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states look beyond borders to collect owed income taxes

Many American workers cross state borders regularly as part of their job. Events like trade shows and client meetings, for example, may require an employee to travel from their home state. View this presentation to learn more about owed income taxes.

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states look beyond borders to collect owed income taxes

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  1. States Look Beyond Borders to Collect Owed Income Taxes By: Samuel Kerch Controller & Director of Tax Compliance

  2. Many American workers cross state borders regularly as part of their job. Events like trade shows and client meetings, for example, may require an employee to travel from their home state. For those that do, chances are they probably owe income taxes in these other states. Such laws have been on the books for decades, however many states appear to have recently stepped up enforcement.  Owed Income Taxes in Other States

  3. The states claim better techniques for tracking income taxes owed, not pressure to fill budget deficits, have prompted them to become more tenacious at enforcing the provision. Originally, state tax officials relied on the sports pages and celebrity magazines to see when well-known higher-earners came to town for work. For everyone else, it was largely ignored because it was not cost-effective for states to monitor every worker crossing a border. Improved Tracking Techniques

  4. Now states have greater access to data warehouses that help them better track income taxes owed. Real estate transactions, federal data from the IRS, bids for government construction projects - all this information is generally available and can help states find additional revenue. Improved Tracking Techniques

  5. Still, perhaps the best enforcement mechanism may be requiring companies to withhold additional taxes from their employees' paychecks. State auditors may not be able to monitor every border-crossing, but with corporate payroll managers as their enforcers, they don't need to.  Improved Tracking Techniques

  6. Many Fortune 500 companies say that they have been subjected to payroll audits more frequently in the last few years and that tax officials have requested travel logs for highly compensated employees during these audits. If, for example, an employee was reimbursed for airfare to California, an auditor may also check to see if that employee had California income taxes withheld from his paycheck. If not, the company can be fined. Payroll Audits

  7. Finding out that you owe income taxes across a state border can raise your overall tax bill if your home state has a lower income tax rate, although it may not rise by much since most states allow you to deduct income taxes paid to another state. The bigger burden associated with distributing your taxes to more state governments is the administrative effort it requires, for both employee and employer. Payroll Audits

  8. Many states require filing a return for a single day's work. For traveling workers like salesmen or consultants, filing a pile of additional state tax returns can become prohibitively expensive, not to mention frustrating.  Payroll Audits

  9. As long as there is a lack of understanding about these laws, the states with the most aggressive income tax compliance teams have the most to gain from enforcement. As more states catch on and start investing in more payroll auditors and data mining tools to get money back, the end result may be an arms race until every state comes out more or less evenly. Owed Income Taxes in Other States

  10. Samuel Kerch, CPA is the Controller and Director of Tax Compliance of Symmetry Software, a software developer that specializes in payroll and payroll-related software applications for the internet and corporate intranets. For more information about filing income taxes, visit http://www.paycheckcity.com/ today. About the Author

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