Don’t Let a Simple Mistake Trigger a Sales Tax Audit

If you’re selling online through Amazon, Etsy, eBay, or other marketplaces, there’s something you need to know right now—because ignoring it could land you in serious trouble with the state taxman.

Since the big court case in 2018 (South Dakota v. Wayfair), every state with a sales tax created rules about when a business must start collecting sales tax. These rules usually depend on how much you sell or how many sales you make into that state. This is called economic nexus. Sounds simple, right?

Here’s the catch: some states count your marketplace sales toward this limit, and some don’t. If you’re not paying attention, you might cross a threshold without realizing it—making you liable for taxes (and even audits) without knowing you were on the hook.

Let’s break it down in plain English.

Economic Nexus

Economic nexus means a state can make your business collect and send in sales tax—even if your business is in another state—once you sell a certain amount there.

Each state has its own limit. Most use $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions in a year (some states use higher limits or only count money, not transactions).

Now, here’s the key question…

Do Marketplace Sales Count Toward That Limit?

Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. And this is where things get risky if you don’t know which is which.

If your sales through Amazon, Etsy, or another platform count toward the threshold, and you go over it—even if you didn’t make a single sale on your own website—you may still need to register with that state.

If your marketplace sales don’t count, then you’re only on the hook for direct sales (like through your own website).

Let’s look at what the states actually say.

States That Do Count Marketplace Sales

Here are some examples of states that include your Amazon, Etsy, or other marketplace sales when measuring your total sales:

  • Alaska (local jurisdictions) – Alaska has no statewide sales tax, but many local municipalities adopt a uniform code with a $100,000 threshold. Marketplace sales are included in that local threshold calculation. (Alaska’s local code treats marketplace sales as part of the seller’s gross sales for nexus purposes.)
  • California – Uses a $500,000 sales threshold. All sales of tangible personal property into CA count toward this threshold, including wholesale/resale and marketplace-facilitated sales. (Only sales of services are excluded, since services are generally not taxable in CA.)
  • Connecticut – Has a dual threshold (>$100,000 and 200 transactions in the prior 12 months). CT includes marketplace platform sales toward both the sales and transaction counts for determining nexus.
  • District of Columbia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Marketplace sales count toward the threshold in D.C., even if the marketplace facilitator is collecting the tax.
  • Hawaii – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Hawaii counts marketplace sales toward its threshold. (All gross sales – taxable or exempt – are counted in HI’s threshold, including those via marketplaces.)
  • Idaho – Threshold: $100,000. Idaho counts gross sales from all channels, including marketplace-facilitated sales, toward the nexus threshold.
  • Iowa – Threshold: $100,000. Marketplace sales are included in Iowa’s threshold calculation. (Iowa removed its transaction threshold in 2019, but continues to count all gross revenue including marketplace sales.)
  • Kansas – Threshold: $100,000. Kansas counts all sales made through marketplaces toward a seller’s threshold. (Kansas’ law specifies including marketplace sales in gross sales; for marketplace facilitators themselves, the threshold is measured on taxable sales, but for marketplace sellers, all sales count.)
  • Kentucky – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Kentucky includes marketplace platform sales in the seller’s threshold determination.
  • Maryland – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Maryland counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward the $100k/200 transaction nexus threshold.
  • Michigan – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Marketplace sales are included in Michigan’s threshold calculation.
  • Minnesota – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Minnesota counts marketplace sales as part of the retail sales total for nexus.
  • Missouri – Threshold: $100,000 (effective 1/1/2023). Missouri’s law explicitly bases the threshold on all taxable sales into Missouri, including sales made through a marketplace. (However, if a seller’s only Missouri sales are via a marketplace that is already collecting Missouri tax, the seller is not required to register or remit – see Special Notes below.)
  • Nebraska – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Nebraska counts retail sales from all channels, including marketplace sales, in the threshold.
  • Nevada – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Nevada includes marketplace platform sales in the threshold calculation.
  • New Jersey – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. New Jersey counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward its threshold as part of the seller’s gross sales.
  • New York – Threshold: $500,000 and 100 transactions (four prior quarters). NY includes marketplace sales in a seller’s gross receipts tally for determining economic nexus. (NY does not exclude marketplace facilitator sales when measuring the $500k/100 txn threshold.)
  • North Carolina – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2024). NC counts gross sales from all channels – including marketplace-facilitated sales – toward the threshold.
  • Ohio – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Ohio includes sales made via marketplaces in the threshold (Ohio clarified that “retail sales” for nexus include marketplace sales).
  • Pennsylvania – Threshold: $100,000. PA measures “gross sales on all channels including taxable, exempt, and marketplace sales” when determining if a remote seller exceeds its threshold. (This means all sales into PA – even those where a marketplace collects the tax – count toward the $100k nexus threshold.)
  • Rhode Island – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Rhode Island counts marketplace platform sales in determining if the threshold is met.
  • South Carolina – Threshold: $100,000. South Carolina includes marketplace sales when measuring a seller’s sales for nexus.
  • South Dakota – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2023). SD counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward the $100k threshold.
  • Texas – Threshold: $500,000. Texas’s threshold covers total Texas revenue including taxable, exempt, and marketplace sales.
  • Vermont – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Vermont counts marketplace sales toward its nexus threshold (all sales of tangible property/services, including those via facilitators).
  • Washington – Threshold: $100,000. Washington’s threshold includes sales made through marketplace facilitators as part of a seller’s gross income. (Notably, WA guidance indicates if a seller makes all its Washington sales via marketplaces, the marketplace sales are counted but the seller may not be required to register – see Special Notes below.)
  • West Virginia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. WV counts marketplace platform sales in its threshold calculation.
  • Wisconsin – Threshold: $100,000. Wisconsin includes marketplace-facilitated sales in determining if a seller exceeds $100k. However, if all of a seller’s Wisconsin sales are through a marketplace that collects tax, the seller is not required to register. (In practice, a purely marketplace seller in WI won’t need to file, but if the seller has any direct sales and total sales including marketplace exceed $100k, the seller must register for Wisconsin sales tax.)

