It appears some states are requiring S corporations to pay personal income tax on behalf of shareholders. They call it "withholding" although actually it hasn't been "withheld" from anything.
One of these states is Pennsylvania. It requires an Alabama S Corp to pay from its own coffers an amount to Pennsylvania for all shareholders computed to have Pennsylvania income. This is true even though the shareholders have no PA wages, or worse still, even if no dividends are declared. So it can be hardly called "withholding."
I guess this is an obvious manner of collecting taxes from shareholders so PA will not have to chase them down if these shareholders don't file a return.
Another state that does this is CO, except they require the shareholders to pay instead of the corporation, and then call it a "withholding."
Do they have the right to do this?
One of these states is Pennsylvania. It requires an Alabama S Corp to pay from its own coffers an amount to Pennsylvania for all shareholders computed to have Pennsylvania income. This is true even though the shareholders have no PA wages, or worse still, even if no dividends are declared. So it can be hardly called "withholding."
I guess this is an obvious manner of collecting taxes from shareholders so PA will not have to chase them down if these shareholders don't file a return.
Another state that does this is CO, except they require the shareholders to pay instead of the corporation, and then call it a "withholding."
Do they have the right to do this?
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