Amazon Charges Sales Tax On "Shipping and Handling" 330
You may have noticed that retailers like Amazon are charging tax, in compliance with state laws, on not just the price of goods, but on the "shipping and handling" fees they charge. An anonymous reader writes "By coincidence I noticed this myself the other night, and ended up ordering something from a supplier in Arizona, rather than Amazon, to avoid the sales tax. Now here is an article about it in the Los Angeles Times."
Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Informative)
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Yes, continue to support a company that has shown it will gouge you all it can. Brilliant plan.
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$80 a year for "free" books and streaming media and 2 day shipping is gouging?
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Informative)
> Don't forget unlimited $4 overnight. Do that once with a computer case and it pays for itself.
Or a generator. I have friends who literally bought a generator with prime shipping as a hurricane was making landfall, and had the generator on their front porch the following afternoon (obviously, they lived in an area where the power lines went down, but there was no major flooding or destruction).
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Insightful)
But if you dont do it the y PUNISH you by delaying when your package ships. I have had orders sit unshipped for 5 days with them, when I ask about it I was told that "to avoid this get a prime membership"
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not punishing, it's exactly what they told you they would do. If you choose free shipping, they say your stuff will be delivered in 5 to 8 business days. Given the abundance of their warehouses and ridiculously low shipping times, you should have received your order within 8 business days, so, they were within their right to delay your order to get more profitable (paid shipping and prime) orders out of door first. If you didn't get it on time, that's a different story.
Then pay for faster shipping (Score:5, Informative)
Their shipping rates are competitive with other online companies. You seem to be complaining that they won't both comp you shipping and do it quickly. Well given that I don't know anyone else that does that, it seems reasonable they don't. Amazon just offers lots of options:
1) Free shipping that is slow. They note it can take a number of days. However, you don't have to pay anything extra for it.
2) Per shipment faster paid shipping. They have all the regular options, up to next day. You pay based on size and weight, like with most retailers, and get your shipment in the specified time.
3) Prime. Yo pay a yearly fee to get two day shipping on all items (even pretty large and heavy ones) and have the option to upgrade any item to one day for $4/item. Often even the 2 day items arrive in one day, though they don't guarantee it.
Sounds damn reasonable to me.
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Exactly. Instead of shopping online at Amazon (where the supplier of the Amazon-fulfilled shipment is often a small business or mom and pop), make sure to shop locally, at mom and pop shops that still exist, like Walmart, Best Buy, or Target.
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Prime streaming got better with the Epix deal. Regardless, it's similar content to Netflix in terms of "recent" movies (Netflix still has a wider selection of older movies -- plus the physical library you have access to with Netflix).
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The free books and streaming media collection suck, they are worthless.
Huh... I guess all of those TV series we have been watching for half a year have just been a waste of time. So glad you told me...
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Interesting)
There is some very good television out there and the fact that they are watching it on Prime instead of live makes me think they aren't watching Honey Boo Boo. Nothing wrong with opting for leisure (and maybe opening up discussion topics) over spending every waking hour trying to make money.
Would it be a problem if they spent that same time playing WoW or reading a book?
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Interesting)
At the end of your live, when you're on you deathbed and ready to breath your final breath, do you regret not working more or do you regret not taking more time off?
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Insightful)
Two day shipping is a convenience, but not worth it to a lot of people. It is for me, even if I opt for standard shipping,
You're forgetting the important part: not only is it 2 day shipping, but it's also "free"; as in, no cost other than the cost of the prime membership for prime eligible items.
As long as you would normally make 12 orders a year from Amazon, with approximately $7.00 regular shipping per order (approximately 1 order a month); then Prime is a good economic choice.
More so, if you regularly paid extra per order for expedited shipping. More so if you have sales taxes in there.