Most states now include marketplace sales. That means if you’re doing a good amount of business on Amazon or Etsy, you could be hitting nexus limits in multiple states without realizing it.

States That Do Not Count Marketplace Sales

Here’s the good news: some states don’t count marketplace sales against your threshold. That means if all your sales are through a platform that collects sales tax (like Amazon or Etsy), you may not have to register in these states at all.

  • Alabama – Threshold: $250,000 (annual retail sales). Alabama excludes sales made through a marketplace facilitator from a seller’s threshold calculation. (Only the seller’s own retail sales count; marketplace sales are not included.)
  • Arizona – Threshold: $100,000 (from 2021 onward). Arizona’s threshold excludes anysales made on a marketplace platform where the facilitator is collecting tax. (All other sales, including exempt/tangible sales, count, but marketplace sales do not count toward the $100k.)
  • Arkansas – Threshold: $100,000. Arkansas counts only a seller’s taxable sales and explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the threshold determination.
  • Colorado – Threshold: $100,000. Colorado does not count marketplace facilitator sales in a seller’s threshold; those are excluded from the “retail sales” total for nexus.
  • Florida – Threshold: $100,000. Florida’s 2021 law excludes marketplace sales from the threshold calculation. (Only a seller’s direct taxable sales count toward FL’s $100k; marketplace-collected sales are ignored for nexus.)
  • Georgia – Threshold: $100,000 (or 200 transactions). Georgia excludes marketplace platform sales from the seller’s threshold count.
  • Illinois – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Illinois excludes marketplace-facilitated sales (where the facilitator collects) from a seller’s threshold tally. Only the seller’s direct Illinois sales (including exempt tangible property sales) count.
  • Indiana – Threshold: $100,000. Indiana excludes marketplace sales from the threshold – “marketplace sales are excluded” per Indiana’s rule.
  • Louisiana – Threshold: $100,000. Louisiana counts gross sales but explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the economic nexus threshold for individual sellers. (LA remote sellers only count their direct sales; marketplace facilitators have their own obligations.)
  • Maine – Threshold: $100,000. Maine excludes marketplace sales from a seller’s threshold and instructs that sellers not include marketplace-collected sales on their returns. (Only the seller’s direct retail sales count toward Maine’s threshold.)
  • Massachusetts – Threshold: $100,000. Massachusetts excludes any sales made via a marketplace facilitator (that is collecting tax) from the seller’s threshold calculation. In other words, marketplace sales do not count toward the $100k nexus threshold in MA if the marketplace is collecting the tax on those sales.
  • Mississippi – Threshold: $250,000. Mississippi’s law considers marketplace-facilitated sales to be the marketplace’s sales, not the individual seller’s. Thus, a seller’s marketplace sales are not counted toward the $250k threshold. (Only the seller’s direct sales into MS count for nexus.)
  • New Mexico – Threshold: $100,000. New Mexico does not count marketplace sales toward a remote seller’s threshold. Marketplace-facilitated sales are treated as having been made by the facilitator, so the individual seller’s threshold only includes its direct taxable retail sales.
