- 1 -
|
2024 Schedule OS Instructions
General Instructions
Purpose of Schedule OS
Schedule OS is used by individuals, estates, and trusts to compute the credit for net income tax paid to another state.
For additional information on this credit, get Publication 125, Credit for Tax Paid to Another State, from the department's
website at revenue.wi.gov.
Note: The use in these instructions of the terms partnership and tax-option (S) corporation include a limited liability company
(LLC) that is treated as that type of entity for Wisconsin tax purposes. The terms shareholder and partner also include a
member of an LLC that is treated the same for Wisconsin tax purposes.
Who Is Eligible For the Credit
You may be eligible for the credit for net income tax paid to another state if:
• You were a Wisconsin resident for all or part of 2024, and
• You paid 2024 income tax to Wisconsin and to another state or the District of Columbia on the same income. “State”
does not include the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico or the several territories organized by Congress.
You may not claim credit for any tax paid to a local unit of government that is not paid directly to the state (such as a city,
county, or school district) or for any tax that is not an income tax (such as a severance tax, personal property tax, real estate
tax, or sales and use tax).
Limitations The following limitations apply for 2024:
• The credit cannot be more than the amount of net tax payable to Wisconsin on income that is taxable to both Wisconsin
and the other state. This limitation does not apply to income that is taxable to both Wisconsin and to Minnesota, Iowa,
Illinois, or Michigan.
• You may not claim the manufacturing and agriculture (M&A) credit and the credit for net income tax paid to another state
to the extent they are both based on the same qualified production activities income (QPAI). One of the credits must be
recomputed to exclude the QPAI used in claiming the other credit.
• You may not claim the credit for net income tax paid to another state if you are a shareholder or partner of a tax-option
(S) corporation or partnership, and the tax-option (S) corporation or partnership elected to be taxed at the entity level in
Wisconsin.
Servicemembers and Their Spouses If you are a servicemember or a spouse of a servicemember and you meet the
conditions under 50 U.S.C. 4001, you may elect for purposes of taxation to use any of the following as your state of
residence: (1) your residence (2) your spouse's residence or (3) the permanent duty station of the servicemember.
Federal law prohibits states (other than the state of residence) from taxing (1) the servicemember's compensation for military
service or (2) the income for services performed by the spouse of the servicemember.
If you do not elect to use Wisconsin as your state of residence, you may not claim a credit for tax paid to another state
unless you meet the limited circumstance under "Nonresidents" below.
If you elect to use Wisconsin as your state of residence, you may qualify for a credit for taxes paid to another state on
income that is taxable to both Wisconsin and the other state.
Wisconsin residents working in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, or Michigan If you had 2024 state income tax withheld
for Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, or Michigan from income earned from working in one of those states as an employee, do not
use Schedule OS. You can get a refund of the tax withheld for the period you were a Wisconsin resident by filing that other
state’s income tax return with that state. Income earned as an employee includes wages, salaries, tips, commissions,
bonuses, etc. For more information, get Wisconsin Publication 121, Reciprocity, from our website at revenue.wi.gov.
If you paid a 2024 net income tax to one of those states on income other than from wages, salaries, tips, commissions,
bonuses, etc. (such as from a business, unemployment compensation, rental property, or from the sale of real property),
you may be eligible for the credit based on that income. Complete Schedule OS.
Part-year residents To be eligible, you must have been a Wisconsin resident when you received the income that was
taxed by both states.
I-123 (R. 10-24) Wisconsin Department of Revenue
|