If you’ve been WFH this year, you could face double the taxes
newsletter.lawtrades.com
Nine months of working from home for millions of Americans has U.S. lawmakers asking an important question that could affect remote workers everywhere: Who gets the tax dollars? States used to have a simple recipe for taxation: They would tax people based on where they lived or worked. A New Hampshire resident who traveled everyday into Massachusetts for a job could be taxed by Massachusetts. But many people who used to cross state lines have been working from home for most of 2020.
If you’ve been WFH this year, you could face double the taxes
If you’ve been WFH this year, you could face…
If you’ve been WFH this year, you could face double the taxes
Nine months of working from home for millions of Americans has U.S. lawmakers asking an important question that could affect remote workers everywhere: Who gets the tax dollars? States used to have a simple recipe for taxation: They would tax people based on where they lived or worked. A New Hampshire resident who traveled everyday into Massachusetts for a job could be taxed by Massachusetts. But many people who used to cross state lines have been working from home for most of 2020.