  • North Dakota – Threshold: $100,000. North Dakota excludes marketplace platform sales from a seller’s threshold calculation. (ND counts only the seller’s taxable sales; all marketplace-fulfilled sales are excluded.)
  • Oklahoma – Threshold: $100,000. Oklahoma’s threshold excludes all marketplace sales where a facilitator collects on the seller’s behalf. (Only the seller’s direct sales of taxable items count toward OK’s threshold.)
  • Tennessee – Threshold: $100,000. Since October 1, 2020, TN’s nexus rule explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the threshold. (Tennessee originally counted all retail sales, but a 2020 law change removed marketplace-facilitated sales from the seller’s nexus calculations.)
  • Utah – Threshold: $100,000 (200 transactions removed in 2025). Utah excludes sales made on marketplace platforms from a seller’s threshold count.
  • Virginia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Virginia’s threshold counts a seller’s retail sales but excludes any marketplace-facilitated sales.
  • Wyoming – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2024). Wyoming does not count marketplace sales toward a seller’s threshold. (All marketplace sales are excluded from the seller’s total when determining if the $100k is met.)

So if you’re only selling through a marketplace in these states, you’re likely safe….. for now.

Special Cases 

Some states say: Yes, marketplace sales count toward your threshold, but if you don’t make any direct sales, you don’t have to register.

  • Exclusive Marketplace Sellers: In states that include marketplace sales in the threshold, a seller who sells only via marketplaces might technically exceed the threshold but still have no direct tax to remit (since the marketplace is collecting). Many such states provide relief from registration if all sales are marketplace-fulfilled. For example, Wisconsin and Washington both count marketplace sales in the $100k threshold, but each notes that a seller with no direct sales (all sales through registered marketplaces) is not required to register or file. Missouri has a similar rule: it counts marketplace sales in determining if the $100k threshold is met, but a seller who only sells via marketplaces doesn’t need to register unless they also make direct sales.

But beware….. the rules change often. And if you make even one direct sale, or start selling on your own site, everything changes.

What Should You Do?

If you’re selling on marketplaces and think you might be close to—or already over—one of these state limits, don’t guess.

The cost of getting this wrong isn’t just a slap on the wrist. You could face an audit and states can come after you for back taxes, penalties, and interest. 

Protect Yourself from an Audit – Get a Free Nexus Study Worksheet

If you sell online and you’re not 100% sure which states you need to register in, it’s time to get clarity. With over 30 states counting marketplace sales—and others not—it’s easy to make a costly mistake.

👉Download the Self-Serve Nexus Study Worksheet -or- Request a free consultation today and let’s review your marketplace sales, state-by-state. We’ll help you figure out exactly where you stand—and what, if anything, you need to do.

Don’t wait for a surprise letter in the mail. Stay ahead of the states. Stay safe.

[Book Your Free Consultation Now]

Don’t Let a Simple Mistake Trigger a Sales Tax Audit

If you’re selling online through Amazon, Etsy, eBay, or other marketplaces, there’s something you need to know right now—because ignoring it could land you in serious trouble with the state taxman.

