It is generally accepted that a construction crew headquartered in a given state can travel to another state, work for a week, then come home. The result is that 4-5 days in another state does not constitute source income from that state. At least I've never seen such a situation result in state taxable wages to any state other than the home state.
One my friends has a brother who played for the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers over a 10-year career. And during this time never lived in either Michigan or Wisconsin. His salary was such that he made (for purposes of discussion) appx $250,000 for every game, even including exhibition games. Except for the high income, his situation did not differ from the construction worker mentioned above, so I don't know why he would incur taxation in every state he played, but he did.
Supposedly, this football player had to file 10-12 states every year, presumably with resident state credits for taxes paid in other states. And the states differed from one year to the next. He said his tax preparation fee ran into the thousands.
One of my clients has a son who may (or may not) be drafted into the NFL, and has discussed retaining me as his tax preparer. I have a couple Scorp shareholders who file in 8-9 states so this is not new to me. Except for the level of income, what is the difference between the construction worker mentioned above and the professional athlete? Any other discussion related to state taxation of professional athletes would be appreciated.
One my friends has a brother who played for the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers over a 10-year career. And during this time never lived in either Michigan or Wisconsin. His salary was such that he made (for purposes of discussion) appx $250,000 for every game, even including exhibition games. Except for the high income, his situation did not differ from the construction worker mentioned above, so I don't know why he would incur taxation in every state he played, but he did.
Supposedly, this football player had to file 10-12 states every year, presumably with resident state credits for taxes paid in other states. And the states differed from one year to the next. He said his tax preparation fee ran into the thousands.
One of my clients has a son who may (or may not) be drafted into the NFL, and has discussed retaining me as his tax preparer. I have a couple Scorp shareholders who file in 8-9 states so this is not new to me. Except for the level of income, what is the difference between the construction worker mentioned above and the professional athlete? Any other discussion related to state taxation of professional athletes would be appreciated.
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