New Sales Tax Amnesty Program For Online Sellers – August to October 2017

According to their website, “the Multistate Tax Commission (MTC) is an intergovernmental state tax agency working on behalf of states and taxpayers to facilitate the equitable and efficient administration of state tax laws.”

In this case, the MTC’s Amazon FBA Sales Tax Amnesty is designed to help Amazon FBA sellers become sales tax compliant, but without facing the fines and penalties they would face due to failing to collecting and remit past due sales tax.

This is seen as a win/win for the states and for Amazon FBA sellers who may not have realized their sales tax liability, or who did realize they have sales tax liability but were worried about becoming compliant due to the fact that they would owe past due sales tax, interest, and other penalties.

With this Amnesty, FBA sellers can simply register for a sales tax permit and begin collecting sales tax. States will not “look back” at previous sales tax liability.

Lasting from August 17 to October 17, this is only the second time in United States history that states have banded together to forgive back taxes. This voluntary disclosure program offers online marketplace sellers that leverage warehouses, such as Amazon’s Fulfillment centers, the opportunity to register for the amnesty program without the penalty of back taxes. Amnesty programs typically only apply to registered taxpayers and limits penalties and interest, but require taxpayers to pay all back taxes owed. In this new program, however, the eligible back taxes will be waived in most states. This program is also unique in that it’s limited to sellers whose only nexus with a state is through inventory in a fulfillment facility or warehouse.

Online businesses that have significant nexus with more than one state may disclose multiple states through the amnesty program. A nexus study can be conducted to determine if a seller has employees, service people or independent sales/service agents or inventory, offices and warehouses. An online seller with multi-state nexus that forgoes registration faces the risk to their finances down the road via back taxes, interest and penalties from numerous states.

To be eligible for the amnesty program the taxpayer must determine if they have not yet:

· registered with the state taxing authority;

· filed returns with such state for the tax type for which the taxpayer is seeking relief; or

· made payments of such taxes to, or had any other prior contact with the state concerning liability or for such tax type.

A taxpayer may apply to a state for voluntary disclosure anonymously and will not be required to disclose its identity to the state until the taxpayer registers with the state and the voluntary disclosure agreement is executed. The taxpayer may choose which state and which tax type for which to seek relief. The taxpayer can also withdraw an application at any time before entering a voluntary disclosure agreement. Businesses can also apply for income/franchise tax amnesty. If the state waives the tax, penalties and interest are automatically waived as well.

The states participating in this initiative will not disclose to other taxing jurisdictions the identity of a taxpayer entering an agreement; however, disclosure may be required by law, court order, or in a response to an inter-government exchange of information agreement.

The biggest question, of course, is this: Is the tax amnesty program right for your business?

Here’s a list of nine frequently asked questions and answers.

1. Who does the tax amnesty impact?

This tax amnesty program is open to all online marketplace sellers, not just FBA sellers. Marketplace sellers are third-party businesses that use a marketplace provider like Amazon or eBay to fulfill orders on their behalf. Marketplace providers typically store a seller’s inventory in warehouses and fulfillment centers in multiple states, and having inventory in a state is one way to establish a sales tax obligation (nexus) with that state.

If you have inventory in a provider’s fulfillment centers and make sales into those states:
You may owe back sales/use or income/franchise taxes to the state where that fulfillment center is located, assuming you aren’t collecting and remitting tax there already.
You’re probably eligible for this tax amnesty program.

If you’ve already been collecting and remitting tax on applicable sales in a state, then you can’t participate in the sales tax amnesty program in that state. However, you may be eligible for income or franchise tax amnesty. The reverse could also be true.

If you have nexus with a state yourself, outside of the connection established through a marketplace provider, you are not eligible to participate in this program.

2. What states are participating?

Here is a map of participating states. Note that the amnesty program is not limited to FBA sellers – it’s open to any online marketplace seller that has inventory in a provider’s warehouse or fulfillment center, or has some other physical connection to a participating state through a provider (like using a provider’s trucks for deliveries)

As of this writing, the following 23 states and the District of Columbia have said they will participate. Most are waiving past taxes without limitations. These are:
Alabama
Arkansas
Connecticut
Florida
Idaho
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Missouri
New Jersey
North Carolina
South Dakota
Oklahoma
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont

The remaining states are offering amnesty with limitations:

  • Colorado will forgive any back sales/use tax, but it won’t waive back tax liability for income tax beyond its normal four-year look-back period.
  • Massachusetts is maintaining a look-back period. Details to be determined.
  • Minnesota is maintaining a look-back period. Details to be determined.
  • Nebraska will consider waiving back sales/use tax and income tax liability.
  • Washington, D.C. will consider a shorter look-back period than its typical three years for both sales/use and income/franchise tax.
  • Wisconsin will require businesses to remit unpaid sales/use and income/franchise tax plus interest going back to Jan. 1, 2015, but will forgive taxes dating from before that date.

The MTC believes this list is complete as of Aug. 17.

