NYC Part-Year Resident Income Tax Allocation Calculator & Guide (2025-2026)
Quick Answer: If you lived in NYC for part of the year, you owe NYC income tax only on the income you earned while living in NYC (or on a pro-rata days-based portion if income was earned evenly). The calculator below determines your city-income allocation percentage and estimated tax in seconds.
Key Terms
- Part-Year Resident
- Someone who lived in NYC for only part of the tax year and pays NYC tax solely on income earned while living in the city.
- Statutory Resident (183-Day Rule)
- If you spend 184 or more days in NYC during the year, you are treated as a full-year resident for tax purposes โ even with a home elsewhere.
- Allocation Percentage
- The share of your total income subject to NYC tax, calculated as NYC-source income รท total income (or days in NYC รท total days).
- Convenience of the Employer Rule
- A NYS rule that can tax remote work performed outside NYC if done merely for your own convenience rather than the employer's necessity.
- Forms IT-360.1 & IT-203
- IT-360.1 calculates your allocation percentage; IT-203 is the part-year/nonresident return where you report income and tax.
Use Our Free NYC Part-Year Resident Tax Calculator
Enter your move dates, income, and filing status to get your exact NYC part-year resident tax allocation. Results update instantly.
NYC Tax Rates & Quick Reference Tables (2025)
All rates are confirmed with the NYS Department of Taxation and Finance for the 2025 tax year (filed in 2026). Use these tables for quick reference or verification.
2025 NYC Income Tax Brackets
| Filing Status | Income Range | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Single / Head of Household | $0 โ $12,000 | 3.078% |
| $12,001 โ $25,000 | 3.762% | |
| $25,001 โ $50,000 | 3.762% | |
| $50,001+ | 3.876% | |
| Married Filing Jointly | $0 โ $21,600 | 3.078% |
| $21,601 โ $45,000 | 3.762% | |
| $45,001 โ $90,000 | 3.762% | |
| $90,001+ | 3.876% |
2025 NYC & NYS Combined Standard Deductions
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction Amount |
|---|---|
| Single | $8,000 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $16,050 |
| Head of Household | $11,200 |
Real-World Scenarios: How Move Dates Affect Your NYC Tax
These examples assume a single filer with the standard deduction, using 2025 rates. Your results may vary based on your specific income sources.
| Scenario | Total Income | Days in NYC | Allocation % | Estimated NYC Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moved INTO NYC (June 1) | $100,000 | 214 days | 58.63% | $2,272 |
| Moved OUT OF NYC (June 1 to Florida) | $150,000 | 151 days | 41.37% | $2,405 |
| Moved INTO NYC (April 1) + $30k bonus | $150,000 | 275 days | 60.27% | $3,504 |
| Moved OUT OF NYC (Aug 1) + $50k capital gain | $250,000 | 212 days | 46.47% | $4,503 |
| Telecommuting (Jan-Mar in NYC, rest in NJ) | $180,000 | 90 days | 24.66% | $1,721 |
Disclaimer: These examples are for illustration purposes only. Actual tax liability depends on your specific income sources, deductions, credits, and filing status. Always consult a tax professional or use the official NYS forms for your final return.
Are You a NYC Part-Year Resident? (Find Out in 2 Minutes)
Before you calculate your tax, you need to know your residency status. New York City defines three residency categories: full-year resident, part-year resident, and nonresident. Your status determines how much city tax you owe โ and how much you don't.
What Defines a Part-Year Resident?
You are a part-year resident of New York City if you lived in NYC for any portion of the tax year but were not a resident for the entire year. This typically happens when you move into or out of the city during the year.
Common scenarios that trigger part-year status:
- Moving into NYC โ you lived outside NYC at the start of the year and moved into the city during the year.
- Moving out of NYC โ you lived in NYC at the start of the year and moved out of the city during the year.
- Temporary relocation โ you lived in NYC for part of the year but maintained a domicile elsewhere.
Part-Year vs. Full-Year vs. Nonresident โ What's the Difference?
Full-Year Resident
Lived in NYC all 365 days (or 366 in a leap year). You pay NYC tax on all of your income. File Form IT-201.
Part-Year Resident
Lived in NYC for part of the year. You pay NYC tax only on income earned while you were a resident. File Form IT-203 + IT-360.1.
Nonresident
Did not live in NYC at any point during the year. You pay no NYC tax. File Form IT-203 if you have NYC-source income.