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Interesting)
The existence of Prime shipping is a game-changer to someone who lives in a place that gets hurricanes, because it enables you to buy things with overnight or 2-day shipping that would be cost-prohibitive to buy from them if you had to actually pay full price for that shipping. I don't even bother fighting the zoo at Home Depot, Target, or Sam's Club anymore before hurricanes... I just buy everything from Amazon, and come home from work to a pile of hurricane supplies waiting on my front doorstep the next day, a few hours before the hurricane makes landfall. Prime shipping is the whole reason why I now buy things like cat food, batteries, and lawnmower parts from Amazon, as opposed to books. Even places that offer free shipping can't compete, because THEY only offer free GROUND shipping, and if you want it upgraded to 2-day or next-day, you get hit with the full cost. With Amazon, 2-day is free, and overnight is only a few dollars more.
I just wish Amazon had a search option for "Only show me items that can be shipped in time to receive tomorrow". If there's any consistent logic to their cutoff times for same-day shipping, I have yet to figure out what it is. Sometimes it seems to be as late as 8:30pm, sometimes it seems to be 4pm, and it doesn't just seem to vary by warehouse... it literally seems to be a matter of blind, random good or bad luck that changes daily with no apparent rhyme or reason. Saturday and Sunday delivery are even more randomly variable. Few things are more frustrating than trying to do last-minute birthday present shopping on Friday as the deadlines are ticking away, and you can't even figure out what the deadlines ARE without clicking on the item and scrolling down. I swear to god, I'm going to write a program to do brute-force scraped-searches on Amazon called "OnlyTomorrow" that spoofs a browser, executes your search, then fetches the items and brute-force eliminates any that can't ship in time or that don't literally include the requested keywords in the title/description (my other pet peeve about Amazon... sometimes, its signal-to-noise ratio for searches is just horrendous, and the SNR seems to be the absolute WORST when you're panic-buying and desperately trying to beat the same-day shipping deadline).
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I like prime myself, I shop a lot online. But for a lot of people it is price gouging. The free books and streaming media collection suck, they are worthless. Two day shipping is a convenience, but not worth it to a lot of people. It is for me, even if I opt for standard shipping, Amazon ships though OnTrac, which is usually 1 day shipping.
That's not price gouging. That's something that is for some people and not for others. To me, the streaming is as good as Netflix for my kids. I buy enough that the shipping is a great deal for me. But it's not "price gouging" [wikipedia.org].
Considering Amazon's normal two-day rates [amazon.com] which are in the $6 to $12 range typically, if you want fast shipping and buy half a dozen items a year, it's a good deal at $80 even if you never stream any video.
If you pay $80 and buy one thing, once, that's not price gouging, that's
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You do realize that amazon doesn't get to keep the sales tax, right?
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Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:5, Informative)
In many states, companies that collect sales tax are allowed to keep a portion of the tax collected. In fact, they HAVE to keep a portion of the tax collected to remain compliant with most state laws. It's just a fraction, but it is meant to "reimburse" the company for going through the trouble to collect the tax in the first place. If tax is collected when it wasn't due, then the retailer is supposed to refund that money back to the customer. If you buy from a retailer that doesn't charge you sales tax then it is presumed to be your duty to files a state sales tax return to "voluntarily" pay the sales tax yourself directly. Technically you could save a fraction of a fraction by setting up yourself or your company as "self pay" for sales tax. You'll typically need a certificate and a statement, then you can buy tax free and file your own state sales tax return. I've known a few companies that do this, as it can make sense both to save a small portion (the amount the retailer would get to keep) and to keep your company compliant when so many retailers do not collect sales tax or charge the right amount. Staying on top of what percent tax is for each and every zip code and for each and every type of product for each and every state and territory can get even big online retailers bogged down.
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s/company/state/
You do realize that amazon doesn't get to keep the sales tax, right?
After they add all the sales together and pay the state whatever the sales tax percentage is on the total, there's probably some left over.
Long ago in a childhood far away when there were such things as 10 cent candy bars and comic books, NC had a 3% sales tax.
Buy a candy bar and a comic book, pay 21 cents.
Do it 5 times, pay $1.05
Store reports $1.00 in sales to state, pays them 3 cents, keeps 2.
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Interesting)
It's possible that North Carolina is different than the Midwestern states which I'm familiar with, but I doubt it.
