Touring in the U.S.: State-by-State Tax Withholding Rules for Comedians and Musicians

Tour life isn’t just soundchecks and green rooms. Every new city can also mean a new set of tax rules—especially state withholding on nonresident entertainers. Handle it well, and you keep more of what you earn. Handle it loosely, and you’ll chase refunds for months.

Why states withhold on touring income

When you perform in a state where you don’t live, that state can tax the income you earned there. To make sure they get paid, many states require withholding at the source—often by the venue, promoter, festival, or production company. Think of it as a down payment on the state return you’ll file later.

Who gets hit—and when

Because rules vary, two shows with the same payout can land very different settlements after tax.

What this looks like in practice

Common pain points that shrink payouts

  1. One contract, many states. A single tour agreement paid from one company can still trigger filings in every performance state. Track the split by date and location.

  2. Incorrect payee. If the contract names the individual but the business actually invoices, withholding can be misapplied. Align the contract, invoice, and bank account.

  3. No paperwork at settlement. Leaving the venue without a withholding receipt or payout statement means extra detective work at tax time.

  4. Per-diems and buyouts. Some states treat these as taxable; others don’t. Keep them itemized, not buried in a single “fee” line.

How to plan a tax-smart tour

After the tour: turn withholdings into refunds or credits

When tax season hits, you’ll file nonresident state returns where you performed. Withholding already paid becomes a credit against the tax due. If too much was withheld, you get a refund; if not enough, you pay the difference. Your home state usually gives a credit for taxes paid elsewhere, so proper documentation prevents double taxation.

Comedy sets and encores pay the bills, but tidy tax planning keeps them. Line up your routing, contracts, and bookkeeping with state rules, and your settlements start looking a lot less mysterious—and a lot more profitable.