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Rising Star
Because the entity paying you is in NYC
(Not saying it makes sense)
Income taxes* are paid where you are employed, not where you live.
That is not true. You pay where you live and work. Author is not doing either in NYC. That said, you’d have to fight with ny/nyc tax collectors for a refund which will be difficult. You’ll need to prove you a) haven’t lived there more than 6 months b) you have no intent to return (this is difficult to prove but you can do things like get a drivers license in the new state, have lease, buy property, etc)
Because NYC wants your money more than you do so they can spend on some useful stuff but mostly to buy the votes of the masses to keep sending the politicians back to the gravy train.
Personal Capital has a good guide. Some states have some flexibility with remote work and others don’t. Hope this helps. https://www.personalcapital.com/blog/taxes-insurance/working-remotely-taxes/
Chief
Because you don’t pay enough for a great accountant?
I thought there was a Supreme Court case definitively stating that two states cannot tax the same income? They may withhold it but you are legally entitled to it via refund when you file a non-resident return
Here:
This is a fair question and the source of many lawsuits between states right now. In normal times, it makes sense, but not rn. I believe NH kicked off the lawsuit against MA, and CT + NJ also joined
Welcome to NYC!