Re:Buy Amazon Prime. (Score:4, Informative)
Further, ALL collected sales taxes, whether lawfully, legally collected or not, or even ifthey are collected in error, MUST be remitted to the state.
Shipping and handling is exempt from sales tax in California but if it is collected, it MUST be sent to California. If they don't, it is tax fraud and they could face stiff penalties, and lose their reseller's permit, preventing them from selling to California addresses.
A lot of businesses collect sales tax for all sales, including tax-exempt sales. Do they remit those taxes? Probably not.
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FALSE. Or at least potentially false. All California sales tax paid by Amazon will be directed to Patterson and San Bernardino where Amazon is building warehouses. These cities are/were planning to rebate 75%-80% of the sales back to Amazon.
From the LA Times:
"San Bernardino and Patterson, where the centers will be located, will gain not only jobs but also a tax bonanza: Sales to Amazon customers throughout California will be deemed to take place there, so all the sales tax earmarked for local government operations will go to those two cities....
[Patterson] City Manager Rod Butler said the city is considering rebating as much as 75% of its share of sales-tax revenues to Amazon. He reasons that even a reduced share of those taxes would enable the city to balance its budget and pay for city parks, streets and garbage collection....
San Bernardino, meanwhile, is working on an agreement with Amazon that would give the retailer as much as 80% of its share of sales taxes in the first few years, according to city spokesman Jim Morris."
California lawmakers have ensured that Californians pay more for everything on Amazon, and that Amazon gets to keep the money as extra profit. Can't legislators just leave us alone? :P
Source:
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/may/19/business/la-fi-amazon-
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All California sales tax paid by Amazon will be directed to Patterson and San Bernardino where Amazon is building warehouses. These cities are/were planning to rebate 75%-80% of the sales back to Amazon.
Hey, it's to encourage Amazon to create all these warehouse jobs in the state:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KRjuuEVEZs [youtube.com]
BTW, I think it shouldn't be too difficult to eventually replace the human's job in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWNuaPE4DTc [youtube.com]
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The share they are allowed to keep is minuscule. In Arizona it's apx 0.1% of sales tax collected. It's been a few years since I ran my business so I'm sure the numbers have changed a bit - sorry for a non-exact figure.
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Huh? Not sure what you're talking about.
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That's a an interesting point (Score:3)
I wonder if you also have to pay tax on Prime? It's main function is to cover shipping & handling for all orders, I cannot see why it would not count. But since it's not part of any one order, perhaps it does not..
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I wonder if you also have to pay tax on Prime? It's main function is to cover shipping & handling for all orders, I cannot see why it would not count. But since it's not part of any one order, perhaps it does not..
Yes, you pay sales tax on Prime subscription (I subscribed just after my state's "agreement" with Amazon kicked in and was charged). It is an order in itself.
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I don't know. I just tried to order something and during the checkout process there was NO tax added. I am using Amazon Prime. I wonder if Amazon will lower its prices if it ends up charging taxes. I am a democrat and am not opposed to more taxes. In a way more taxes could help things.
Here's how I see it. Amazon is all of a sudden forced to charge sales tax on out of state purchases, while it'll be a few years before smaller businesses will have to charge sales tax. Meanwhile, some people will floc
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Problem solved.
Except you end up paying sales tax on the prime subscription. OTOH you probably would be expected to pay 'use tax' if sales tax isn't charged so the only difference (assuming your tax return is a true statement) is whether you pay when you order or pay in April.
Either way, the state gets its cut.
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Amazon Prime is useful for those who buy a lot from Amazon. Not good for those who rarely buys from Amazon like me. :(
Is shipping (Score:2)
not a sale for a service?
I pay sales tax when I get my oil changed for both the oil and the labor.
Was the handling charge really for handling ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Was the handling charge really for handling ... (Score:4, Informative)
This is why the EU has a value added tax. It doesn't matter how the value was added to the product, it's taxable. This conceptually makes sense if you consider the basic unit of value is labour - labour is used to extract the resources that make things, and to convert the resources into other things. So any use of labour can be taxed.
