Filing status for resident alien but part year resident in VA state ?
I have question related to my Virginia state filing status as resident or non-resident or PartYearResident.
I am single and lived in Virginia from 2005 to 2010 as a resident(alien).
I moved out of VA on June 2010 to my home country i.e India and donot plan to go back USA.
My stay in VA in 2010 was less than 183 days , i.e. it was around 160 days.
But during those 160 days my domiciliary i.e. my permanent residence was VA.
All my federal income received (W2, Bank Interest etc) was during those 160 days.
After that I didn't received any federal income, nor I received any foreign income after
Moving out of VA. So all my income received in 2010 was only during those 160 days
Stay in VA (with exception of bank interest which I received till dec).
I didn't lived or worked in any other State in 2010. Now my questions are
Q1) Do I qualify to file as Resident and get full (Standard deduction + exemption) ? Or
I need to file as PY Resident and pro-rate the deduction/exemption? I think that
Even if I file as PY resident, the pro-rating will result in same deduction/exemption
Since there is no other state income to prorate, is that correct?
Q2) I filed my federal taxes as a ResidentAlien , but I think I should have filed as Dual-Status ?
Or is there any exception condition in which I do qualify to file as Resident Alien.
Q3) I had a NRI bank account in India and got interest of $5K from Jan to Dec and also received
1099-INT for that. I have included that in my federal return(since I filed as resident so had to
Show worldwide income).. But in case if I file as PY resident in VA then how do I pro-rate
That interest income, I think this income is not considered to be from VA sources
So can I completely remove it from VA return in which case this never gets taxed in VA , is that correct ?
Comment on AtlantaTaxExpert's post
As per VA site info below, if I file as PYresident,I get more tax saving since I donot have to show my NRI bank interest in Adj gross income.
Prorating deduction/exemption will not reduce it since there is no other state income to pro-rate.
On other hand if I file as resident I need to pay taxes on complete interest income. Am I correct ?
Part-year residents have several options for reporting and computing Virginia taxable income:
•Filing as a part-year resident: A part-year resident usually files as such on Form 760PY.
You must prorate your personal exemptions and standard deduction. A subtraction is allowed for non-Virginia income.
•Filing as a resident: If you are a part-year resident,but your entire federal adjusted gross income is from Virginia sources,
You can file as a resident on Form 760. Filing as a resident allows you to claim full personal exemption and standard deduction amounts
Comment on AtlantaTaxExpert's post
Question is that does my NRI 1099-INT remains untaxed in VA state if I file as PY resident ? Or when I prorate deduction/exemtion I do it on basis of interest received in NRI bank account (althougt this is not connected to any State in USA)
Comment on AtlantaTaxExpert's post
Interest in NRI account gets deposited every 5 months , so it got deposited on April , Sept and Dec..
My stay in VA was from Jan to June, so does it means that only April interest needs to be added to VA taxable income? Or other way is to add all 3 interest and prorate it from jan to June? Another thing I noticed is that my final payslip was deposited to my account in July and I left VA in June , so does it means that July payslip cannot be taxed in VA as I was non-resident in July...
Comment on AtlantaTaxExpert's post
I assume you mean to say , just add April interest and skip Sept and Dec interest.. how do I convert the April interest from Rupee to dollar , which days exchange rate will apply (april or dec or filing date), and is there any common place/website to obtain exchange rate for that day.. I know all banks give diff exchange rate..
Comment on AtlantaTaxExpert's post
On VA state website, they mentioned that non-resident need not report bank interest, check below , so it means I can skip entire 1099-INT even if they were received while I was resident, bcoz I am filing as non-resident.
Nonresidents
A nonresident is a person who is not a domiciliary or actual resident of Virginia,
But who received income from Virginia sources during the taxable year.
NOTE: Interest received by a nonresident from a personal account held in a Virginia bank and
Pension or annuity payments made to a nonresident from a Virginia payer are not Virginia source income