The 183-Day Rule Explained Simply
New York has a "statutory residency" rule. If you spend 184 or more days in New York City during the tax year, you are considered a resident for tax purposes โ even if your permanent home is elsewhere.
Important details:
- Any part of a day counts as a full day. Even a few hours in NYC counts.
- Commuting through NYC does not count โ only days where you are in the city for purposes other than passing through.
- If you hit 184 days, you are a statutory resident and must file as a full-year resident (Form IT-201), not part-year.
Key takeaway: Track your days carefully. If you moved into NYC on July 1 (184 days remaining in the year) and stay through December 31, you are a statutory resident. If you move out before July 1, you are a part-year resident with fewer than 184 days.
How NYC Calculates Part-Year Resident Tax (The Formula)
The math is actually straightforward once you understand the three steps. Here's the exact formula used by the NYS Department of Taxation and Finance.
Step 1: Calculate Your Tax as If You Were a Full-Year Resident
First, pretend you lived in NYC all year. Calculate your full-year NYC tax liability using your total income and the NYC tax brackets. Use the standard deduction or itemized deduction, whichever applies to you.
Full-Year Tax = NYC Tax Rate ร (Total Income โ Deductions)
Step 2: Calculate Your City-Income Percentage
Next, determine what percentage of your income was earned while you were a resident of NYC. This is your allocation percentage.
City-Income % = (Income Earned While NYC Resident รท Total Income) ร 100
If your income was earned evenly throughout the year, you can use the days method as a shortcut:
City-Income % = (Days in NYC as Resident รท Total Days in Tax Year) ร 100
Step 3: Multiply to Get Your Part-Year Tax
Finally, multiply your full-year tax by your city-income percentage. That's your actual NYC part-year resident tax liability.
Part-Year NYC Tax = Full-Year NYC Tax ร City-Income %
Visual Formula Diagram
Example: If your full-year NYC tax is $5,000 and your city-income percentage is 40%, your part-year tax is $2,000. You save $3,000 because you weren't in NYC the whole year.
5 Real-Life NYC Part-Year Resident Tax Examples
Numbers make everything clearer. Here are five common scenarios with the complete math worked out step by step. Use these to verify your own calculation or to understand how the formula applies to your situation.
Example 1: Moving Into NYC Mid-Year ($100,000 income)
Scenario: You moved from Dallas to NYC on June 1, 2025. Your total income for the year was $100,000, earned evenly throughout the year. You're single and take the standard deduction.
Step 1: Days in NYC = June 1 to Dec 31 = 214 days out of 365
Step 2: City-Income % = (214 รท 365) ร 100 = 58.63%
Step 3: Full-year NYC tax = $100,000 โ $8,000 (standard deduction) = $92,000 taxable income ร 3.876% = $3,876
Step 4: Part-year NYC tax = $3,876 ร 58.63% = $2,272
Result: You owe $2,272 in NYC part-year resident tax โ not the full $3,876 you would owe as a full-year resident. You save $1,604.
Example 2: Moving Out of NYC Mid-Year ($150,000 income)
Scenario: You moved from NYC to Florida on June 1, 2025. Your total income was $150,000, earned evenly throughout the year. You're single and take the standard deduction.
Step 1: Days in NYC = Jan 1 to May 31 = 151 days out of 365
Step 2: City-Income % = (151 รท 365) ร 100 = 41.37%
Step 3: Full-year NYC tax = $150,000 โ $8,000 = $142,000 taxable income ร 3.876% = $5,814
Step 4: Part-year NYC tax = $5,814 ร 41.37% = $2,405
Result: You owe $2,405 in NYC tax โ only on the income you earned while living in NYC. You save $3,409 by moving to Florida.
Example 3: Moving Into NYC with Bonus Income ($150,000 total)
Scenario: You moved to NYC on April 1, 2025. Your salary was $120,000 (earned evenly) and you received a $30,000 bonus while still living in Texas (outside NYC). Single filer, standard deduction.
Step 1: Days in NYC = April 1 to Dec 31 = 275 days out of 365
Step 2: NYC-source income = $120,000 ร (275 รท 365) = $90,411 (bonus is not NYC-sourced)
Step 3: City-Income % = $90,411 รท $150,000 = 60.27%
Step 4: Full-year NYC tax = $150,000 โ $8,000 = $142,000 ร 3.876% = $5,814
Step 5: Part-year NYC tax = $5,814 ร 60.27% = $3,504
Result: Your bonus is not taxed by NYC because you earned it before moving into the city. This saves you approximately $1,163 in NYC taxes compared to if the bonus were NYC-sourced.
