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Bb17
Level 2

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

I was a resident in state A for 6 months. I moved to another state and got a different job. I owe an exorbitant amount of state taxes in my old state even though I technically overpaid in state taxes according to the old state brackets. Not sure where I went wrong. Have never filed part resident before so this is all new to me.
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MaryK4
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

South Carolina allows you to choose the Resident or Nonresident for the first year that you move into or out of South Carolina so there is no problem if you choose the better outcome (in fact it would be more suspect if you choose to pay more in taxes.) @Bb17 

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9 Replies
MaryK4
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

You will in most cases file a Part Year resident return for each state.  In the state section of TurboTax you will be able to allocate the wages you made in each state so only that income is taxed.  If you have gone through and you are not seeing this, post which states and someone may be able to guide you.  

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Bb17
Level 2

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

I'm filing for MD and SC.

MaryK4
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

South Carolina does not have a separate Part Year resident tax return- you can elect to file as a Full Year resident or Nonresident (I am glad I added the "in most cases").  You may want to try both ways, but with most simple returns the results are the same.  You should see the screen where they ask you the dates of South Carolina residency.  Look for the screen below- this is where you want to enter the SC W2 amount.  @Bb17

 

 

Maryland asks you to enter the non-Maryland income (which should be the same amount you entered for South Carolina wages).

 

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Bb17
Level 2

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

Thank you, I did see the Maryland question but it confused me. I thought it was asking me for outside income while being a Maryland resident. That seemed to fix the issue. The SC section did not ask me for earned income (I should mention that all of my W2 info is entered by this point, so maybe TurboTax realized the income earned in SC based on the entered W2 info?). Also, filing as a nonresident of SC has a considerably higher refund amount than a resident. Does this matter?

Screenshot_20230212_143617_Chrome.jpg

Screenshot_20230212_143849_Chrome.jpg

 

ErnieS0
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

Yes. How you file a part-year South Carolina tax return matters a lot. Filing part-year return as a resident will generally result in higher tax because it will use your total income for the year as a tax base. You'll only be taxed on SC income, but at a higher rate.

 

Filing as a part-year return as a non-resident will only use actual South Carolina income to set your tax return.

 

It’s always useful to try it both ways. You don’t have to do anything to change filing statuses but switch the button on “South Carolina Residency Information” and tap Continue.

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Bb17
Level 2

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

@ErnieS0 So based on your explanation, it sounds like filing as a non resident this time around is the correct way to do this since I only made a part of my total income for the year in SC. However, I am concerned that the refund is much higher when I change the status to non-resident, and that this may somehow end up being incorrect and I'll have to deal with it later on. Keep in mind, we moved to SC as a permanent move, despite the tax definitions of residency. So, would filing as a non resident for this year be acceptable in the eyes of the state government?

MaryK4
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

South Carolina allows you to choose the Resident or Nonresident for the first year that you move into or out of South Carolina so there is no problem if you choose the better outcome (in fact it would be more suspect if you choose to pay more in taxes.) @Bb17 

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Bb17
Level 2

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

@MaryK4 That's interesting. Why is it considered suspect?

DawnC
Expert Alumni

I was a part resident in one state, worked and paid state taxes, then moved to a different state with a different job. Why do I owe excessive taxes in my old state?

When given an option, you should always choose the option that results in the lowest tax.   There are situations in which a part-year SC resident would be better off by choosing to file as a full-year resident (if they only had SC income during the year and wanted tax breaks only residents get).   But in your situation, having other state income, it is more beneficial to be a non-resident of SC.    ''Suspect'' could describe anything that draws unnecessary attention to your tax return (like overpaying taxes).  

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