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April 8, 2024
Question

CA resident working remotely for NY state

  • April 8, 2024
  • 3 replies
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I am a resident of CA, but I work remotely for a company in the state of NY.  The state of NY will be taxing me as a resident of their state, but it seems that they will not take out withholdings for CA.  What should I do to prevent a large tax bill at the end of the year?  Also, the state of CA has withholding for state disability insurance.  How do I make estimates for that?

    3 replies

    April 8, 2024

    @drheidi   your NY employer should be taxing you as a nonresident of NY.  You will owe taxes to NY as you are working remotely for a NY based business.  New York is one of a handful of states that has a “convenience of employer” rule, meaning workers must pay income tax to New York if their employer is based in the state, even if their job was done remotelyNonresidents of NY only pay taxes to New York on New York-sourced income  

     

    Your employer should withhold taxes for CA  especially as they are liable for UI, ETT, SDI, and PIT depending on if they have business there.  It could get messy if you ever have to file for unemployment as your work is being done out of CA and you are in CA more than 50% of the time . Employers also have a responsibility to withhold taxes for the state in which the employee works and your place of work will be CA. CA is one of the few states who have no reciprocal tax agreements.  Employers conducting business in California are required to register with and file reports and pay taxes to EDD. https://www.taxes.ca.gov/Payroll_Tax/doingbus1.html If they do, no problem have them withhold. If they don't you will have to pay estimated taxes to CA.As you are a resident of CA, you owe taxes as if all income was earned in CA.  Generally, residents of California (with the exception of dual-resident estates and trusts) may claim a credit for net income taxes imposed by and paid to another state only on income which has a source within the other state.  in your case NY sourced.

     

    You should talk to your employer as there are a number of intricacies to CA FTB liabilities.  They should start withholding for CA.  If they won't withhold taxes,  make sure to file estimated taxes utilizing TT.  You may want to update it if you had bonuses or any other income sources as you don't want to have CA tax penalties for failure to pay timely. 

     

    Next year when you file first you will do your Federal return, then your non-resident NY State for the remote work and you will have to allocate other types of income such as dividends and interest out during the NY interview, and third your CA resident state which will credit you for double taxed income at lowest state rate.

     

    **I don't work for TT. Just trying to help. All the best. ***Say "Thanks" by marking as BEST ANSWER and clicking the thumb icon in a post and that I solved your question**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer" I am NOT an expert and you should confirm with a tax expert.
    April 8, 2024

    @drheidi --

     

    If you were a full-year resident of CA in 2023, and you never set foot in NY, then your remotely-earned income is not subject to NY income tax.

     

    Here's the applicable New York law:

    "The New York adjusted gross income of a nonresident individual rendering personal services as an employee includes the compensation for personal services entering into his Federal adjusted gross income, but only if, and to the extent that, his services were rendered within New York State."

    https://casetext.com/regulation/new-york-codes-rules-and-regulations/title-20-department-of-taxation-and-finance/chapter-ii-income-taxes-and-estate-taxes/subchapter-a-new-york-state-personal-income-tax-under-article-22-of-the-tax-law/article-3-nonresidents/part-132-new-york-adjusted-gross-income-of-a-nonresident-individual/income-and-deductions-from-new-york-state-sources/section-1324-business-trade-profession-or-occupation-carried-on-in-new-york-state

     

    If that's still your situation for 2024, then you should file NY Form IT-2104.1 with your NY employer in order to exempt yourself from NY withholding.  Here's a link to that form:

    https://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/current_forms/it/it2104_1_fill_in.pdf

     

    If NY taxes were incorrectly withheld from your pay, then you should file a non-resident NY tax return on which you show the withholding but declare zero NY income, in order to obtain a full refund.

    **Answers are correct to the best of my ability but do not constitute tax or legal advice.
    April 8, 2024

    @TomD8  NY is one of the few states who does tax nonresidents for telecommuting if their employer is in NYS.  see TSB-M-06(5)ITSB-M-06(5)I]. Section 601(e) of the New York State Tax Law imposes a personal income tax on a nonresident individual’s taxable income that is derived from New York sources. The tax is equal to the tax computed as if the individual were a New York State resident for the entire year, reduced by certain credits, multiplied by the income percentage. Work days are days on which you were required to perform the usual duties of your job. Any allowance for days worked outside New York State must be based upon the performance of services which, because of necessity (not convenience) of the employer, obligate the employee to out-of-state duties in the service of his
    employer. Such duties are those which, by their very nature, CANNOT be performed at the employer’s place of business.

    https://www.tax.ny.gov/pdf/memos/income/m06_5i.pdf

     

    Work days are days on which you were required to perform the usual duties of
    your job. Any allowance for days worked outside New York State must be based upon the performance of services which, because of necessity (not convenience) of the employer.

