So if you go to Amazon.com and buy $50 worth of books, do you calculate what your state sales tax would be on that and pay it when you do your state income taxes? In most states you’re supposed to, but according to articles I’ve read if you don’t you’re in very good (or at least very big) company since between 90% and 98% (depending on the poll) don’t.
So just curious- which of these best describes you?
I do, ever since they started to ask about such purchases on the state income tax return. Since I have to sign my state income tax return, I feel that denying such purchases amounts to perjury and/or tax fraud (although I am not an attorney so perhaps it’s not perjury), and I’d rather not do that.
I live in a state with no state income tax, so it isn’t an issue for me, but I had no idea people in other states had to do that. In my mind it doesn’t make sense - shouldn’t any sales tax and related actions be based on where the company you’re paying is based?
Yes and no. I don’t add up all of my untaxed purchases, but my state tax return allows me to pay a set amount based on my income if I choose not to keep records.
NJ - no sales tax on clothing or things to make clothing (fabric, thread, etc.).
No need to report the taxes on other things, the sales tax is billed on the order. I have, for example, an invoice in front of me for books that I ordered online and the sales tax is noted.
I don’t have one here in Oregon and when I shop across the river in Washington all I have to do is show my Oregon driver’s licence and I don’t have to pay their’s either.
You guys are talking about THE sales tax, right? >.< The 8 dollars extra I have to pay for every 100 that I spend? Knowing that there are states where you don’t have to pay it makes me feel… strangely violated.
Ex-Oregonian here. No sales tax there, but they more than make up for it with state income tax and property tax. I pay less tax per annum in Nevada, which has a 7andchange percent sales tax, but no state income tax. The tourists pay alot of my tax burden, so, thanks for the money; Now get out.
something I heard in a conversation my father was having when I was just a young pup
“Fred got caught by the California Franchise Tax Board for cheating on his sales tax remittance. they tossed his ass in jail.”
“Yup, the franchise tax board makes the IRS look like your best friend. You don’t ever fuck with the Franchise Tax Board.”
:eek:
Words I have never forgotten. If anything I might over pay by $10. just to be sure.
um, I would expect any state department of revenue to be severely harsh on merchants who do not remit sales taxes. They are double cheats - they don’t give the government their due, and they consequently are effectively stealing from customers.
So your father’s example may not necessarily warrant your paranoia, but I get the sentiment nonetheless.
New Jersey has a sales tax on non-food, non-clothing items, and IIRC, the food exemption was only for actual groceries. Dining out on prepared food still had a tax.
New Jersey is also a state where it is not legal to pump your own gas.
As far as online taxes, I leave that up to the website, and report nothing.
Unless you in a hurry and there is one pump jockey working eight gas pumps. Then it can be a bit of a drag.
The state of NC is nice enough to estimate for me based on my income. I run the numbers in my head and it usually seems that I come out ahead using their numbers. It isn’t all that much and I figure putting a zero in there probably increases your chances of an audit by some percentage.