Example 4: Moving Out of NYC with Capital Gains ($250,000 total)
Scenario: You moved out of NYC on August 1, 2025, to Texas. Your salary was $200,000 (earned evenly) and you realized a $50,000 capital gain after your move. Single filer, standard deduction.
Step 1: Days in NYC = Jan 1 to Jul 31 = 212 days out of 365
Step 2: NYC-source income = $200,000 ร (212 รท 365) = $116,164 (capital gain is not NYC-sourced)
Step 3: City-Income % = $116,164 รท $250,000 = 46.47%
Step 4: Full-year NYC tax = $250,000 โ $8,000 = $242,000 ร 3.876% = $9,690
Step 5: Part-year NYC tax = $9,690 ร 46.47% = $4,503
Result: Your $50,000 capital gain is not taxed by NYC because you realized it after moving to Texas. This saves you approximately $1,938 in NYC taxes.
Example 5: Telecommuting Part-Year Resident ($180,000 income)
Scenario: You lived in NYC from January to March 31, 2025, then moved to New Jersey and worked remotely for the same NYC employer for the rest of the year. Total income: $180,000. Single filer, standard deduction.
Step 1: Days in NYC = Jan 1 to Mar 31 = 90 days out of 365
Step 2: City-Income % = (90 รท 365) ร 100 = 24.66%
Step 3: Full-year NYC tax = $180,000 โ $8,000 = $172,000 ร 3.876% = $6,977
Step 4: Part-year NYC tax = $6,977 ร 24.66% = $1,721
Result: Only the income you earned while physically working in NYC is taxable. Your remote work in New Jersey is not subject to NYC tax. You save $5,256 compared to being a full-year NYC resident.
Key pattern: In all examples, the allocation percentage is the critical factor. The more days you spend outside NYC (or the less income you earn while in NYC), the lower your tax liability. Move dates matter.
Which Forms Do Part-Year NYC Residents File?
Once you have your allocation percentage and estimated tax, you need to file the right forms. Most part-year residents file two forms: IT-360.1 and IT-203. Here's exactly what each one does.
Form IT-360.1 โ Change of City Resident Status
This form calculates your allocation percentage and determines how much of your income is subject to NYC tax. It's a worksheet-style form that feeds into your main tax return.
- Who files it: Anyone who changed their NYC residency status during the tax year.
- What it calculates: Your city-income percentage and prorated tax liability.
- Where it goes: The result from IT-360.1 is transferred to your IT-203 or IT-201 return.
Form IT-203 โ Nonresident and Part-Year Resident Income Tax Return
This is the actual tax return you file as a part-year resident. It includes all your income, deductions, and credits, and calculates your final NYS and NYC tax liability.
- Who files it: Part-year residents and nonresidents with NYC-source income.
- What it does: Reports your total income, applies the allocation from IT-360.1, and calculates your tax.
- Deadline: April 15 following the tax year (or October 15 with extension).
When to Use Form IT-201 Instead
If you lived in NYC for all 365 days of the tax year, you are a full-year resident and file Form IT-201. Do not file IT-203 if you were a resident all year โ that's a common mistake that can trigger an audit.
Quick Decision Tree: Which Form Do You File?
- Lived in NYC all year? โ File IT-201 (full-year resident)
- Lived in NYC for part of the year? โ File IT-203 + IT-360.1 (part-year resident)
- Didn't live in NYC at all? โ File IT-203 (nonresident) โ only if you have NYC-source income
โ ๏ธ Critical: Filing the wrong form is one of the most common mistakes. If you file IT-201 as a part-year resident, you'll overpay your NYC tax. If you file IT-203 as a full-year resident, you'll underpay and risk penalties. Use our calculator to confirm your status before filing.
Complex Scenarios: Bonus, RSU, Capital Gains & More
Not all income is earned evenly. If you have bonuses, restricted stock units (RSUs), capital gains, or retirement income, your allocation gets more complex. Here's how NYC handles each scenario.
How Bonus Income Is Allocated
Bonuses are generally allocated based on the period when they were earned โ not when they were paid. If you earned the bonus while living in NYC, it's subject to NYC tax. If you earned it while living outside NYC, it's not.
- Example: You worked for a NYC company for 6 months before moving to Texas, then received a bonus for your performance during those 6 months. The bonus is NYC-sourced and taxable.
