In its 2018 decision in South
Dakota v. Wayfair, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld South Dakota’s
“economic nexus” statute, expanding the power of states to collect sales tax
from remote sellers. Today, nearly every state with a sales tax has enacted a
similar law, so if your company does business across state lines, it’s a good
idea to reexamine your sales tax obligations.
What’s nexus?
A state is constitutionally prohibited from taxing business
activities unless those activities have a substantial “nexus,” or connection,
with the state. Before Wayfair,
simply selling to customers in a state wasn’t enough to establish
nexus. The business also had to have a physical
presence in the state, such as offices, retail stores, manufacturing or
distribution facilities, or sales reps.
In Wayfair, the
Supreme Court ruled that a business could establish nexus through economic or
virtual contacts with a state, even if it didn’t have a physical presence. The
Court didn’t create a bright-line test for determining whether contacts are
“substantial,” but found that the thresholds established by South Dakota’s law
are sufficient: Out-of-state businesses must collect and remit South Dakota
sales taxes if, in the current or previous calendar year, they have 1) more
than $100,000 in gross sales of products or services delivered into the state,
or 2) 200 or more separate transactions for the delivery of goods or services
into the state.
Nexus steps
The vast majority of states now have economic nexus laws,
although the specifics vary:Many states adopted the same sales and transaction
thresholds accepted in Wayfair,
but a number of states apply different thresholds. And some chose not to impose
transaction thresholds, which many view as unfair to smaller sellers (an
example of a threshold might be 200 sales of $5 each would create nexus).
If your business makes online, telephone or mail-order sales in
states where it lacks a physical presence, it’s critical to find out whether
those states have economic nexus laws and determine whether your activities are
sufficient to trigger them. If you have nexus with a state, you’ll need to
register with the state and collect state and applicable local taxes on your
taxable sales there. Even if some or all of your sales are tax-exempt, you’ll
need to secure exemption certifications for each jurisdiction where you do
business. Alternatively, you might decide to reduce or eliminate your
activities in a state if the benefits don’t justify the compliance costs.
Need help?
Note: If you make sales through
a “marketplace facilitator,” such as Amazon or Ebay, be aware that an
increasing number of states have passed laws that require such providers to
collect taxes on sales they facilitate for vendors using their platforms.
If you need assistance in setting up processes to collect sales
tax or you have questions about your responsibilities, contact us.
© 2019
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