggestions.
Larry
Diane,
When can I expect a reply concerning my TT issue?
Again, looking at the Ohio Joint allocation worksheet, TT is putting my spouses NY unemployment as Ohio income, which is wrong
And there is no screen to reallocate what it transferred from the Federal return.
The Unemployment income was clearly marked as NY dept of labor income via the appropriate pull down in the federal TT screen
Thank you,
Larry
@DianeW777 See poster's comment & token #.
The joint filing credit is not wrong and the information provided by our awesome Tax Champ @Hal_Al about that is correct. Ohio (OH) is going to factor that based on all income on the tax return because it starts with federal adjusted gross income (AGI).
Here is what you need to do to apportion the tax correctly for the OH income using TurboTax CD/Download version. If you need to switch see the instructions in the link below.
This was the only way I was able to get the necessary results for your return. Under normal circumstances, you shouldn't have to override anything. Returns that contain overrides cannot be e-filed and may not be covered under our 100% Accurate Calculation Guarantee. We're providing these instructions to customers who understand the risks, but wish to proceed anyhow.
We are looking into this experience, however you should continue to complete your return at this time.
[Edited: 03/23/2022 | 7:06a PST]
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