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Your taxable sales only-those from in state buyers who you charged sales tax. (If you do.)
You should be charged the sales tax from the state you live in. I know that if you live in NH and you buy a car in another state you aren't charged any tax because NH doesn't have tax.
Your taxable sales only-those from in state buyers who you charged sales tax. (If you do.)
There is a federal excise tax and a state sales tax.
Remeber that sales tax is a state by state tax so rules vary. Most states will require the same sales tax charged by nonprofits that is charged by for profits. Otherwise, the competition is not fair.
yes
It depends on which state you are in. In Delaware there is no sales tax whatsoever. In New Jersey you are charged 7% sales tax whenever you buy food from a restaurant but you aren't charged when you buy food from a grocery store. Other states may have a sales tax all the way across the board including groceries.
These are given to them by the state. They provide proof of handicap, and then they are issued a plaque if they desire one.
There is no particular website that eliminates sales tax. In most states sales tax is not charged if it is shipped into the state and the retailer doesn't have a store in the state. A few states are different.
Actually, it will depend upon the country and state/province you live in. In the US, you will be charged state sales tax if there an Apple store in your state (meaning the company has a commercial presence in your state). You will not be charged sales tax if the state does not have any (ie. Oregon). In Canada, you will pay the applicable provincial tax and GST (or HST) in the province you live.
Yes, and then when you take it back to your state and license it you will still pay your state sales tax. what if your company buys it out of state and sells it to your mother as a used car does she pay tax as well and at what rate. In most instances you are charged the sales tax rate of the area you live in regardless of where you purchase the vehicle.
Most of the time labor must be itemized separately for you not to be charged sales tax. In cases like where a contractor puts a new roof on a home for $8,000 then sales tax must be charged for the whole amount. If the invoice lists the bill of $4500 for materials and $3500 for labor to put on new shingles then sales tax would only be charged for the material and not for the labor. This is pretty much the law in just about every state.