     

    There are a number of factors that determine whether your employer has established a bona fide employer office at your telecommuting location. In general, unless your employer specifically acted to establish a bona fide employer office at your telecommuting location, you will continue to owe New York State income tax on income earned while telecommuting.

     

     

     

    The Factors are made extremely difficult:

    Factors to apply to determine if a home office is a bona fide employer office
    Employees should use the factors provided below to assist them in determining if their
    home office constitutes a bona fide employer office. The factors are divided into three
    categories: the primary factor, secondary factors, and other factors. In order for an office to be
    considered a bona fide employer office, the office must meet either:
    a) the primary factor, or
    b) at least 4 of the secondary factors and 3 of the other factors.
    TSB-M-06(5)I
    Income Tax
    May 15, 2006
    - 3 -
    Primary Factor
    The home office contains or is near specialized facilities.
    If the employee’s duties require the use of special facilities that cannot be made available
    at the employer’s place of business, but those facilities are available at or near the employee’s
    home, then the home office will meet this factor. For example, if the employee’s duties require
    the use of a test track to test new cars, and a test track is not available at the employer’s offices in
    New York City, but is available near the employee’s home, then the home office will meet this
    factor. In the alternative, if the employee’s duties require the use of specialized scientific
    equipment that is set up at the employee’s home (or at a facility near the employee’s home) but
    could physically be set up at the employer’s place of business located in New York, then the
    home office would not meet this factor.
    Secondary Factors
    1) The home office is a requirement or condition of employment.
    If the employer requires the employee to work from his or her home office as a condition
    of employment, the home office will meet this factor. For example, if a written employment
    contract states the employee must work from home to perform specific duties for the employer,
    then the home office will meet this factor.
    2) The employer has a bona fide business purpose for the employee’s home office
    location.
    If the employer has a bona fide business purpose for establishing an office in the locale
    where the employee’s home is located, the home office will meet this factor. For example, if the
    employee is an engineer working on several projects in his or her home state and it is necessary
    that the employee have an office near these projects in order to meet project deadlines, then the
    home office will meet this factor.
    3) The employee performs some of the core duties of his or her employment at the
    home office.
    If some of the core duties of employment are performed at the home office, then the
    home office will meet this factor. For example, the core duties of a stock broker include the
    purchase and sale of stock. Accordingly, if the stock broker executes stock purchases and sales
    from the home office, this would constitute performing some of the core duties at the home
    office. However, if the stock broker merely reads business publications on the weekend, this
    would not constitute performing any core duties at the home office.
    TSB-M-06(5)I
    Income Tax
    May 15, 2006
    - 4 -
    4) The employee meets or deals with clients, patients or customers on a regular and
    continuous basis at the home office.
    If an important part of the employee’s duties include physically meeting with clients,
    patients or customers in the normal course of the employer’s trade or business, and those
    meetings are performed on a regular and continuous basis at the home office, then the home
    office will meet this factor. For example, the employer has clients located near the employee’s
    home office and the employee must meet with the clients once a week to perform the duties of
    his or her job. If the meetings with clients are on a regular and continuous basis at the
    employee’s home office, then the home office will meet this factor.
    5) The employer does not provide the employee with designated office space or other
    regular work accommodations at one of its regular places of business.
    If the employer does not provide the employee with designated office space or other
    regular work accommodations at one of its regular places of business, then the home office will
    meet this factor. For example, an employer wishes to reduce the size of the office space
    maintained in New York to decrease rental expenses and, therefore, no longer provides
    designated office space or other regular work accommodations for one of its employees. Instead,
    the employer allows the employee to work from the employee’s home. If the employee must
    come to the office, the employee must use the “visitors” cubicle, conference room, or other
    available space that is also used by the other employees of the company. In this instance, the
    home office will meet this factor.
    6) Employer reimbursement of expenses for the home office.
    If the employer reimburses the employee for substantially all of the expenses (e.g., utility
    expenses, insurance) related to the home office, or the employer pays the employee a fair rental
    value for the home office space used and the employer furnishes or reimburses the employee for
    substantially all of the supplies and equipment used by the employee, then the home office will
    meet this factor. For purposes of this factor, substantially all of the expenses means 80% or more
    of the expenses.
    Other factors
    1) The employer maintains a separate telephone line and listing for the home office.
    2) The employee’s home office address and phone number is listed on the business
    letterhead and/or business cards of the employer.
    3) The employee uses a specific area of the home exclusively to conduct the business of the
    employer that is separate from the living area. The home office will not meet this factor if
    the area is used for both business and personal purposes.
    TSB-M-06(5)I
    Income Tax
    May 15, 2006
    - 5 -
    4) The employer’s business is selling products at wholesale or retail and the employee keeps
    an inventory of the products or product samples in the home office for use in the
    employer’s business.
    5) Business records of the employer are stored at the employee’s home office.
    6) The home office location has a sign indicating a place of business of the employer.
    7) Advertising for the employer shows the employee’s home office as one of the employer’s
    places of business.
    😎 The home office is covered by a business insurance policy or by a business rider to the
    employee’s homeowner insurance policy.
    9) The employee is entitled to and actually claims a deduction for home office expenses for
    federal income tax purposes.
    10) The employee is not an officer of the company.

