Ing to the New York Department of Taxation and Finance: A New York Resident is an individual who is domiciled in New York or an individual that maintains a permanent place of abode in New York and spends 184 or more days in the state during the tax year.
The requirements to be a New York City resident are the same as those needed to be a New York State resident. You are a New York City resident if: your domicile is New York City; or. you have a permanent place of abode there and you spend 184 days or more in the city.
Acceptable proofs of residency are, a valid government issued photo ID such as; a driver's license, and either a current utility bill, rent receipt, lease, or check with an address imprinted. Please note, library cards, previous years membership ID cards, and tax bills cannot be used as proof of residency.
The rule stipulates that if an individual spends at least 10 months in New York City during the tax year, they are presumed to be a resident for tax purposes, even if their primary home is elsewhere.
Such a showing must be made by clear and convincing evidence. Students who claim that New York is their domicile are expected to have a New York State driver's license or New York State issued identification card dated a minimum of twelve (12) months prior to the start of the semester.
This information can come from a number of documents, but is necessary to proving where you live. A utility bill, credit card statement, lease agreement or mortgage statement will all work to prove residency. If you've gone paperless, print a billing statement from your online account.
Any part of any day spent physically in New York, including days in transit, counts as a day of presence in New York. N.Y.C.R.R. 105.20(c). Because residency is determined in part by day count (183-day rule), generally a part-year resident is a person whose domicile changes to or from New York State during a tax year.
Current council tax demand letter or statement. HMRC-issued tax notification (NB: employer-issued documents such as P60s are not acceptable) End of year tax deduction certificates. Current bank statements or credit/debit card statements.
Acceptable Proof of Identity and Address Credit card. Birth certificate/baptismal certificate. U.S. social security card. U.S. health insurance card/prescription card. U.S. utility bill (must include your name and address) U.S. insurance policy (in effect for more than three years)
A recent bank statement, credit card statement, or mortgage statement that includes your name and address.