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If taxpayers thought they were supposed to receive a tax refund but it is determined that they owe a certain unpaid debt, tax law allows a portion or all of their tax refund to be offset and paid toward their tax debt obligation, which is outlined by Tax Topic 203.
Nonresident state taxes Applies if youre an employee who works in one state but lives in another. You might benefit from a reciprocity agreement between the two states. Additionally, your place of employment will withhold state and local taxes for the work state. However, you will still owe taxes in your home state.
If one of you was a New York State resident and the other was a nonresident or part-year resident, you must each file a separate New York return. The resident must use Form IT-201. The nonresident or part-year resident, if required to file a New York State return, must use Form IT-203.
Spouses Certification IT-203-C. (12/24) To be filed with Form IT-203, Nonresident and Part-Year Resident Income Tax Return, by married taxpayers filing a joint return when only one spouse has New York source income (see Form IT-203 instructions and page 2 of this form for additional information).
As a resident, you pay state tax (and city tax if a New York City or Yonkers resident) on all your income no matter where it is earned. As a nonresident, you only pay tax on New York source income, which includes earnings from work performed in New York State, and income from real property located in the state.
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The IT-201 is the main income tax form for New York State residents. It is analogous to the US Form 1040, but it is four pages long, instead of two pages. The first page of IT-201 is mostly a recap of information that flows directly from the federal tax forms.
You must file Form 1040-NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return only if you have income that is subject to tax, such as wages, tips, scholarship and fellowship grants, dividends, etc. Refer to Foreign Students and Scholars for more information.
New York Form IT-203-B is used to allocate income to the state during the period of the taxpayers (and spouses) period of nonresidency and to indicate where in the state the taxpayer and/or spouse maintained living quarters, if any.

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