Remote Work State Tax Guide
How State Taxes Work for Remote Workers
The baseline rule in US state taxation is simple: states can tax income earned within their borders. If you physically work in a state, that state can tax the income from that work. This means if you live in Virginia and your employer is in California, California generally cannot tax your income — you never earned it there.
In practice, the reality is more complicated. A handful of states have enacted special rules — the convenience-of-employer rule being the most significant — that allow them to claim tax jurisdiction over remote workers based on where the employer is located rather than where the work is performed. Understanding which states have these rules, and how they interact with your specific situation, is essential for accurate tax compliance. Use the remote worker tax calculator to check your specific state combination.
States With Special Rules for Remote Workers
⚠️ New York — The Most Aggressive COE State
New York's convenience-of-employer rule is the most significant tax risk for remote workers. If your employer is based in New York and you work remotely for your own convenience (rather than because your employer required it), New York can tax your full income as if you worked in New York — even if you never visited the state. The employer-necessity exception is narrow and rarely satisfied. New York is the primary state remote workers need to model carefully before accepting a NY-based employer.
⚠️ Delaware, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Arkansas
These four states have convenience-of-employer rules similar to New York's. The enforcement is generally less aggressive than New York, but the legal framework exists. Remote workers with employers in these states should verify their withholding situation with a tax professional. Connecticut previously had a COE rule but repealed it in 2023, creating a reciprocal dynamic with New York.
✓ Most States — Source-Based Taxation Only
The majority of states with income taxes follow straightforward source-based rules: they tax income earned within their borders. If you work remotely from their state, they tax your income. If you work remotely from another state, they cannot. This is the standard rule and is favorable for most remote workers who live in a different state than their employer.
State Tax Reciprocity Agreements
Reciprocity agreements between pairs of states simplify multi-state taxation significantly. Under a reciprocity agreement, employees who live in one state and work in another only pay income tax to their home state — the employer state gives up its tax claim.
Examples of states with reciprocity agreements (not exhaustive):
- Virginia ↔ Maryland, DC, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Kentucky
- Illinois ↔ Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Wisconsin
- Indiana ↔ Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
- Maryland ↔ DC, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
- Michigan ↔ Indiana, Kentucky, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin
Important: reciprocity agreements are state-to-state bilateral agreements. They do not apply universally. California, New York, and Texas do not participate in any reciprocity agreements. Always verify the specific pair of states you're dealing with — the calculator covers all 50 states.
The Credit for Taxes Paid to Another State
In multi-state situations without a reciprocity agreement, the mechanism for avoiding double taxation is a tax credit for income taxes paid to another state. Here's how it generally works:
- You file a nonresident return in your employer's state and pay tax there on your income
- You file a resident return in your home state, which taxes your worldwide income
- Your home state gives you a credit for the tax paid to the employer's state — typically up to the amount your home state would have charged on that income
The credit prevents double taxation in most cases but doesn't eliminate all complexity. If your employer's state has a higher tax rate than your home state, the credit may not fully offset your home state liability, and vice versa. The credit calculation is also subject to the ordering rules in your home state, which vary.
Convenience-of-employer situations are particularly complex — New York may claim tax, your home state may also claim tax, and the credit may not fully resolve the overlap depending on your home state's rules about crediting COE-state taxes.
Day-Count Thresholds and Nonresident Filing
Most states require nonresidents to file and pay income tax if they work in the state for more than a certain number of days. Common thresholds:
- 30-day rule: Most common threshold — once you've worked more than 30 days in a state in a calendar year, you owe income tax for the full working period there
- Day-one rule: California, Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania technically require filing from the very first day of work in their state — no grace period
- $600 minimum: Some states only require filing if income earned there exceeds a minimum dollar amount, regardless of days
Remote workers who travel to their employer's office occasionally may trigger nonresident filing obligations in the employer's state, even if they work remotely the rest of the year. Keep track of days spent working in each state.
Practical Steps for Remote Workers
- Identify your employer's state and your home state: Use the calculator to see the tax relationship between the two states.
- Check for reciprocity: If your states have a reciprocity agreement, you likely only need to file in your home state. Notify your employer's payroll department to withhold only your home state taxes.
- Check for COE rules: If your employer is in NY, DE, NE, PA, or AR, consult a tax professional about your specific situation.
- Ensure correct withholding: Many employers default to withholding for the state where the employer is located. If you live in a different state, you may need to submit a withholding adjustment form.
- Track in-state days: Keep a record of days you physically work in your employer's state — especially if you visit the office occasionally.
Tax rules change frequently. This guide reflects general principles as of 2025 — always verify with a qualified CPA for your specific situation.