What Amazon's decision to collect sales tax in all states does (and doesn't) mean for your business
Gone is the need to speculate about where and when Amazon will next collect; come April 1, 2018, the e-commerce giant will tax deliveries into Hawaii, Idaho, Maine, and New Mexico and be registered in 45 states plus the District of Columbia. Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon don't have a general sales tax.
When the largest ecommerce seller in the world makes a move like this, it sparks questions.
Do other ecommerce sellers now have to start collecting tax?
What about Amazon's third-party sellers?
Will this impact state tax policy?
There are simple answers to some of these questions, yet sales tax rules for e-commerce sellers remain anything but simple. Read on to learn what Amazon's decision does and doesn't mean for your business.
Do other ecommerce merchants now have to collect sales tax?
Amazon's decision does not mean other merchants now have to collect. State nexus rules still apply: A business only has to collect state sales tax when it has a specific type of connection to a state, such as in-state employees, inventory, or infrastructure. eBay and many other sellers are adamantly opposed to collecting where they lack nexus.
Amazon's decision does not immediately impact tax policy for its third-party sellers;
like other remote vendors, FBA sellers are required to collect only
where they have nexus. Since a third-party seller's property in an
Amazon fulfillment center creates nexus for that seller, FBA sellers
have nexus in any state where Amazon stores its products. Of course,
Amazon doesn't have a warehouse in every state where it now collects,
which means that FBA sellers need to know not only where their product
is stored, but also where Amazon has or will have a warehouse.
However,
there are many who believe this move by Amazon will eventually expose
the identity of Amazon's third-party sellers, many of whom have long
been flying beneath the radar of state tax officials, who know they
exist but have lacked the resources to find them.
Every state where Amazon has a physical presence potentially has a right to a list of the company's FBA sellers; this information can be obtained by a request or a limited audit. Once they have it, the states will share that information with other states due to formal or informal information sharing agreements. Whether they were intentionally hiding or not, FBA and other third-party vendors will likely now be found.
According to Amazon, almost half of the products it sells are from third-parties; more than 100,000 third-party vendors each sell more than $100,000 annually on Amazon.com.
Max Behlke, director of budget and tax policy for the National
Conference of State Legislatures, says, "Whatever a state is getting in
sales tax from Amazon, it should probably be
getting about twice that much." Once states develop a taste for Amazon
sales tax revenue, chances are they won't want to leave that
additional revenue on the table.
Will this impact state tax policy?
The
fact that Amazon is voluntarily collecting in so many states could
create a renewed sense of purpose and fuel state efforts to capture
more tax revenue from remote sales, i.e, any sale that doesn't occur
over a counter (e.g., catalog, internet, mail, and phone sales).
Numerous states have already enacted affiliate nexus, click-through nexus, or economic nexus
laws whereby a business can establish the obligation to collect state
and local sales tax through ties to in-state affiliates, referrals from
in-state businesses (links on websites), or simply doing a certain
amount of business in the state. Several more state legislatures are
considering such policies this session, including Maryland and North
Dakota.
What does this mean for you?
Unless
you're Amazon, the company's decision to collect tax where it lacks
nexus won't impact you now. Depending on your business, however, it
could impact you down the road.
Yet many e-commerce merchants don't realize that they already have sales tax obligations
when they make remote sales. All remote vendors should keep abreast
of state nexus policies - those already in effect and those under
consideration. It is essential to know where you already have nexus
and should be collecting and remitting tax. If you are a third-party
seller on Amazon, this means you should closely monitor where Amazon has a physical presence and an obligation to collect.
No comments:
Post a Comment