In north america we have various 'goods' taxes, (usually provincial or state taxes), but some are goods and services taxes. Varies a lot by place.
where do they bill you for labor on a oil change? (Score:2)
where do they bill you for labor on a oil change? The dealer??
The lube places have a flat fee or do they brake it down in to labor and oil cost??
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In California at least:
Charges for shipping (what I am charged by the courier, and an approximate cost of packaging materials) are not considered as part of the sale, and I am not required to collect sales tax.
Charges for handling (additional charges beyond the courier and packaging materials) are considered as part of the sale (as they are part of my business income), and I am required to collect sales tax.
A shipping and handling charge is taxable as it does not differentiate the taxable amount from the no
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ok tinfoil, if you are not paying for a service ...
why are there so many dumb fucks on slashdot?
Re:Is shipping (Score:5, Funny)
Mostly because Slashot's green color is lead paint, and all these screen lickers are getting lead poisoning.
Re:Is shipping (Score:5, Informative)
You are a special kind of stupid.
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Just make sure you don't grow your own grain to feed your own chickens
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=roscoe%20filburn&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&ved=0CB4QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FWickard_v._Filburn&ei=lzSXUM__MMSW2AWLkIHIAw&usg=AFQjCNFN0flFjCoNo0rtuaegJoAYE5VStQ [google.com]
Or use vegetable oil to power your diesel engine without paying your fuel tax
http://herald-review.com/news/local/article_5dae2327-a3cb-5bba-ac4c-14dac3b83327.html [herald-review.com]
sales tax is always on the FULL PRICE (Score:4, Informative)
in some states you even have to pay sales tax on the full $649 price of a smart phone
sales tax is on GOODS AND SERVICES
are slashdotters really that dumb not to realize this?
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Not in California, which is where the buyer was.
http://www.boe.ca.gov/pdf/pub100.pdf [ca.gov]
Re:sales tax is always on the FULL PRICE (Score:5, Insightful)
And now you see why small businesses don't like to have to collect taxes for hundreds of different taxing jurisdictions. When they aren't located there, are much smaller than Amazon and can't afford a tax compliance department staffed with accountants and lawyers. Yeah sure, you could do business as a 'associate' of Amazon and have them handle tax compliance for you. But now you're their bitch and they can dictate other aspects of your online existence.
Wave good by to innovation.
Re:sales tax is always on the FULL PRICE (Score:4, Interesting)
Most small businesses don't. They collect sales taxes in the jurisdiction where they are located. If I (in Maryland) sell you something by mail, I collect tax if you're in Maryland, or no tax if you're not. You might owe use tax, but that's Not My Problem.
In New York, where it's a destination tax, a merchant located there has to collect for a few dozen jurisdictions -- a pain, but far from "thousands".
It's a problem for too-big businesses such as Amazon that have "nexuses" of business all over the place; screw them, companies shouldn't be that big.
But it can be a problem for small companies that provide a venue for merchants in many different locations.
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but far from "thousands".
Add in the EU, which is like the US, but with potentially one extra layer of government, since the EU has local, provincial (your "State"), Federal and EU level rules, and there are 27 federal governments, with god knows how many provinces etc.
And then there's india, china, japan, south america etc.
Web businesses essentially do business with potentially every country in the world, and that can be a nightmare, because your local rules for dealing with every country can be different, and you may only need to
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screw them, companies shouldn't be that big.
Why not? Scale brings efficiency; there's a reason why they grow that big in the first place, you know.
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"Why not? Scale brings efficiency"
And also monopoly and anti-competitiveness. In the real world things aren't so rosy.
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Sure, which is why we have the state to keep monopolies in check, and crack down on anti-competitive business practices. In this particular case, there's no reason why we can't have the cake (efficiency of scale), and eat it too. I'll grant you that US government is not particularly good at keeping large companies in check, but that's the problem with that government, not with the arrangement in general - it works just fine elsewhere.
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It's a problem for too-big businesses such as Amazon that have "nexuses" of business all over the place; screw them, companies shouldn't be that big.
