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Question

I am starting an online retail web site.    What tax rate will my customers be charged?   Should I and can I establish the company in a lower or non-tax state?

Submitted: 217 days and 12 hours ago.
Category: Tax
Value: $30
Status: CLOSED
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atlanta, Georgia

Already Tried:
this goes with my first question.   i reside in ga, where the sales tax rate is at 7.5%.   can i establish the company somewhere else, so i can charge a lower tax rate.

Posted by Dave 217 days and 11 hours ago.

Answer

Good afternoon XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX and welcome to Just Answer!

This is a very good question and there are a few variables involved with the answer to this question. How much sales tax should be charged is not necessarily dependent on the state in which your business is organized through. However, the amount of sales tax you need to charge is dependent upon where your company is physically located and selling your merchandise/products from. If you have an online sales business and you sell all of your products out of Georgia, then you will not have to charge a sales tax to customers who purchase your products/merchandise from any state outside of Georgia. However, you should be charging sales taxes for consumers making in-state purchases within Georgia. Therefore, by incorporating your company in another state other than GA, this is not what will determine your sales tax. Your sales tax will be determined by what state you sell your products out of. Another thing to note is that many US states are trying to enforce various sales tax policies regarding online purchases. You can read more about the state simplication tax project by clicking here.

If your business has a physical presence in a state, such as a store, office or warehouse, you must collect applicable state and local sales tax from your customers. If you do not have a presence in a particular state, you are not required to collect sales taxes. In legal terms, this physical presence is known as a "nexus." Each state defines nexus differently, but all agree that if you have store or office of some sort, a nexus exists. If you are uncertain, whether or not your business qualifies as a physical presence, contact your state's revenue agency.

 

If you do not have a physical presence in a state, you are not required to collect sales taxes from customers in that state. This rule is based on a XXXX XXXXXXX XXXXX ruling (Quill v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298, (1992)) in which the justices ruled that states cannot require mail-order businesses, and by extension, online retailers to collect sales tax unless they have a physical presence in the state. The Court reasoned that forcing sellers to comply with over 7,500 tax jurisdictions was too complex for sellers to manage, and would put a strain on interstate commerce.

 

Keep in mind that not every state and locality has a sales tax. Alaska, Delaware, Hawaii, Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon do not have a sales tax. In addition, most states have tax exemptions on certain items, such as food or clothing. If you are charging sales tax, you need be familiar with applicable rates. Determining which sales tax to charge can be a challenge. Many online retailers use online shopping cart services to handle their sales transactions. Several of these services are programmed to calculate sales tax rates for you.


Here are a few links for you with some very valuable information:

http://www.business.gov/business-law/online-business/sales-tax/
http://smallbusinessonlinecommunity.bankofamerica.com/message/28512
http://www.streamlinedsalestax.org/oprules.html
http://www.gppf.org/article.asp?RT=13&p=pub/Regulation/Technology/Etax%20IA.htm
https://etax.dor.ga.gov/compliance/usetax/ut_overview.aspx

Please let me know if I can be of any further assistance with this matter. Thank you for using Just Answer and please remember to leave feedback after you have clicked the Green Accept button. Have a great week and best of luck with everything.

217 days and 11 hours ago.

Reply

My office will be in Atlanta, but I will not warehouse any of my products here.   All products will be dropped shipped from other vendors in other states.   My largest dropshipper is out of NY.   So, you are saying since I do not have a store front I only have to charge a tax to GA residents???

The majority of my product save energy (CFL bulbs, power strips, weatherizing etc). Are they any tax benefits from selling these?

One more thing... Half of the profits from the sale of the products is donated to a not-for-profit.   How does this effect my taxes or taxing???

Thank you.

Accepted Answer

If you are having many of your products dropshipped this raises other issues, because any of the states you are dropshipping your products out of, you generally should be charging sales tax for customers in those states as well. For example if your products are being dropshipped out of NY, GA, and FL then you should be charging sales tax for consumers who are buying products in their respective state for those states. Another thing to keep in mind is that determining which sales tax to charge can be a challenge. Many online retailers use online shopping cart services to handle their sales transactions. Several of these services are programmed to calculate sales tax rates for you.

To understand the taxation of a drop-shipment, we must first look at the logistics of the transaction as shown in the illustration below. Generally, the following illustration occurs:
  • The retailer accepts an order for tangible personal property from its customer, the final end user of the tangible personal property;
  • The retailer (who does not have the desired property) places a similar order with a third party, usually a manufacturer or distributor;
  • The third party then ships the tangible personal property directly to the retailer's customer (ultimate user), but sends the invoice for the property to the retailer;
  • The customer then receives an invoice from the retailer.
So how does sales and use tax apply to this transaction? The answer depends, in part, on the states involved in the transaction. If the third party shipper is not registered to collect tax in the state where they are shipping the property (destination state) on behalf of the retailer, then the shipper charges no tax on their bill. If the retailer is not registered in the destination state, the liability then falls into the hands of the ultimate end user to self-assess the applicable use tax on the transaction. See our discussion of registration requirements on the nexus page of this web site. But let's muddy the water. If the shipper IS registered to collect tax in the destination state on behalf of their customer (the retailer), then by law they are required to collect a tax on the transaction from the retailer. You may be thinking, "Isn't this a resale transaction?" You are correct, but more than one state is involved. Most states will allow the shipper to exempt the transaction with the retailer from tax as long as they have a valid resale certificate on file from the retailer. You see, most (destination) states will accept as proof of resale, a certificate issued from a state other than theirs. However, some (destination) states do not. These states require the shipper to have a valid resale certificate from the destination state issued by the retailer. If the retailer can't issue a certificate from the destination state, the shipper must charge tax on their invoice. Basically the destination state is saying that they don't care what other certificate you have, they will only accept a certificate issued from their state. The impact on the retailer is to pay the tax to the shipper. They usually bury this cost in the price of the tangible property when invoicing the end user. Alternatively, the retailer can volunteer to register in the destination state as a reseller. Then they could issue an acceptable resale exemption certificate to the shipper. But watch out. As a consequence of registering in the destination state, the retailer must now collect tax on all sales they make to customers in that state. Since each state makes their own rules, it is important to analyze each state's laws to correctly administer their sales tax provisions when dealing with third party drop-shipments into their states.

Here are some good links regarding sales tax and drop shipping:
http://www.streamlinedsalestax.org/issue_papers/drop%20shipments_ip2.pdf (this link has a lot of very good information)
http://www.salestaxadvisors.com/v4.2/tax/drop/
http://www.salestaxinstitute.com/

In regards to your 2nd question,unfortunately, there do not appear to be any tax benefits from selling these types of products. Finally, you will be able to receive the tax deductibility benefits of donating half of your profits to a non-profit organization. Any taxes which are charged on your products will remain the same because the product is being taxed on its selling price, and it has nothing to do with the actual profit you make from the sale. Therefore, besides doing a wonderful thing and donating half of your profits to a non-profit the other benefit will be the tax deductibility of the donations.

Please let me know if I can be of any further assistance with this matter. Thank you for using Just Answer and please remember to leave feedback after you have clicked the Green Accept button. Have a great week and best of luck with everything.

Edited by Dave on 4/19/2009 at 4:20 PM

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Expert: Dave
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Answered: 4/19/2009

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