Since the big court case in 2018 (South Dakota v. Wayfair), every state with a sales tax created rules about when a business must start collecting sales tax. These rules usually depend on how much you sell or how many sales you make into that state. This is called economic nexus. Sounds simple, right?

Here’s the catch: some states count your marketplace sales toward this limit, and some don’t. If you’re not paying attention, you might cross a threshold without realizing it—making you liable for taxes (and even audits) without knowing you were on the hook.

Let’s break it down in plain English.

Economic Nexus

Economic nexus means a state can make your business collect and send in sales tax—even if your business is in another state—once you sell a certain amount there.

Each state has its own limit. Most use $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions in a year (some states use higher limits or only count money, not transactions).

Now, here’s the key question…

Do Marketplace Sales Count Toward That Limit?

Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. And this is where things get risky if you don’t know which is which.

If your sales through Amazon, Etsy, or another platform count toward the threshold, and you go over it—even if you didn’t make a single sale on your own website—you may still need to register with that state.

If your marketplace sales don’t count, then you’re only on the hook for direct sales (like through your own website).

Let’s look at what the states actually say.

States That Do Count Marketplace Sales

Here are some examples of states that include your Amazon, Etsy, or other marketplace sales when measuring your total sales:

  • Alaska (local jurisdictions) – Alaska has no statewide sales tax, but many local municipalities adopt a uniform code with a $100,000 threshold. Marketplace sales are included in that local threshold calculation. (Alaska’s local code treats marketplace sales as part of the seller’s gross sales for nexus purposes.)
  • California – Uses a $500,000 sales threshold. All sales of tangible personal property into CA count toward this threshold, including wholesale/resale and marketplace-facilitated sales. (Only sales of services are excluded, since services are generally not taxable in CA.)
  • Connecticut – Has a dual threshold (>$100,000 and 200 transactions in the prior 12 months). CT includes marketplace platform sales toward both the sales and transaction counts for determining nexus.
  • District of Columbia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Marketplace sales count toward the threshold in D.C., even if the marketplace facilitator is collecting the tax.
  • Hawaii – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Hawaii counts marketplace sales toward its threshold. (All gross sales – taxable or exempt – are counted in HI’s threshold, including those via marketplaces.)
  • Idaho – Threshold: $100,000. Idaho counts gross sales from all channels, including marketplace-facilitated sales, toward the nexus threshold.
  • Iowa – Threshold: $100,000. Marketplace sales are included in Iowa’s threshold calculation. (Iowa removed its transaction threshold in 2019, but continues to count all gross revenue including marketplace sales.)
  • Kansas – Threshold: $100,000. Kansas counts all sales made through marketplaces toward a seller’s threshold. (Kansas’ law specifies including marketplace sales in gross sales; for marketplace facilitators themselves, the threshold is measured on taxable sales, but for marketplace sellers, all sales count.)
  • Kentucky – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Kentucky includes marketplace platform sales in the seller’s threshold determination.
  • Maryland – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Maryland counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward the $100k/200 transaction nexus threshold.
  • Michigan – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Marketplace sales are included in Michigan’s threshold calculation.
  • Minnesota – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Minnesota counts marketplace sales as part of the retail sales total for nexus.
  • Missouri – Threshold: $100,000 (effective 1/1/2023). Missouri’s law explicitly bases the threshold on all taxable sales into Missouri, including sales made through a marketplace. (However, if a seller’s only Missouri sales are via a marketplace that is already collecting Missouri tax, the seller is not required to register or remit – see Special Notes below.)
  • Nebraska – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Nebraska counts retail sales from all channels, including marketplace sales, in the threshold.
  • Nevada – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Nevada includes marketplace platform sales in the threshold calculation.
  • New Jersey – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. New Jersey counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward its threshold as part of the seller’s gross sales.
  • New York – Threshold: $500,000 and 100 transactions (four prior quarters). NY includes marketplace sales in a seller’s gross receipts tally for determining economic nexus. (NY does not exclude marketplace facilitator sales when measuring the $500k/100 txn threshold.)
  • North Carolina – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2024). NC counts gross sales from all channels – including marketplace-facilitated sales – toward the threshold.
  • Ohio – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Ohio includes sales made via marketplaces in the threshold (Ohio clarified that “retail sales” for nexus include marketplace sales).
  • Pennsylvania – Threshold: $100,000. PA measures “gross sales on all channels including taxable, exempt, and marketplace sales” when determining if a remote seller exceeds its threshold. (This means all sales into PA – even those where a marketplace collects the tax – count toward the $100k nexus threshold.)
  • Rhode Island – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Rhode Island counts marketplace platform sales in determining if the threshold is met.
  • South Carolina – Threshold: $100,000. South Carolina includes marketplace sales when measuring a seller’s sales for nexus.
  • South Dakota – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2023). SD counts marketplace-facilitated sales toward the $100k threshold.
  • Texas – Threshold: $500,000. Texas’s threshold covers total Texas revenue including taxable, exempt, and marketplace sales.
  • Vermont – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Vermont counts marketplace sales toward its nexus threshold (all sales of tangible property/services, including those via facilitators).
  • Washington – Threshold: $100,000. Washington’s threshold includes sales made through marketplace facilitators as part of a seller’s gross income. (Notably, WA guidance indicates if a seller makes all its Washington sales via marketplaces, the marketplace sales are counted but the seller may not be required to register – see Special Notes below.)
  • West Virginia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. WV counts marketplace platform sales in its threshold calculation.
  • Wisconsin – Threshold: $100,000. Wisconsin includes marketplace-facilitated sales in determining if a seller exceeds $100k. However, if all of a seller’s Wisconsin sales are through a marketplace that collects tax, the seller is not required to register. (In practice, a purely marketplace seller in WI won’t need to file, but if the seller has any direct sales and total sales including marketplace exceed $100k, the seller must register for Wisconsin sales tax.)

