We briefly mentioned this in another post but this is from a different angle.
One of my clients with a Florida s corporation is temporarily doing some work in Georgia. It might end up a permanent move but at this point it looks like it was just for a few months.
I could go get a job in Georgia for a few months and still have my residence in Florida with no issues. I would just have to file a Georgia state tax return at the end of the year to report those wages earned in Georgia. But is it different when it is an s corporation. She will get a 1099misc to report the earnings and it will be made out to the s corporation. I think that the payments would have to be to the s corporation since her licenses are in her business name.
I called the division of corporations in Georgia and they told me that she had to fill out an application for certificate of authority for foreign corporation and mail it in with $225. Then in reading the form it asked for the date business commenced in Georgia and there is a $500 penalty if the date is more than 30 days from the date it is filed and it says the penalty is statutory and cannot be waived by the Secretary of the State. That would mean that it would cost her $725 and she might not even continue to work there. This doesn't seem right.
The other post was about unemployment tax being paid to the state of Georgia. I can understand that except that her s corporation is not registered in the state of Georgia.
What is our obligation? Maybe she should have contracted with the people she is working for as an individual and not the s corporation????
Linda, EA
One of my clients with a Florida s corporation is temporarily doing some work in Georgia. It might end up a permanent move but at this point it looks like it was just for a few months.
I could go get a job in Georgia for a few months and still have my residence in Florida with no issues. I would just have to file a Georgia state tax return at the end of the year to report those wages earned in Georgia. But is it different when it is an s corporation. She will get a 1099misc to report the earnings and it will be made out to the s corporation. I think that the payments would have to be to the s corporation since her licenses are in her business name.
I called the division of corporations in Georgia and they told me that she had to fill out an application for certificate of authority for foreign corporation and mail it in with $225. Then in reading the form it asked for the date business commenced in Georgia and there is a $500 penalty if the date is more than 30 days from the date it is filed and it says the penalty is statutory and cannot be waived by the Secretary of the State. That would mean that it would cost her $725 and she might not even continue to work there. This doesn't seem right.
The other post was about unemployment tax being paid to the state of Georgia. I can understand that except that her s corporation is not registered in the state of Georgia.
What is our obligation? Maybe she should have contracted with the people she is working for as an individual and not the s corporation????
Linda, EA
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