An interesting sentiment. Why not?
Re:sales tax is always on the FULL PRICE (Score:4, Insightful)
Amazon loves this complicated and convoluted system - it raises the barriers to entry of competition.
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Yes there are companies that collect all the sales tax rates throughout the country,
Re:sales tax is always on the FULL PRICE (Score:4, Interesting)
How about they do their job and regulate interstate commerce?
The apply the Commerce Clause to everything under the sun, but when it comes to normalizing trade between the States they have basically remained quiet. Of course, what that means is that there should be no taxes charged by any State on goods arriving from outside their borders. Aggressive jurisdictions, like California and New York, have taken it upon themselves to exceed their authority, and all it would take is a simple clarifying act for Congress to settle the issue.
Of course, that can only happen in a country that isn't broken. Since the US is not such a country, don't expect a simple, straightforward Act to pass settling the issue. When they finally decide to do something, it will be so incomprehensibly Byzantine that tax lawyers everywhere will simultaneously jizz themselves.
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If this is stifling your innovation, you need a new line of work.
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Collecting sales tax on S&H isn't what he was referring to. He's saying that forcing small businesses / bootstrapped startups to collect sales tax for every region of the country will stifle innovation by raising the barrier to entry so high that most people won't be able to enter the market.
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Not in Virginia; no sales tax on services.
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Just to add to this, the shipping and handling is actually the source of profit for many companies on Amazon. I personally knew the owner of a company that sells $0.99 computer games on Amazon, but charges $5.99 shipping on them, which turns into a $5-plus profit on each game sold. I recently fell for this tactic when I bought a copy of the Hulk Video Game [amazon.com] for $3.96 and got charged $4.59 in shipping. This is also the case with many used-book sellers on Amazon, who sell the book for a dollar, charge you five
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Depends on your definition of services.
If you rent tools, you pay sales tax on the rental here in The Old North State.
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Same for Colorado. Labor is tax free.
Yup. (Score:2)
This is the correct behavior (in most states). Hate it? Me too. Bitch at your local government person.
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Unfortunately, it's also the correct policy by the state governments to tax shipping and handling. Otherwise mail order purchases would all go the way of TV-infomercials where the product is like $5 with $20 "shipping and handling"...
Outrage! (Score:5, Insightful)
After all the outrage in the Apple tax thread, everyone should stand for paying their fair share of sales taxes, not dodging them by ordering out of state from somebody they normally wouldn't.
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apple is evil, amazon is not
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Er, no body is complaining about paying taxes. They are complaining paying extra taxes for shipping and handling. In california, there is no tax on services. People have every right to complain about Amazon charging sales taxes on things, the state does not want it to.
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Well, in California, you must collect taxes on Shipping if you're charging more than the actualy cost of shipping, or you don't keep detailed shipping cost-records. So, the flat-rate $4.99 shipping option in California, according to the BoE is fully taxable.
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Yes I am complaining about paying taxes in California. We used to be able to build roads and school our children on a 6% sales tax. California employees were allowed to unionize under Jerry Brown and since then there has been a steady drumbeat of tax increases to keep California government growing and public employees living large. In a few years we will have 20,000+ California retirees living like lottery winners with 100k+ pensions (with automatic inflation increases) and lifetime gold plated health bene
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Right, because it's the responsibility of the bottom 99% to prop-up our welfare system now that the wealth of the nation has literally been hauled-off by a select few. No, really; what else do you think happens next?
Re:Outrage! (Score:4, Insightful)
Because the sales tax on S&H for a $9.99 dvd is morally and ethically the same as pre-tax profits of $36.8 billion
Sure it is. What's the difference? One number is much bigger than the other, but the difference in tax amounts is similarly different... and the *aggregate* of all the S&H fees on all the DVDs is probably not so much different in scale than the Apple number. So, what's the difference?
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Yes. Killing one innocent person is as morally wrong as killing a million innocent people.
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Saying it's theft is as stupid as saying fines and penalties are theft. If too many voters voted for the wrong people they all get the punishment they deserve.