Most states now include marketplace sales. That means if you’re doing a good amount of business on Amazon or Etsy, you could be hitting nexus limits in multiple states without realizing it.

States That Do Not Count Marketplace Sales

Here’s the good news: some states don’t count marketplace sales against your threshold. That means if all your sales are through a platform that collects sales tax (like Amazon or Etsy), you may not have to register in these states at all.

  • Alabama – Threshold: $250,000 (annual retail sales). Alabama excludes sales made through a marketplace facilitator from a seller’s threshold calculation. (Only the seller’s own retail sales count; marketplace sales are not included.)
  • Arizona – Threshold: $100,000 (from 2021 onward). Arizona’s threshold excludes any sales made on a marketplace platform where the facilitator is collecting tax. (All other sales, including exempt/tangible sales, count, but marketplace sales do not count toward the $100k.)
  • Arkansas – Threshold: $100,000. Arkansas counts only a seller’s taxable sales and explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the threshold determination.
  • Colorado – Threshold: $100,000. Colorado does not count marketplace facilitator sales in a seller’s threshold; those are excluded from the “retail sales” total for nexus.
  • Florida – Threshold: $100,000. Florida’s 2021 law excludes marketplace sales from the threshold calculation. (Only a seller’s direct taxable sales count toward FL’s $100k; marketplace-collected sales are ignored for nexus.)
  • Georgia – Threshold: $100,000 (or 200 transactions). Georgia excludes marketplace platform sales from the seller’s threshold count.
  • Illinois – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Illinois excludes marketplace-facilitated sales (where the facilitator collects) from a seller’s threshold tally. Only the seller’s direct Illinois sales (including exempt tangible property sales) count.
  • Indiana – Threshold: $100,000. Indiana excludes marketplace sales from the threshold – “marketplace sales are excluded” per Indiana’s rule.
  • Louisiana – Threshold: $100,000. Louisiana counts gross sales but explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the economic nexus threshold for individual sellers. (LA remote sellers only count their direct sales; marketplace facilitators have their own obligations.)
  • Maine – Threshold: $100,000. Maine excludes marketplace sales from a seller’s threshold and instructs that sellers not include marketplace-collected sales on their returns. (Only the seller’s direct retail sales count toward Maine’s threshold.)
  • Massachusetts – Threshold: $100,000. Massachusetts excludes any sales made via a marketplace facilitator (that is collecting tax) from the seller’s threshold calculation. In other words, marketplace sales do not count toward the $100k nexus threshold in MA if the marketplace is collecting the tax on those sales.
  • Mississippi – Threshold: $250,000. Mississippi’s law considers marketplace-facilitated sales to be the marketplace’s sales, not the individual seller’s. Thus, a seller’s marketplace sales are not counted toward the $250k threshold. (Only the seller’s direct sales into MS count for nexus.)
  • New Mexico – Threshold: $100,000. New Mexico does not count marketplace sales toward a remote seller’s threshold. Marketplace-facilitated sales are treated as having been made by the facilitator, so the individual seller’s threshold only includes its direct taxable retail sales.
