There are many possible tax implications of remote work for businesses. If your employees relocated to other states, or if the business itself moved its operations to another state, or multiple states, you might have to deal with new state income tax filing requirements or other state-level compliance rules.
Nexus
Has your business changed location to another state, or are you doing business in multiple states for the first time? If so, you need to know how to define your “nexus,” in order to clarify in which state your business is located for state income tax filing purposes. Depending on how much business activity you are doing in a given state, you might be subject to that state’s tax jurisdiction and tax laws.
Nexus is determined by several factors, including:
- Production activities
- Property
- Sales
- Employees
- Offices (although simply having an office in a state is not necessarily enough to create a nexus in that state)
Different states have different requirements for determining nexus, and several states have provided relief to their usual nexus requirements. If you have employees temporarily working in those states because of the pandemic, your business might not be considered “located in” those states for state tax purposes, due solely to employee location.
Remote Work Policy
Is your business being proactive or reactive in deciding how to manage a remote workforce? For example, if your employee moves to another state, do you know what that means for you as an employer and a business from a tax and compliance standpoint? Are you willing to accept those ramifications, or are you being caught off-guard?
Ideally, your business should be proactive in developing a remote work policy that manages everyone’s expectations and interests. However, due to the pandemic, many employers might not have had a chance to plan ahead. Some of those employers are now facing unpleasant surprises in their tax, reporting, and compliance obligations.
Try to use this moment as an opportunity to think broadly about your remote work policy, what you want it to look like, and whether you’re comfortable with the possible exposure or additional obligations that it creates for the business. As the pandemic hopefully subsides throughout 2021, it’s time for companies to switch gears from being reactive to proactive on this front.
Reimbursements for Home Office Expenses
Many employers have provided benefits to their employees to reimburse expenses incurred by the employee. Expenses such as office space and furniture, technology, childcare, and employee well-being may be deductible for the business and not includable in gross wages for the employees.
Mobile Workforce Amendment
In February, the Senate passed a Mobile Workforce Amendment that would make a few potentially helpful changes to state payroll or income tax reporting requirements. As of this writing, the amendment is not yet law, but is an example of how the federal government might make helpful changes to respond to the pandemic. These changes include:
- De Minimis Threshold Expanded to 90 Days:The De Minimis Threshold for state tax withholding is expanded from 30 days to 90 days. Meaning that workers can work remotely in other states (where they are not a resident for tax purposes) for up to 90 days without having to owe state income tax in those other states.
- No Nexus or Apportionment Impact from Remote Workers:If employees are working in a non-resident state during the pandemic, this should not affect the business’s nexus or income apportionment for state tax purposes.
- Flexible Withholding:State tax withholdings can continue from employee paychecks as they were before, or workers can choose how to track where they performed remote work among multiple states.
The business community is in favor of this legislation because it will simplify processes for employers, employees, state and federal governments.