    **I don't work for TT. Just trying to help. All the best. ***Say "Thanks" by marking as BEST ANSWER and clicking the thumb icon in a post and that I solved your question**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer" I am NOT an expert and you should confirm with a tax expert.
    April 8, 2024

    @maglib --

     

    TSB-M-06(5)I:((5/06) applies only to employees who work both within and without New York State.  To quote from its first paragraph:  

    "The memorandum addresses situations where a nonresident or part-year resident employee whose assigned or primary work location is in New York State performs services for an employer at that location and at a home office located outside of New York State."

    TSB-M-06(5)I:(5/06):New York Tax Treatment of Nonresidents and Part-Year Residents Application of the Convenience of the Employer Test to Telecommuters and Others:tsbm065i (ny.gov)

     

    A non-resident of New York who never physically works within New York State has no tax obligation to the State of New York.  This has also been affirmed by the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court:

     

    “A nonresident who works in another State but who performs no work in New York is not subject to New York State tax liability no matter for whose convenience or necessity he performs the work 

    Hayes v. State Tax Comm, 61 A.D.2d 62, 64 (N.Y. App. Div. 1978)

     

    This principle is also clearly stated in the New York law that I cited in my previous post.

     

     

    **Answers are correct to the best of my ability but do not constitute tax or legal advice.
    April 24, 2024

    @drheidi If you are in fact living and domiciled in California, your employer cannot tax you as a resident of New York State. What it sounds like is happening, is that they are withholding NYS taxes because you are assigned to a NY office. If there is any presumption that you might go to NYS for work purposes, this is the correct way to handle. If, however, its clear in your employment agreement/paperwork that you are a fully remote employee working year round in CA, you shouldn't have NY withholdings. You can file an IT-2104.1 listing the 0% and nonresident status, and see if they accept that. 

     

    As it relates to CA taxes, they should be withholding those regardless. CA is a physical presence state. Meaning even if NYS considers them NY workdays and subject to tax in NYS, CA also considers them CA workdays and subject to tax in CA. Its important that you get a professional involved, because you may not be entitled to claim a tax credit in your home state of CA, for taxes paid in NY, because of the incongruence of the laws. The last thing you want is to be subject to tax in both NYS and CA on the same income. 

    Kristine L. Bly, EA Private Client Services / Residency / Tax ControversyPartner, Cohen & Company
    April 24, 2024
    He has a letter from his employer that he did not work in NY at all. His business card has his personal cell #, no address, he even meets multiple requirements of the office. You site the facts but, then fail to state details to those facts of proving an office. Yet then you do not tell folks how difficult it is to prove your office for NYS purposes and what Convenience of Employer rule is. We are in middle of a fight with NY and have a tax partner who is fighting others on our side but, have to pay every year and do note he now even works for a NJ office and they still reccomend paying NY. Do note he is a licensed CPA and has work in the field for many years. Let me know your court cases considering NY claims to tax them otherwise.
    Let me know your clients whom are not withholding NYS taxes where the office is in NY and the person telecommutes. I'd love to hear it considering the major payroll firms are wh NY for anyone who is assigned ot a NYS office.
    Make sure you are informing these telecommuters the full details of what an office is and also if they ever go to NY for training, or an interview or a party for the FIRM you better give them all those details.
    **I don't work for TT. Just trying to help. All the best. ***Say "Thanks" by marking as BEST ANSWER and clicking the thumb icon in a post and that I solved your question**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer" I am NOT an expert and you should confirm with a tax expert.