I cannot find any special instructions for these on NCDOR. Assume still cannot be efiled? Mark "Military Spouse Relief Act" at top of return? For MFJ, only spouse had NC income, but both have to sign form? Tks.
NC Military Spouse Return
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Solution
See page 6 of the NC Form D-400 instructions:
The NCDOR is committed to helping taxpayers comply with tax laws in order to fund public services benefiting the people of North Carolina.
If the spouse is not originally a resident of NC, i.e. from another state accompanying spouse who is on active duty in NC, wages should be exempt from taxation by NCDOR.
If that applies, you should file a NonResident return for NC. Lines 51-53 of Form D-400 will be adjusted accordingly based on your input. That tax return can easily be efiled, one would think.
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Yes, I had that. And I did complete the D-400 for a non-resident. I did not see anything I could check to alert that this is a MSRA return, and last year it was different. TP had to mail in, mark MSRA at top, attach orders, etc. So I will give the efile a go. VA has a special form, one page, and it has to be paper-filed.Comment
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Not sure if "proof" is needed
Yes, I had that. And I did complete the D-400 for a non-resident. I did not see anything I could check to alert that this is a MSRA return, and last year it was different. TP had to mail in, mark MSRA at top, attach orders, etc. So I will give the efile a go. VA has a special form, one page, and it has to be paper-filed.
The NR worksheet pretty much speaks for itself. I imagine it might not be a bad idea to have the "proof" in your folder, if needed.
Quite frankly, it would appear the employer, with proper notification (see line 4 of NC Form W-4 ---- http://www.dornc.com/downloads/nc-4.pdf or the instructions http://www.dornc.com/downloads/nc4_instructions.pdf ---- should never have withheld any NC taxes in the first place.
FEComment
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Huh?
One would think that an employee's Form NC-4 ("Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate") --- take a look at it!! --- for payroll withholding might have played a role in things for the "paperwork department"?????Comment
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Are you asking a question or just making a statement?Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.Comment
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Quite frankly, it would appear the employer, with proper notification (see line 4 of NC Form W-4 ---- http://www.dornc.com/downloads/nc-4.pdf or the instructions http://www.dornc.com/downloads/nc4_instructions.pdf ---- should never have withheld any NC taxes in the first place.
FEComment
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Employer withholding issues
Just make do with what you have, and tell your client the rest of the refund will be on the way.
As for your original post, I think if you fill in the correct amount on the NR worksheet ("income subject to NC tax") as zero, your software should handle everything to include efile and refund of all improperly withheld NC tax. It's still basically a Form D-400 with a little extra info.
This all assumes, of course, that neither the H or W was a resident of NC prior to military associations. Then it's an entirely different ballgame.And it will depend upon what their home of record state is, but don't forget the "NC" income is likely to still be taxed by their home state, and the zero withholding of that state....might hurt! (FL TX et al helps...)
FEComment
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This all assumes, of course, that neither the H or W was a resident of NC prior to military associations. Then it's an entirely different ballgame.And it will depend upon what their home of record state is, but don't forget the "NC" income is likely to still be taxed by their home state, and the zero withholding of that state....might hurt! (FL TX et al helps...)
FEComment
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Filing update
You are correct - NC has no "extra" form for efiling, as does VA. The federal Form 8879 handles all.
Aside: I always have wondered why VA makes things so complicated, with my favorite being for a person with VA 2013 estimated tax payments having to send those payments to different addresses, as well as also having different payees.
FEComment
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If you are talking about the local Commissioners of Revenue & the local Treasurers' info, I have never used any of them. I have been doing taxes in VA since the 1970's and everything I ever did went to the same address in Richmond. (For individual returns and estimated taxes ---- corp and fiduciary have a different P. O. Box.) It still works. In the old days before computers, using the locals only delayed everything by a week or more.Comment
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VA estimates
If you are talking about the local Commissioners of Revenue & the local Treasurers' info, I have never used any of them. I have been doing taxes in VA since the 1970's and everything I ever did went to the same address in Richmond. (For individual returns and estimated taxes ---- corp and fiduciary have a different P. O. Box.) It still works. In the old days before computers, using the locals only delayed everything by a week or more.
The client lives in a small county in the western part of The Commonwealth, so he apparently "walks" his four payments to the proper destination. All things considered, he may well prefer that approach, especially since he always receives (immediately) a yellow receipt showing the payment.
FEComment
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And that is fine. That works too. But many of my clients didn't want the local offices to see what they make or what their financial positions are (they know them), and besides, for my purposes, there were way, way too many of them in less populated areas of the state -- every city and county has one. It was so much easier to use one place to send everything when we did paper returns. Of course, now that we all efile, it doesn't matter about the return. But I have to override the info on the mailing slips for estimated. When I did paper returns, I gave them the envelope with my label for Richmond. (Still do when that occurs for some reason.)Last edited by Burke; 02-19-2013, 03:09 PM.Comment
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See page 6 of the NC Form D-400 instructions:
The NCDOR is committed to helping taxpayers comply with tax laws in order to fund public services benefiting the people of North Carolina.
If the spouse is not originally a resident of NC, i.e. from another state accompanying spouse who is on active duty in NC, wages should be exempt from taxation by NCDOR.
If that applies, you should file a NonResident return for NC. Lines 51-53 of Form D-400 will be adjusted accordingly based on your input. That tax return can easily be efiled, one would think.
FEComment
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