[quote name='Brian9824']Actually your wrong. They are only required to collect sales taxes in states where they have a physical presence.
Amazon has physical warehouses in Kansas, Kentucky, North Dakota, and Washington and as such people in those states pay sales tax no matter where their items come from.
Anyone not in one of those states doesnt have to pay tax due to the law.
On a sidenote lets think this through a bit. AMAZON is the one who isn't charging sales tax so they would go after amazon, not the consumer. Also you better damn well believe if a company wasn't charging tax and paying tax they'd be investigated asap.
Please don't spread false information if you have no idea what you are talking about. [/quote]
No, actually you are completely wrong, so it's funny to me (and sad for you) that you tried to criticize me so heavily. I did not say a company has to collect the tax if they don't have a physical presence in your state. I said you have PAY the tax. And you do. A simple Google search would yield that information. Next time, try that route first, instead of blatantly insulting a fellow board member, who is only trying to help...by actualy providing the correct information...
"Tracking down who bought what, and determining how much they owe, is a loophole that anti-smoking advocates and others want to see closed."
http://www.twincities.com/wisconsin/ci_7807521?nclick_check=1
You wouldn't be able to "track" down anyone, if they didn't do something wrong. You need to pay the tax.
"But the average individual taxpayer may be more confused than educated at this point. Since online shopping sites vary widely in their policies on collecting sales tax, consumers have to review transaction-by-transaction which purchases might carry a year-end liability."
http://www.news.com/States-push-for-piece-of-online-sales/2100-1040_3-5187751.html
The year-end liability, of course, refers to the TAX you have to pay.
So, as I said above, if your state has a sales tax, you may technically have to pay up at tax time. It all depends on how your state's laws are written. But it doesn't really make a difference one way or the other, because no one is going to come after you. There is a lot of pressure on Congress right now from a number of states who want all online retailers to charge sales tax, even without a presence in their state, because so few people actually report their online purchases.