(?)
Using your New York State Tax Return, input your New York City Personal Income Tax Liability.

If form IT-150: use the value on line 32. If form IT-201: use line 49 (if a full-year city resident); line 50 (if a part-time city resident); or line 52 (if a married couple with one full-time city resident and one part-time city resident). If form IT-203: use line 51.
+
(?)
Input your calendar year 2012 property tax liability.

For residential properties: if you don’t have your property tax records handy, you can find your property tax liability online here. After inputting your address, look up your “January 15th, 2013 Notice of Property Value.” On that form, your 2012 property tax liability will be written near the bottom of the page in small bold font above the words “This is Not a Bill.” Look for the sentence that reads, “In calendar year 2012, the Department of Finance received XXX in property taxes from this property” – that’s the number to use for this calculator.
+
(?)
This box is an opportunity to input city payments other than NYC Personal Income Tax and property taxes, such as local fees. Want to see where the money from your parking ticket went? Or how the city spends the money it raised from a local permit you purchased? Input those values here.
Calculate Your Receipt
$0
Don't have your tax info handy? Choose an estimated return (?)
All examples are based on New York adjusted gross income and assume filers take the standard deduction. New York City personal income tax liability is calculated before the application of any tax credits. Please note: these examples provide only general estimates of tax liability – the NYC Tax Receipt makes no representation that it provides accurate assessments of tax liability for individual filers.
$25,000 income
Single with no children
543
$55,000 income
Single with no children
1616
$25,000 income
Single parent with one child
392
$55,000 income
Single parent with one child
1491
$55,000 income
Married with two children
1207
$110,000 income
Married with two children
3180
Expand all
Want to know where your federal tax dollars are going? View your 2011 Federal Taxpayer Receipt.