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Nominal income earned in NJ as a CA resident

Is there an income limit under-which it’s unnecessary to report? I earned $10 in NJ farming while residing in CA. Is there a penalty for not reporting? I don’t want to spend a bunch of time and $ filing in NJ for nominal income 

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3 Replies
BrittanyS
Expert Alumni

Nominal income earned in NJ as a CA resident

You are required to file if you have a total self-employment income of $400 or more.  If you only had $10 worth of income you would not be required to file.  

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Nominal income earned in NJ as a CA resident

Thanks for the response! Where would I find that threshold ($400) called out? Does it matter that I have a lot of expenses on my schedule F which overwhelm that tiny income ?

AmyC
Expert Alumni

Nominal income earned in NJ as a CA resident

Nonresident Income Tax Return Instructions lists who must on page 2 and taxable income on page 6. Page 4 states: You must file a nonresident return if you received income from a New Jersey source while you were a nonresident and your income for the entire year (not just your period of nonresidency) was more than the filing threshold for your filing status (see page 2). Only report income you earned while a nonresident of New Jersey.

 

The answer by @BrittanyS applies to federal income tax filing, see Filing requirement . Your expenses will give you a loss on the federal and NJ it sounds like. Even though NJ will be a loss, they have a tax form with your name and income shown. NJ will be looking at the form and seeing a positive income then see your return is actually a loss.

 

Most states have a limit where you need to have earned enough money to make it worth processing a return. NJ  is not one of them.

 

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