Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

Even if employees work one day a week in different states, you could be liable to pay taxes in those states.

Source: Business Management Daily

Trudging to the office is so … 2019. But for payroll professionals, the remote work trend has created a host of new complexities and compliance risks.

Warning: During the peak of the pandemic, many states relaxed their withholding rules to accommodate employers. But that benevolence has ended and states are once again aggressively enforcing their withholding rules for remote workers. The impact: Having employees working from different states will likely trigger unintended payroll liabilities in states far from your corporate offices.

Even if employees work only one or two days a week from home in different states, you could be liable to pay taxes in those states. And one tax liability usually leads to a host of others. Depending on state rules, you could also be on the hook for corporate, excise, and unemployment taxes. State minimum wage and wage payment laws present another surprise liability.

Don’t get caught unprepared and out of compliance. States, like the IRS, are unforgiving.

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Post ID: @OP+1f15ZcUJ

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When the article says "you" could be liable for taxes, the you is the company, not the employee. So why do "I" care? If EM's WFH employees are physically storing and selling fuel from their houses, are extracting or refining oil in their backyards, are selling candy bars and coffee, then yeah, EM might have a problem. But EM is already paying state income tax in all 50 states. A few employees WingFH doesn't move the needle on the apportionment. So I don't care.

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Post ID: @2rrv+1f15ZcUJ

“Source: Business Management Daily

This source is garbage. Unsurprisingly, the article (more of a blurb) gets everything it says about how remote workers are taxed completely wrong.

We get it: many of you, especially mid-managers, want everyone at the office so that you can enjoy the few perks that come with the job. If you want to go to the office so bad, then you can go there.

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Post ID: @2tev+1f15ZcUJ

If you reside in a state with an income tax, you pay it regardless of where you work. The risk is to the company for state payroll taxes.
If you don't reside in a state and/or don't claim a home office, don't expect a state auditor to try to build a circumstantial case.
Silly sh-t.

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Post ID: @2ppp+1f15ZcUJ

Again the HR troll posting? Leave us alone at least here please and go back writing "talking points" and Career Development mass emails

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Post ID: @1nbv+1f15ZcUJ

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