  • North Dakota – Threshold: $100,000. North Dakota excludes marketplace platform sales from a seller’s threshold calculation. (ND counts only the seller’s taxable sales; all marketplace-fulfilled sales are excluded.)
  • Oklahoma – Threshold: $100,000. Oklahoma’s threshold excludes all marketplace sales where a facilitator collects on the seller’s behalf. (Only the seller’s direct sales of taxable items count toward OK’s threshold.)
  • Tennessee – Threshold: $100,000. Since October 1, 2020, TN’s nexus rule explicitly excludes marketplace sales from the threshold. (Tennessee originally counted all retail sales, but a 2020 law change removed marketplace-facilitated sales from the seller’s nexus calculations.)
  • Utah – Threshold: $100,000 (200 transactions removed in 2025). Utah excludes sales made on marketplace platforms from a seller’s threshold count.
  • Virginia – Threshold: $100,000 or 200 transactions. Virginia’s threshold counts a seller’s retail sales but excludes any marketplace-facilitated sales.
  • Wyoming – Threshold: $100,000 (transactions threshold removed in 2024). Wyoming does not count marketplace sales toward a seller’s threshold. (All marketplace sales are excluded from the seller’s total when determining if the $100k is met.)

So if you’re only selling through a marketplace in these states, you’re likely safe….. for now.

Special Cases 

Some states say: Yes, marketplace sales count toward your threshold, but if you don’t make any direct sales, you don’t have to register.

  • Exclusive Marketplace Sellers: In states that include marketplace sales in the threshold, a seller who sells only via marketplaces might technically exceed the threshold but still have no direct tax to remit (since the marketplace is collecting). Many such states provide relief from registration if all sales are marketplace-fulfilled. For example, Wisconsin and Washington both count marketplace sales in the $100k threshold, but each notes that a seller with no direct sales (all sales through registered marketplaces) is not required to register or file. Missouri has a similar rule: it counts marketplace sales in determining if the $100k threshold is met, but a seller who only sells via marketplaces doesn’t need to register unless they also make direct sales.

But beware….. the rules change often. And if you make even one direct sale, or start selling on your own site, everything changes.

What Should You Do?

If you’re selling on marketplaces and think you might be close to—or already over—one of these state limits, don’t guess.

The cost of getting this wrong isn’t just a slap on the wrist. You could face an audit and states can come after you for back taxes, penalties, and interest. 

Protect Yourself from an Audit – Get a Free Nexus Study Worksheet

If you sell online and you’re not 100% sure which states you need to register in, it’s time to get clarity. With over 30 states counting marketplace sales—and others not—it’s easy to make a costly mistake.

👉Download the Self-Serve Nexus Study Worksheet -or- Request a free consultation today and let’s review your marketplace sales, state-by-state. We’ll help you figure out exactly where you stand—and what, if anything, you need to do.

Don’t wait for a surprise letter in the mail. Stay ahead of the states. Stay safe.

[Book Your Free Consultation Now]

About the Author salestaxology

Share your thoughts
{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Free!

Book [Your Subject] Class!

Your first class is 100% free. Click the button below to get started!