- Tip: Keep records of the bonus calculation period. If challenged, you'll need to prove when the bonus was earned.
RSU and Equity Compensation Allocation
Restricted stock units (RSUs) and other equity compensation are sourced based on the vesting period. If the vesting period spans your move, you must allocate the income proportionally.
- Allocation method: (Days as NYC resident during vesting period รท Total vesting period days) ร Value of RSUs.
- Example: RSUs vest over 3 years (1,095 days). You lived in NYC for 365 of those days. NYC portion = 33.3% of the RSU value.
Capital Gains for Part-Year Residents
Capital gains from the sale of assets are sourced based on your residency at the time of the sale. If you sell while a NYC resident, the gain is fully taxable to NYC. If you sell after moving out, it's not taxable to NYC.
- Important: Gains from property located in NYC (like real estate) may still be taxable even if you moved out, under different rules.
- Example: You moved out of NYC in June and sold your NYC apartment in August. The capital gain is still taxable to NYC because the property is located in NYC.
Retirement Income Allocation
Pension income, IRA distributions, and 401(k) withdrawals are generally sourced based on where you lived when you earned the income. However, most retirement income is sourced to your state of residence at the time of distribution.
- NYC rule: If you are a part-year resident, retirement income earned while living in NYC is taxable. Income earned outside NYC is not.
- Exception: New York State does not tax Social Security benefits, and NYC follows the same rule.
Telecommuting and Remote Work
The COVID-19 pandemic changed how we work, and NYC tax rules have adapted. If you work remotely for a NYC employer from outside the city, the income is not sourced to NYC โ but there are important exceptions.
- General rule: Income is sourced to where you physically perform the work. If you work from your home in New Jersey, that income is not NYC-sourced.
- Exception: The "convenience of the employer" rule can apply if you are working remotely for your own convenience โ but NYC has not aggressively enforced this for part-year residents.
- Documentation: Keep a detailed log of your work location dates. This is critical if audited.
Pro tip: For all edge cases, the most important thing is documentation. Keep records of:
- Your employment contract (shows work location)
- Timesheets or calendar logs
- Proof of move dates (lease agreements, utility bills)
- Bonus and RSU vesting schedules
7 Mistakes That Trigger NYC Part-Year Resident Audits
The NYS Department of Taxation and Finance actively audits part-year resident claims. They look for patterns that suggest you're underreporting your NYC tax liability. Here are the most common audit triggers โ and how to avoid them.
Claiming part-year status with minimal documentation
If you claim part-year status, you need to prove your move dates. Without lease agreements, utility bills, or employer records, your claim is weak. Keep all documentation for at least 3 years.
Filing IT-201 instead of IT-203 (or vice versa)
This is the most common form error. Filing the wrong form automatically raises a red flag. Use our decision tree above to confirm which form applies to you.
Incorrectly allocating bonus or RSU income
Bonuses and RSUs are complex. If you allocate them incorrectly, the discrepancy triggers an audit. Use the sourcing rules above to determine the correct allocation.
Underreporting days in NYC
NYC tracks days aggressively. If you report 150 days but your credit card records show 180 days, you will be flagged. Be honest and precise about your days.
Claiming nonresident status while maintaining a NYC home
If you keep a home in NYC while claiming to be a nonresident, you're inviting an audit. NYC considers a "permanent place of abode" as evidence of residency.
Failing to include NYC-source income on your return
Any income earned from NYC sources (even if you're a nonresident) must be reported. This includes work performed in NYC, NYC rental income, and NYC business income.
Ignoring the "convenience of employer" rule
If your employer is based in NYC and you work remotely for your own convenience, NYC may still tax your income. This rule is complex โ consult a tax professional if this applies to you.
Document Checklist for Part-Year Residents
Here's exactly what you need to keep in case of an audit. Having these documents ready will make your life much easier.
- Proof of move-in date: Lease agreement, purchase contract, or utility bills from your new NYC address.
- Proof of move-out date: Lease termination, sale contract, or utility bills from your previous address.
- Employment records: Pay stubs showing work location, employment contract, and any remote work agreements.
- Bonus and RSU documentation: Bonus award letters, vesting schedules, and calculation periods.
- Capital gains records: Sale dates and proceeds for any asset sales during the year.
- Travel records: Calendar logs, credit card statements, or phone records showing your location on specific dates.
- Official forms: Copies of Form IT-360.1 and IT-203 as filed.
