themuzzer
Well-Known Member
How's that work when the player pays taxes......Does he pay under Michigan law or where the player lives and resides at the time of signing?
Since the top 51(or maybe 52 now) contracts are all that counts against the cap whenever we sign a player a player at the bottom of the list is displaced. Nate and Caraun both signed contracts worth $420,000 the miniumum salary that increases our cap number is $535,075(Sam Martin) at the moment. Signing bonuses become dead money the moment the player is signed though, so that's the only part of there contract that is a cap hit.
Players have to pay state taxes for every state they play in that has a state income tax, on a game check basis. States that do not have a State Income Tax are; Alaska, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Tennessee, Washington, Wyoming. I believe there is one more but I cannot recall off hand. It is not based on state residency.
How did this post add any value or say anything different than what I said? While you may think you know the cap well there are posters who read this board for help in understanding where we are.
When you make a couple of posts saying that the Lions have signed three of their draft picks and the cap hit totals less than $140k you are going to confuse the heck out of some guys.
Dr. Evil-er said:
Are you serious? That's a legit question. I am absolutely wrecked right now
Players have to pay state taxes for every state they play in that has a state income tax, on a game check basis. States that do not have a State Income Tax are; Alaska, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Tennessee, Washington, Wyoming. I believe there is one more but I cannot recall off hand. It is not based on state residency.
If they or you are confused maybe they should do a small amount of research to find out how the cap works heres a good read for you Explaining the NFL Rookie Pool and its Impact on the Salary Cap - Over the Cap
yes sir, they do have to pay a state income tax for each and every state they play in so long as that state does in fact have such.
yes sir, they do have to pay a state income tax for each and every state they play in so long as that state does in fact have such.
gandydancer said:So are you saying if you play for Dolphins you don't pay state tax for a home game, but do if they travel to Detroit to play a road game?
Seems rather fucked up for a baseball player to file 8 different state returns???
Dr. Evil-er said:Well, another drink for me is on the way. And since my clock says it's 4:20......
Listen Professor Dickweed, I understand the cap quite well but your posts are completing misleading. But if that makes you happy so be it.
Knock yourself out if you want to spend two pages explaining how 51 contracts count now, 53 for the season plus the practice squad, how the amortized signing bonuses of the higher picks will push off the bottom deals right now but how things change again once the salaries are added back when the final roster is set, etc, etc.
Or you could take the approach to simply let people know who was signed and at what amounts without adding a technically correct cap amount for this stage of the offseason but otherwise completely misleading.
Yep, there was a 30 For 30 that discussed this a couple years ago. It was about how's of many athletes become broke. One of the biggest issues is that their taxes become so screwed up bc they don't file correctly bc of this very reason.
gandydancer said:This is bullshit I work in Texas about 6 months a year. I should only pay state tax for the other six months.
^^^ Just think of living/playing in the states of New York or Cali making more than 100k and your state income tax rate izzzzzzzzzzzz..... wait for it.... 13%....gents
Gandy, unfortunately, you were prolly hired while serving residency in another state. It's not fair but those are common practice laws of the goode ole IRS.
Say if you lived in Texas but worked in Minnesota and the company was based out of Texas, then you wouldn't be paying taxes for another state unless you had verifiable proof of residency in Minnesota for at least 6 months, also known as, half non-resident
it sucks but those are the laws. I've been doing taxes in multiple states since a teenager. that's many many years ago. Construction man, sometimes it sucks.