Don't like the rules, try to change them, or go somewhere else.
Does Amazon know the tax laws for each state? (Score:2)
Certain items aren't taxable in certain states. For example, clothes aren't taxable in New Jersey, where Amazon will start collecting tax in 2013.
If Amazon is collecting tax inappropriately, then it should have passed the money on to the state. It would be up to the customer to request a refund on his/her state return. The inappropriate tax could offset tax that wasn't collected, but should have been.
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there are national services that compile this kind of data and sell it to corporations
not a big deal
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The inappropriate tax could offset tax that wasn't collected, but should have been.
When did Congress pass bills allowing the IRS to rob Peter to pay Paul's bill?
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When did Congress pass bills allowing the IRS to rob Peter to pay Paul's bill?
If I remember right it was around 1935.
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not just state, but city, county, zone: you can buy web service or software to do this automatically, and the tables are updated monthly as part of subscription. such softwares have been around for decades and the web services since the late 90s.
The answer is yes (Score:2)
The answer is generally yes, you pay sales tax on shipping & handling. Check your local state's department of revenue, though in general if a state can charge a tax it will.
As someone who actually pays their use tax... (Score:2)
I can tell you that's exactly how it's supposed to happen, in every state I've done the paperwork in.
If you doubt, pick up the phone, order pizza delivery, and check out the receipt.
States charge tax on taxes anyway (Score:2)
North Carolina does. So why not. Vote Higher Taxes 2012.
It may be the law (Score:2)
The Source (Score:2)
You ship directly to the purchaser by common carrier, contract carrier, or US Mail
Your invoice clearly lists delivery, shipping, freight, or postage as a separate charge
The charge is not greater than your actual cost for delivery to customer
The first item is basically a distinction between bringing the product to the customer yourself and using a service (like USPS, UPS, FedEx, etc.). Amazon isn't delivering the item itself, so this doesn't apply to them.
The sec
Bad Summary (Score:5, Informative)
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Shipping and Handling charges suck (Score:3)
A few years ago I was trying to find a gameboy advance cartridge that was fairly uncommon.
Sam Goody's carried it for 16 dollars, so I ordered it immediately. They charged me 17 dollars and change for "shipping and handling".
When the package arrived it was the size of a deck of cards and had $1.60 in postage on it, sent via regular post - not even first class.
Talk about thieves.
Amazon made a profit on shipping first (Score:2)
It's the law in CA (Score:4, Informative)
Have a look at this FAQ entry on the California Board of Equalization website:
http://www.boe.ca.gov/sutax/faqpurch.htm#10 [ca.gov]
Wait till you see the taxes on the taxes! (Score:2)
Cross border shopping is worse... if i bring my purchases home into Canada, and the border guy is bored enough, I pay 13% taxes on the cost of the item, the state taxes, and shipping and handling costs.
Usually they don't bother now until it's around $200. If I stay in the US, after 24 hours i have a $200 exemption (but $201 makes the whole thing fair game). After 48 hours I have an exemption on the first $800.
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I haven't had a need to do this, but suppose I buy a TV from some online place using my CC.
It's shipped, and I've paid sales tax on the shipping. Okay, I return it for some reason,
for a CC refund.
Do I receive a refund for the sales tax paid for its original shipping, or is that lost forever?
You returned the TV, but you didn't return the shipping. You "consumed" it.
(return shipping is not the same as returning the shipping)
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Fairly stupid, but then again Amazon has free shipping with a $25 order which is about what the world's small violin costs.
No, you are wrong.
It is actually only $9.98 ... http://www.amazon.com/Worlds-Smallest-Violin-Akira-Wing/dp/B002IYDTTK [amazon.com]
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For me, the extra sales tax runs about $10 a year. Not a big deal.
Evil 1%er (Score:2)
It's nice that you found a way to not pay "your fair share" to the state you live in.
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Remember when everyone was upset that Amazon threatened to pull their warehouses out of CA to avoid collecting sales taxes? Now everyone is upset because Amazon is collecting sales taxes in CA according to CA state law...