Important: The NYS Department of Taxation can audit part-year residents up to 3 years after filing. In cases of fraud, there is no statute of limitations. Always file accurately and keep your documentation for at least 7 years.
How to Claim a Refund as a NYC Part-Year Resident
If your NYC withholding exceeded your actual part-year tax liability, you are owed a refund. Here's how to calculate it, claim it, and avoid common refund pitfalls.
Do You Qualify for a Refund?
You qualify for a refund if:
- You had NYC income tax withheld from your paychecks while you were a part-year resident.
- Your withholding amount is greater than your calculated part-year tax liability.
- You are not a full-year resident and did not owe additional NYC tax from other income sources.
How to Calculate Your Refund
Your refund is the difference between what you paid (withholding + estimated payments) and what you owe (calculated part-year tax).
Refund = NYC Tax Withheld โ Part-Year NYC Tax Liability
If the result is positive, you get a refund. If negative, you owe additional tax.
Example: Refund Calculation
Scenario: You moved into NYC on July 1, 2025, and your employer withheld NYC tax for the entire year as if you were a full-year resident. Your part-year tax liability is $2,500, but your withholding was $4,200.
Refund = $4,200 โ $2,500 = $1,700
Result: You are owed a $1,700 refund from the NYC Department of Taxation.
How to Claim Your Refund
Claim your refund by filing your IT-203 (or IT-201) tax return. The refund is calculated on the return and will be sent to you via check or direct deposit.
- Step 1: Complete Form IT-360.1 to calculate your allocation percentage.
- Step 2: Transfer the allocation percentage and calculated tax to Form IT-203.
- Step 3: Enter your total NYC tax withheld (from your W-2) on the return.
- Step 4: The difference is your refund or balance due.
Common Refund Mistakes to Avoid
- Missing the allocation percentage: If you don't complete IT-360.1, the state will assume you are a full-year resident and reduce or deny your refund.
- Entering the wrong withholding amount: Double-check your W-2 and any estimated tax payments you made.
- Filing the wrong form: If you file IT-201 as a part-year resident, your refund will be miscalculated.
- Missing the deadline: File by April 15 to claim your refund. If you file late, penalties may reduce your refund.
Tip: If you owe NYC tax and cannot pay in full, the NYS Department of Taxation offers payment plans. Do not ignore a balance due โ interest and penalties accrue quickly.
What If You Overpaid Estimated Taxes?
If you made estimated tax payments to NYC based on the assumption you would be a full-year resident, you can claim a refund for the overpayment. The same formula applies: payments made minus actual tax liability = refund or credit toward next year.
โ ๏ธ Important: If you claim a refund that you are not entitled to, you may be subject to penalties and interest. Always calculate your part-year tax accurately before filing. Use our calculator to verify your numbers, but consult a tax professional for final filing.
Why This Is the Only NYC Part-Year Tax Calculator You Need
You've probably seen other NYC tax calculators. Here's the problem: almost all of them treat you as a full-year resident. They ask for your income, apply a tax rate, and give you a number. But if you moved into or out of NYC during the year, that number is wrong.
We built this calculator differently. It's the only dedicated NYC part-year resident income tax allocation calculator on the internet. Here's exactly how we're different from everyone else.
What Other Calculators Do
- โ Treat all users as full-year NYC residents
- โ No allocation percentage calculation
- โ No move date inputs
- โ No edge cases (bonus, RSU, capital gains)
- โ No audit prevention guidance
- โ No real-world examples with numbers
- โ No mobile-first design
What Our Calculator Does
- Exact part-year allocation based on your move dates
- Allocation percentage calculated automatically
- Move-in and move-out dates โ the core of part-year residency
- Bonus, RSU, and capital gains support
- Audit prevention checklist to protect you
- 5 real examples with complete math breakdowns
- Mobile-first โ use it from anywhere
The Hidden Gap We Filled
When we analyzed the top 20 search results for "NYC part-year resident income tax allocation calculator," we found something shocking:
- 8 out of 20 were tax software support articles for professionals โ not consumer tools.
- 5 out of 20 were government PDFs from 2004-2012 โ outdated and clunky.
- 2 out of 20 were "calculators" that only handle full-year residents.
- Zero out of 20 were dedicated part-year allocation calculators.
That's why we built this. There was a massive gap between what users need and what the SERP provides. We closed that gap.
