Tax services

Personal Tax Preparation in New Hampshire

Personal tax preparation done accurately the first time. We handle Form 1040 returns of every shape — W-2 employees, the self-employed, investors, multi-state residents, and U.S. citizens abroad — with one preparer on every file from intake through e-file.

CS Precision Tax prepares Form 1040 federal and New Hampshire resident returns for individuals and families across the Northeast region. New Hampshire has no state income tax. New Hampshire has no state sales tax. Understanding how NH treats various income types — wages, Schedule C net income, capital gains, retirement distributions, and out-of-state earnings — is central to getting the return right the first time. New Hampshire's Concord-based tax administration has its own deadlines, conformity rules relative to federal law, and credit provisions that diverge from the federal 1040 in ways that regularly surprise filers. We prepare the federal return and every applicable NH schedule together, apply the correct filing status under New Hampshire law, and handle part-year and nonresident returns for anyone who moved into or out of New Hampshire during the tax year. Amended NH returns, prior-year catch-up filings, and state notice response are included for returns we prepared.

What to know if you file from here

New Hampshire has no state income tax. New Hampshire has no state sales tax. New Hampshire filers should verify conformity between state and federal treatment of deductions and credits before finalizing the return, because NH does not always adopt federal changes in the same year Congress enacts them. Multi-state earners with New Hampshire source income — from wages, rental property, or pass-through K-1s — must file a NH nonresident or part-year return even when their primary residence is in another state.

Who this service is for

  • W-2 employees with standard or itemized deductions
  • Self-employed professionals, freelancers, and gig workers (Schedule C)
  • Investors with brokerage, dividend, or capital-gain activity
  • Landlords with rental property (Schedule E)
  • Multi-state residents and remote workers
  • Equity-compensated employees (RSU, NSO, ISO, ESPP)
  • U.S. citizens and green-card holders living abroad
  • Anyone with an open IRS or state notice

Typical documents we'll ask for

  • Prior-year federal and state returns
  • All W-2s, 1099s (NEC, MISC, INT, DIV, B, R, K) and SSA-1099
  • K-1s from partnerships, S-corps, or trusts
  • Brokerage 1099-Composite or year-end summary
  • Mortgage interest (1098) and property-tax records
  • Rental property income, expenses, and mileage
  • Self-employment income, expenses, and home-office details
  • Education (1098-T) and student-loan interest (1098-E)
  • HSA and IRA contribution records
  • Form 1095 (health-coverage)
  • Any IRS or state notices received during the year

Frequently asked questions for New Hampshire

What is the New Hampshire income tax rate for individuals?
New Hampshire does not levy a state income tax. Most filers there owe only federal taxes — we still prepare your Form 1040 and any required information returns. The effective rate often differs from the marginal bracket rate when you have multiple income streams — wages, investment gains, retirement distributions — because NH may apply separate rules or exclusions to each category.
Does New Hampshire tax Social Security or pension income?
New Hampshire applies its own rules to Social Security benefits, pension distributions, and IRA withdrawals, which do not always align with federal treatment. New Hampshire has no state income tax. We review NH exclusions and credits on every retirement-income return we prepare, whether the client lives near Concord or elsewhere in the Northeast region.

All cities in New Hampshire

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