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The way this works is that these states all work on your full income as adjusted for various state additions and subtractions and then they calculate a state tax.
Please do your CT and NJ state returns first, then do your NY return. This will give TurboTax the opportunity to calculate the taxes from the nonresident states and carry these amounts to line 41 on your IT-201, which is the "Resident Credit".
This credit is a dollar for dollar credit for taxes paid on the same income in other states. In this way states try to avoid double taxation of the same income (this works more or less well, depending on how close the states' tax rates are).
If you have already done your state returns, go to line 41 on the IT-201 and make sure that it is equal to the sum of the credits in the other two states. If no, run through all three state interviews again (CT, then NJ, then NY) to give TurboTax a chance to pick up the line 41 amount.
You must have made a typo - there is no way that a New Jersey income for the two of you of $27,284 could possibly lead to a New Jersey tax of $10,176.
Is it possible that your New Jersey income is actually much greater? Do you have sources other than Wages? Didn't your wages amount increase when you entered both spouses incomes together?
@BillM223 Thanks for your reply. That is why I am confused as well.
My husband does not have any NJ income, only I do. Only 27284 of our combined wages is from NJ. We do have 1099 income from our self employment businesses but none of them are from NJ.
Under Tax Tools -> Tax Summary -> NJ Tax Summary,
Gross income: 228684
Total exemptions and deductions: 5478
New Jersey taxable income: 223206
Total tax: 1213
Total payments and credits: 870
Balance due: 344
Tax bracket: 6.370%
Looking here, is it normal for NJ taxable income to be applied to all our wages? We had to file CT and NY state tax as well, and they all seem to have pretty much full wages - various state deductions as AGI. WHere can I make sure that I am not double-triple paying the state taxes, as we are full year residents of NY only?
Thanks for your help!
The way this works is that these states all work on your full income as adjusted for various state additions and subtractions and then they calculate a state tax.
Please do your CT and NJ state returns first, then do your NY return. This will give TurboTax the opportunity to calculate the taxes from the nonresident states and carry these amounts to line 41 on your IT-201, which is the "Resident Credit".
This credit is a dollar for dollar credit for taxes paid on the same income in other states. In this way states try to avoid double taxation of the same income (this works more or less well, depending on how close the states' tax rates are).
If you have already done your state returns, go to line 41 on the IT-201 and make sure that it is equal to the sum of the credits in the other two states. If no, run through all three state interviews again (CT, then NJ, then NY) to give TurboTax a chance to pick up the line 41 amount.
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