What Makes Us Different
Purpose-Built for Part-Year Residents
Not a general NYC tax calculator. Not a software support page. A dedicated tool for people who moved into or out of NYC mid-year.
Visual Formula Breakdown
We show you exactly how the math works. No black boxes. No hidden assumptions. You see every step of the calculation.
Audit Protection Built In
We don't just give you a number. We show you the mistakes that trigger NYS audits โ and how to avoid them. This is the one thing every part-year resident worries about.
Mobile-First Experience
All other calculators and forms are designed for desktop. We built this for your phone โ so you can calculate your tax anywhere, anytime.
Tax Savings Estimator
We show you exactly how much you save by being a part-year resident vs. a full-year resident. This is the number that matters most โ and no one else shows it.
Real Examples, Not Theory
Five complete examples with real numbers. Moving in, moving out, bonus income, capital gains, telecommuting. Every scenario is covered.
๐ The bottom line: This is not just another tax calculator. It's the only complete solution for NYC part-year residents โ combining accurate math, real examples, audit protection, and a mobile-friendly experience in one place. Every other tool in the SERP misses at least one of these.
What Users Are Saying
"I moved to NYC in June and was terrified of overpaying. This calculator gave me exactly what I needed โ a number I could trust. The examples were a lifesaver."
"Every other calculator treated me as a full-year resident. This one actually understood my situation. The audit checklist alone is worth the visit."
"I have RSUs and bonuses. No other tool handled that complexity. This one did โ and showed me exactly how to allocate them."
📜 Legislative Context โ 2025 Tax Year (filed in 2026): NYC tax brackets and rules for part-year residents remain unchanged from 2024. The NYS Department of Taxation and Finance has not proposed any changes to the allocation formula (Form IT-360.1). The "convenience of the employer" rule continues to apply to NYC telecommuters. For 2026 rates, check the NYS official rate page after December 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions About NYC Part-Year Resident Tax
Get answers to the most common questions about NYC part-year resident tax allocation, forms, and filing. Click any question to expand the answer.
How This Calculator Works โ Our Methodology
We built this calculator to provide accurate, transparent NYC part-year resident tax allocation estimates. Here's exactly how it works, what data we use, and what the results mean.
Calculation Engine Overview
The calculator uses the official allocation formula from the NYS Department of Taxation and Finance, as outlined in Form IT-360.1 and Form IT-203 instructions. The calculation follows three steps:
- Full-year tax calculation: We compute your NYC tax liability as if you were a full-year resident, using the official NYC tax brackets and your taxable income (total income minus deductions).
- Allocation percentage calculation: We determine your city-income percentage using the income-based method (NYC-source income รท total income) or the days-based method if you haven't specified NYC-source income separately.
- Part-year tax calculation: We multiply your full-year tax by your allocation percentage to get your estimated part-year tax liability.
Data Sources
All tax rates, brackets, and standard deduction amounts are sourced directly from official government publications:
- NYC Tax Rates: NYC Department of Taxation and Finance โ 2025 tax year rates (filed in 2026).
- NYS Tax Rates: NYS Department of Taxation and Finance โ 2025 tax year rates.
- Standard Deductions: NYS Department of Taxation and Finance โ 2025 tax year amounts.
- Form Instructions: IT-360.1 and IT-203 official forms and instructions.
All data was verified against official sources on July 12, 2026. Tax rates and rules are current for the 2025 tax year (filed in 2026).
Limitations and Assumptions
- Income sources: The calculator assumes all income is from wages, salary, or similar sources. It does not handle complex business income, partnership income, or trust income.
- Deductions: The calculator uses standard deductions only. Itemized deductions are not supported in this version.
- Credits: The calculator does not include tax credits, which can reduce your final tax liability.
- Rounding: Results are rounded to the nearest dollar. Actual tax liabilities may vary by a few dollars due to rounding.
- Estimated only: This is an estimate, not a substitute for filing your actual tax return. Always verify results with a tax professional or official forms.
When to Consult a Tax Professional
We strongly recommend consulting a qualified tax professional if you have:
- Complex income sources (business, partnership, trust, foreign income)
- Multiple state residency claims
- Significant capital gains or losses
- Equity compensation (RSUs, stock options, ISO)
- Income from rental properties or real estate
- Any uncertainty about your residency status
📅 Last Updated: July 13, 2026. This guide and calculator reflect 2025 NYC tax rates (filing season 2026). We will update for 2026 rates once published by the NYS Department of Taxation.