A real estate showing is a professionally scheduled appointment for a prospective buyer looking to tour a property. A showing is typically set up between a showing agent, or buyer's agent, working on behalf of the prospective buyer, and a listing agent, or seller's agent, working on behalf of the seller.
The three types of real estate listing agreements are open listing, exclusive agency listing, and exclusive right-to-sell listing.
A “one-time show” is similar to an open listing in many respects, as it is most often used by real estate agents who are showing a FSBO (for sale by owner) to one of their clients.
One-time showing agreements contain several crucial elements to protect both the seller and the agent. These components include: Property Details: A clear description of the property being shown. Duration of Agreement: Specifies the time frame in which the showing can occur.
A pension exclusion will calculate on Form IT-201, line 29 if: You've entered an amount on line 9 or 10 that wasn't from a NYS or local government pension plan or federal government pension plan. The taxpayer was aged 59 1/2 before January 1 of the current year.
Your standard deduction on your joint New York State return for the entire year is $16,050. Your standard deduction for the nine months that you and your spouse were New York City residents, based on the Proration chart, is $12,038.
If one of you was a New York State resident and the other was a nonresident or part-year resident, you must each file a separate New York return. The resident must use Form IT-201. The nonresident or part-year resident, if required to file a New York State return, must use Form IT-203.