What is Multi-State Sales Tax Compliance? A Complete Guide for E-commerce Businesses

You’ve built an awesome online store, uploaded those product photos you spent all weekend perfecting, and now orders are rolling in from California to New York. What started as a side hustle from your spare bedroom has turned into a growing business with customers across multiple states. Each notification ping brings both excitement and a new challenge you might not have anticipated: multi-state sales tax compliance.  Unlike a local shop that deals with one set of tax rules, your online business potentially faces different e-commerce sales tax requirements in every state where you make sales. One day you’re celebrating a surge of orders from a new region, and the next you’re wondering if you’ve just created tax obligations in another state. Keeping track of when, where, and how much to collect can quickly become overwhelming, especially when you’d rather focus on perfecting your products or marketing strategy. Don’t worry—this guide will break down everything you need to know to stay compliant without losing your mind. Table of Contents Economic Nexus: The Foundation of Multi-State Sales Tax Compliance  Let’s start with the million-dollar question: When exactly do you need to collect sales tax in a state? This is where “nexus sales tax rules” come into play. Understanding these rules is critical for every e-commerce seller.  Nexus means having a connection to a state that’s significant enough to trigger tax obligations there. Traditionally, this meant physical presence—having an office, employees, or inventory in a state. But the e-commerce revolution has completely changed the game.  The Evolution of Economic Nexus  With the Supreme Court’s monumental Wayfair decision in 2018 removing the physical presence requirement, states can now require you to collect sales tax based solely on your economic activity there—even if you’ve never set foot in the state. This created what tax professionals call “economic nexus.”  Here’s an example:  Imagine you run an online boutique from your home in Florida. You have zero physical presence in California—no warehouse, no employees, nothing. But your products are a hit with California customers, and last year you sold more than $500,000 worth of merchandise to California residents.  Having surpassed California’s economic nexus threshold of $500,000 in annual sales, you now have a sales tax obligation in the Golden State. You’ll need to register for a California sales tax permit, start collecting the appropriate sales tax on all future California sales, and send those taxes to California’s tax authorities on their schedule.  U.S. State Sales Tax Rates & Economic Nexus Thresholds (As of Jan 2025)  As of January 2025, economic nexus laws are in place across nearly all U.S. states, but the rules vary widely. The table below summarizes each state’s:  Did you know? In most states, exceeding either the sales or transaction threshold is enough to establish nexus. But in Connecticut and New York, you must exceed both thresholds before you’re required to collect and remit sales tax.  State  Sales Tax Rate  Sales Threshold  Transaction Threshold  Measurement Period  Marketplace Sales Included?  Alabama  4%  $250,000  None  Previous calendar year  Yes  Arizona  5.6%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Arkansas  6.5%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  California  7.25%  $500,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Colorado  2.9%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Connecticut  6.35%  $100,000  200  12-month period ending Sep 30  Yes  Florida  6%  $100,000  None  Previous calendar year  No  Georgia  4%  $100,000  200  Previous or current calendar year  No  Hawaii  4%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Illinois  6.25%  $100,000  200  Prior 12 months  No  Indiana  7%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  No  Iowa  6%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Kansas  6.5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Kentucky  6%  $100,000  200  Previous or current calendar year  Yes  Louisiana  5%  $100,000  None  Previous or current calendar year  No  Maine  5.5%  $100,000  None  Previous or current calendar year  No  Maryland  6%  $100,000  200  Previous or current calendar year  Yes  Massachusetts  6.25%  $100,000  None  Previous or current calendar year  No  Michigan  6%  $100,000  200  Previous calendar year  Yes  Minnesota  6.88%  $100,000  200  Rolling 12 months  Yes  Mississippi  7%  $250,000  None  Prior 12 months  No  Missouri  4.23%  $100,000  None  Reviewed quarterly  Yes  Nebraska  5.5%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Nevada  4.6%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  New Jersey  6.63%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  New Mexico  5.13%  $100,000  None  Previous calendar year  No  New York  4%  $500,000  100  Previous 4 quarters  Yes  North Carolina  4.75%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  North Dakota  5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  No  Ohio  5.75%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Oklahoma  4.5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  No  Pennsylvania  6%  $100,000  None  Prior calendar year  Yes  Rhode Island  7%  $100,000  200  Prior calendar year  Yes  South Carolina  6%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  South Dakota  4.5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Tennessee  7%  $100,000  None  Previous 12 months  No  Texas  6.25%  $500,000  None  Preceding 12 months  Yes  Utah  4.7%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  No  Vermont  6%  $100,000  200  Prior 4 quarters  Yes  Virginia  4.3%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  No  Washington  6.5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  West Virginia  6%  $100,000  200  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Wisconsin  5%  $100,000  None  Current or previous calendar year  Yes  Wyoming  4%  $100,000  None (as of July 1, 2024)  Current or previous calendar year  No  Important notes:  Further Aspects of State E-commerce Tax While understanding economic nexus is crucial, several other factors complicate multi-state compliance. Consider this section your mini state-by-state e-commerce tax guide to these additional complexities:  Product Taxability Variations  What’s taxable varies dramatically across states. For instance, clothing is totally exempt in Minnesota but taxable almost everywhere else, while New York only exempts clothing below certain price thresholds. Consider these important distinctions:  Marketplace Facilitator Laws  If you sell through platforms like Amazon, Etsy, or Walmart