beppington
Elite Member
The length of this thread already explains why across-state-lines sales tax is problematic to say the least ... I don't think states are even sure how to do it uniformly.
I "think" the answer to the OP is that the NY dealer is correct.
1) My better half sells stuff on the internet out of our home here in FL. She is a total stickler for the rules. When she sells to a person in another state, she does not collect any tax at all. When she sells to a FL buyer, she collects sales tax at the rate for that buyer's county, which varies from county to county. Then, quarterly she makes a tax-collected payment to the State - God knows what they do with it. Certainly they wouldn't know how to distribute it accurately to the counties from which she collected it - She doesn't provide them with such a breakdown list, so they wouldn't even know which counties she collected tax for/ from.
2) The closest AgriSupply location to me is in GA. If I buy something online from AgriSupply, no sales tax. If I visit the store in GA, they charge me their sales tax, even though I'm taking the item right home to my home in FL (did this once with an $1,800 Caroni flail mower). IMO they should charge me no sales tax but inform me that I must pay FL the correct FL sales tax at my county's sales tax rate.
In order for it to change, AgriSupply would have to have an accurate, up-to-date database of the sales tax rate for every county in the US, & have a means of distributing the taxes collected for every county they sold to, to those counties. What a nightmare?
This is all ridiculous to me. But I guess one way to make it enforceable is to have a firm, uniform law, which might require all counties within all states to charge the same tax rate ... & I don't think the Feds have the authority to require that.
I "think" the answer to the OP is that the NY dealer is correct.
1) My better half sells stuff on the internet out of our home here in FL. She is a total stickler for the rules. When she sells to a person in another state, she does not collect any tax at all. When she sells to a FL buyer, she collects sales tax at the rate for that buyer's county, which varies from county to county. Then, quarterly she makes a tax-collected payment to the State - God knows what they do with it. Certainly they wouldn't know how to distribute it accurately to the counties from which she collected it - She doesn't provide them with such a breakdown list, so they wouldn't even know which counties she collected tax for/ from.
2) The closest AgriSupply location to me is in GA. If I buy something online from AgriSupply, no sales tax. If I visit the store in GA, they charge me their sales tax, even though I'm taking the item right home to my home in FL (did this once with an $1,800 Caroni flail mower). IMO they should charge me no sales tax but inform me that I must pay FL the correct FL sales tax at my county's sales tax rate.
In order for it to change, AgriSupply would have to have an accurate, up-to-date database of the sales tax rate for every county in the US, & have a means of distributing the taxes collected for every county they sold to, to those counties. What a nightmare?
This is all ridiculous to me. But I guess one way to make it enforceable is to have a firm, uniform law, which might require all counties within all states to charge the same tax rate ... & I don't think the Feds have the authority to require that.