GeekWire spoke with legal experts and wealth advisors to learn more about how the new income tax may impact different people in Washington's tech ecosystem.
Washington millionaire tax could reshape Seattle sports. A new 9.9% tax on income above $1M may affect athlete taxes, talent ...
New US tax rules restricting foreign-linked entities are dividing the energy tax credit market and complicating investment, ...
Landlords in Greece can get up to 3 years of tax-free rental income by using new E2 codes for vacant properties or ...
Understand what makes a qualified eligible participant (QEP) eligible to invest in complex funds, including futures and hedge funds, under the Commodity Exchange Act rules.
A new tax bill passed in Mississippi could add a healthy bit of competition into college football's NIL arms race. The Mississippi House passed a bill excluding NIL (name, image and likeness) earnings ...
The so-called “millionaires tax” was approved by Washington’s Senate on Monday, advancing a measure that would create a 9.9% tax applied to taxable, personal annual income that exceeds $1 million. Gov ...
The tax break on tip income is not automatic. You need to file a new form. The U.S. Treasury Department has a list of dozens of occupations that 'customarily and regularly received tips' that qualify ...
The proposal would raise the standard deduction and lower the state's income tax rate. To pay for the tax cut, the plan would eliminate or reduce various tax breaks for businesses and industries.
ATLANTA — Georgia Senate Republicans are behind a plan to eliminate state income tax in stages, but the state would have to get rid of the tax credits used to entice businesses to locate here.
The “determine and document” requirement in Notice 2025‑75 is “ambiguous and potentially onerous,” and Treasury should eliminate, simplify, or replace it, the AICPA told Treasury and IRS officials in ...
Wisconsin seniors will get a bigger break when filing state income taxes this year. Retirees can now subtract $24,000 in retirement income on their state forms, or double that amount for joint filers.