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March 26, 2010 at 1:47 PM #532695March 26, 2010 at 2:48 PM #531792paranoidParticipant
Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?
March 26, 2010 at 2:48 PM #531921paranoidParticipantGary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?
March 26, 2010 at 2:48 PM #532372paranoidParticipantGary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?
March 26, 2010 at 2:48 PM #532469paranoidParticipantGary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?
March 26, 2010 at 2:48 PM #532730paranoidParticipantGary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?
March 26, 2010 at 3:05 PM #531807ybitzParticipant[quote=paranoid]Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?[/quote]
Yeah, this is correct. It’s irrelevant how much was withheld; your overall tax liability is the same. As long as your tax liability is over $3333, you’ll get the whole amount.
March 26, 2010 at 3:05 PM #531936ybitzParticipant[quote=paranoid]Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?[/quote]
Yeah, this is correct. It’s irrelevant how much was withheld; your overall tax liability is the same. As long as your tax liability is over $3333, you’ll get the whole amount.
March 26, 2010 at 3:05 PM #532387ybitzParticipant[quote=paranoid]Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?[/quote]
Yeah, this is correct. It’s irrelevant how much was withheld; your overall tax liability is the same. As long as your tax liability is over $3333, you’ll get the whole amount.
March 26, 2010 at 3:05 PM #532484ybitzParticipant[quote=paranoid]Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?[/quote]
Yeah, this is correct. It’s irrelevant how much was withheld; your overall tax liability is the same. As long as your tax liability is over $3333, you’ll get the whole amount.
March 26, 2010 at 3:05 PM #532745ybitzParticipant[quote=paranoid]Gary, thanks for the link.
I think the credit is related to the total net tax you owe to colifornia for the year, regardless how much withholding is being taken month by month. For example, for a regular emplyee, a portion of your salary is withheld for each pay-check. if your net tax is $6k for the year, and your accumulated total withholding is $7k, you are still going to get the $3,333 credit for the year, so that your total refund (by april next year) will be (7k-6k) + 3.333k = $4.333k.Is this correct?[/quote]
Yeah, this is correct. It’s irrelevant how much was withheld; your overall tax liability is the same. As long as your tax liability is over $3333, you’ll get the whole amount.
March 26, 2010 at 7:36 PM #53189734f3f3fParticipant[quote=Fearful]The tax credit is for new houses, not resales.[/quote]
AB 183 will provide $200 million for home buyer tax credits, allocating $100 million for qualified first-time home buyers of existing homes and $100 million for purchasers of new, or previously unoccupied, homes.March 26, 2010 at 7:36 PM #53202634f3f3fParticipant[quote=Fearful]The tax credit is for new houses, not resales.[/quote]
AB 183 will provide $200 million for home buyer tax credits, allocating $100 million for qualified first-time home buyers of existing homes and $100 million for purchasers of new, or previously unoccupied, homes.March 26, 2010 at 7:36 PM #53247734f3f3fParticipant[quote=Fearful]The tax credit is for new houses, not resales.[/quote]
AB 183 will provide $200 million for home buyer tax credits, allocating $100 million for qualified first-time home buyers of existing homes and $100 million for purchasers of new, or previously unoccupied, homes.March 26, 2010 at 7:36 PM #53257434f3f3fParticipant[quote=Fearful]The tax credit is for new houses, not resales.[/quote]
AB 183 will provide $200 million for home buyer tax credits, allocating $100 million for qualified first-time home buyers of existing homes and $100 million for purchasers of new, or previously unoccupied, homes. -
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