My employer didn't withhold 2022 state tax. Now I have to file state return with the taxes I owed in 2022.
How can use turbo tax software to reflect this situation that I will pay the state taxes I am owing?
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Nothing you have to do. If you have a State Tax Due you just pay it either with a check or direct debit to your bank account or credit card. Or you can probably pay it directly online on the State's website. You don't need to list the payment on your return. Your tax return will always show the refund or tax due amount. It is not updated when you pay it.
You will enter your W-2 into the federal software like you enter every W-2. The information flows from the federal return to the state return. If the employ withheld no state tax and your box 17 is blank, that is how you enter the W-2. If it turns out that you owe some state tax, you will need to pay by April 18. (and have a conversation with the employer about withholding state tax going forward...)
@VolvoGirl @xmasbaby0 Thanks for your reply. I think i need to restate my question: If I don't enter the state tax amount I will pay/owe, will it affect the accuracy of my federal tax return ? (I was under impression that paid state taxes can be claimed as some tax credits/deductions in calculating federal taxes?)
It depends on when you actually pay those taxes to the state. IF you pay state taxes due for your 2022 State tax return, now....meaning during 2023, then those state $$ paid are a "potential" Federal income deduction on your Federal 2023 tax return you will file next year. So the $$ due & paid now, don't end up on the 2022 Federal tax return you are preparing now.
Now, if the employer had withheld state taxes on your pay last year, during 2022, then those would be a "potential" Federal income deduction for your 2022 Federal taxes.
I say "potential" deduction, because you cannot actually use that deduction unless the total of all yoru itemized deductions is greater than the Standard Deduction for your particular filing status. i.e, you normally get to use the greater of the two.
(THough, people who file as Married Filing Separately (MFS ) have some restrictions that may work against that general rule)
@SteamTrain I would give you 10 thumbs up!
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