Great video! We just bought a house in Brunswick OH. Property taxes are less in Medina county but you still have to pay a municipal income tax to the city of Brunswick. Which isn't a part of RITA but still a pain in the neck coming from a state that doesn't have individual municipal income taxes.
Thanks for the video, i had a question. I'm considering on relocating to Cleveland and I wanted to know on average how much do you have to pay for RITA? Does it go by the city you live in and do you pay it for both cities of where you live & work?
So that is based off of where you live vs where you work. So you will pay up to a certain amount in both cities. If you type in Rita Tax Chart on google that should give you some helpful information
To clarify you technically do pay it for both cities where you live and work, but generally the residence city will give you at least some credit for the rita tax you paid where you worked, and possibly full credit such as in my Avon Lake example.
I made a comment here that I think got lost. I work in Westlake and live in Avon Lake. I pay 1.5% to Westlake and Avon Lake gives me full credit for that, so I don't owe anything to Avon Lake when filing taxes. Your employer generally withholds only for the city where you work, unless they do offer residence withholding but this is optional for the employer and uncommon. It's a complex system and the best thing to do is check the RITA website for the tax rate where you will work, the tax rate where you will live, and also the credit the city where you live will give you for taxes paid to the city where you work. I hope that makes sense.
Don’t, live here my whole life we have absolutely nothing to offer and the people are trash, are crimes are extremely high, our economy is low, our poverty is high, and I honestly dont understand why my family still loves it so much. Or ask why do I wanna move to NYC or Houston instead
@@Demo556 I moved from OH to NYC, and now I really cannot understand what my family was thinking when they settled in OH. I suppose my parents might’ve had legal restrictions that kept them from leaving OH for their entire lives
Great video! We just bought a house in Brunswick OH. Property taxes are less in Medina county but you still have to pay a municipal income tax to the city of Brunswick. Which isn't a part of RITA but still a pain in the neck coming from a state that doesn't have individual municipal income taxes.
Thanks for the video, i had a question. I'm considering on relocating to Cleveland and I wanted to know on average how much do you have to pay for RITA? Does it go by the city you live in and do you pay it for both cities of where you live & work?
So that is based off of where you live vs where you work. So you will pay up to a certain amount in both cities. If you type in Rita Tax Chart on google that should give you some helpful information
To clarify you technically do pay it for both cities where you live and work, but generally the residence city will give you at least some credit for the rita tax you paid where you worked, and possibly full credit such as in my Avon Lake example.
@@angelachapman4415yep! That’s the way I understand it at least
I made a comment here that I think got lost. I work in Westlake and live in Avon Lake. I pay 1.5% to Westlake and Avon Lake gives me full credit for that, so I don't owe anything to Avon Lake when filing taxes. Your employer generally withholds only for the city where you work, unless they do offer residence withholding but this is optional for the employer and uncommon. It's a complex system and the best thing to do is check the RITA website for the tax rate where you will work, the tax rate where you will live, and also the credit the city where you live will give you for taxes paid to the city where you work. I hope that makes sense.
How does the tax work if you work remotely?
No worries; not moving to Cleveland, ever
Don’t, live here my whole life we have absolutely nothing to offer and the people are trash, are crimes are extremely high, our economy is low, our poverty is high, and I honestly dont understand why my family still loves it so much. Or ask why do I wanna move to NYC or Houston instead
@@Demo556 I moved from OH to NYC, and now I really cannot understand what my family was thinking when they settled in OH. I suppose my parents might’ve had legal restrictions that kept them from leaving OH for their entire lives