3. Do I really have to register and collect sales tax?

States require any business with nexus — a physical presence in the state — to collect and remit sales tax. According to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling*, a state cannot require a business to collect and remit taxes unless it has a physical presence in the state. As a result, states have gotten creative with how they define physical presence. For them, inventory in a marketplace provider’s fulfillment or distribution center is a clear physical presence that triggers an obligation to collect and remit sales tax.

“For marketplace sellers like FBA sellers, the typical business arrangement is for the seller to send inventory to the marketplace fulfillment agent to hold on the seller’s behalf. But, this is property owned by the seller, which creates nexus,” said Diane Yetter of YETTER Tax and the Sales Tax Institute. “States are using the same tools that marketplace sellers use to find their competitors and are tracking down sellers to audit. And when they find you, they will assess back taxes to the date your inventory arrived at the warehouse, which could be years in some cases.”

*Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. (1992)

4. What about income tax?

Nexus rules for income tax vary from state to state. If you have inventory in a state where you make sales, you could also have income tax liability.

5. How does tax amnesty work?

The tax amnesty program is currently set to run Aug. 17–Oct. 17. During that time, if you apply to collect sales tax in a participating state or states, you will not be responsible for paying any unpaid back taxes on sales. You can also apply for income/franchise tax amnesty. If the state waives the tax, penalties and interest are automatically waived as well.

Participating states will work through the Multistate Tax Commission (MTC) Voluntary Disclosure Program. The MTC is a tax agency that works to promote fair tax policies, as well as state and local tax compliance. Since it already runs a multistate voluntary disclosure program, it is well-positioned to oversee this tax amnesty program.

6. What are the risks of participating in the amnesty plan?

Essentially, creating more work for yourself.

If you participate in this voluntary disclosure program, you’ll have to register and begin collecting sales tax in all the states you select by Dec. 1, 2017. Moving forward, you could also have other tax liabilities. States will expect you to collect tax on all sales, not just marketplace sales — something to consider if you also sell and fulfill orders through your own site. This will take time and resources away from other activities, especially if you do tax compliance manually — it’s not uncommon for even a small FBA seller to file in as many as 25 states. That said, filing doesn’t have to be that painful, and many FBA sellers use sales tax software to help.

There’s also the risk of making customers unhappy by charging sales tax. After all, it makes their purchases more expensive (even though they actually owe use tax to the state if sales tax wasn’t collected at checkout). But many would argue it’s better to collect tax from buyers than to be on the line for the tax, plus potential interest and penalties, because if a state audits you in the future and finds that you haven’t been collecting the tax you owe, you’ll be held accountable. Keep in mind, many states will hold a business’s executives personally liable for not remitting sales tax.

7. What are the risks of not participating?

Having to pay the back taxes, penalties, and interest this program would otherwise waive.

An audit by a remote state may seem like a remote threat, and it oftentimes was in the past. But that’s changing. Two states (Minnesota and Washington) have already passed laws to help them collect tax revenue from marketplace sales. Colorado and Washington enacted laws that require out-of-state sellers that don’t collect tax to identify their customers to the state tax authorities. That way, states can go after the customers for use tax. More states may do the same.

Bottom line: It’s going to get harder to fly under the radar of state auditors and easier to miscalculate sales tax obligations. Amazon and other marketplace providers move inventory from warehouse to warehouse at will, making it hard to track where you have nexus. Amazon alone has fulfillment centers in at least 25 states. You may not know your inventory is stored in a state until an auditor comes knocking.

8. What are my other options?

If you haven’t been collecting sales tax or remitting income tax in a state or states where you owe it, you have three options:

  • Don’t collect or remit and hope for the best
  • Participate in a tax amnesty program
  • Take advantage of a voluntary disclosure program

The first option carries risk. In the event you’re audited, you could end up with a punishing bill.

Many states periodically offer tax amnesty programs. Pennsylvania ran one this spring and Virginia will offer one before June 30, 2018. Individual state amnesty programs typically waive penalties and a portion of the interest owed on unpaid back taxes. However, they usually require taxpayers to pay all the taxes they owe during the state look-back period — the length of time a state is allowed to hold a registered taxpayer liable for unpaid taxes. While the minimum for look-back periods is typically three years, in some states the look-back period is significantly longer. For unregistered sellers, look-back periods can be unlimited.

Several states also have voluntary disclosure programs (VDP) designed to encourage non-compliant taxpayers to become compliant. Take Washington as an example. When Washington discovers noncompliant taxpayers through an audit, it may hold them liable for tax, interest, and penalties of 39 percent of the tax due during the past seven years. Participation in Washington’s VDP limits the look-back period and the penalties.

The FBA tax amnesty program could help you become sales tax compliant in multiple states, with minimal penalties and risk.

9. How do I learn more about the tax amnesty program?

To learn more about the tax amnesty program:
Visit the sales tax amnesty and MTC Online Marketplace Seller Voluntary Disclosure Initiativewebsites
Talk with a trusted tax advisor

(source https://www.avalara.com/blog/2017/08/07/fba-sales-tax-amnesty-what-you-need-to-know/)

Table of Contents: New Sales Tax Amnesty Program For Online Sellers – August to October 2017

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