Connecticut prusing sales tax directly with the state

As a business owner selling taxable goods or services, you act as an agent of the state of Connecticut by collecting tax from purchasers and passing it along to the appropriate tax authority. Sales and use tax in Connecticut is administered by the Department of Revenue Services (DRS).

Any sales tax collected from customers belongs to the state of Connecticut, not you. It’s your responsibility to manage the taxes you collect to remain in compliance with state and local laws. Failure to do so can lead to penalties and interest charges.

When you need to collect Connecticut sales tax

In Connecticut, sales tax is levied on the sale of tangible goods and some services. The tax is collected by the seller and remitted to state tax authorities. The seller acts as a de facto collector.

To help you determine whether you need to collect sales tax in Connecticut, start by answering these three questions:

  1. Do you have nexus in Connecticut?
  2. Are you selling taxable goods or services to Connecticut residents?
  3. Are your buyers required to pay sales tax?

If the answer to all three questions is yes, you’re required to register with the state tax authority, collect the correct amount of sales tax per sale, file returns, and remit to the state.

Failure to collect Connecticut sales tax

If you meet the criteria for collecting sales tax and choose not to, you’ll be held responsible for the tax due, plus applicable penalties and interest.

It’s extremely important to set up tax collection at the point of sale — it’s near impossible to collect sales tax from customers after a transaction is complete.

Sales tax nexus

The need to collect sales tax in Connecticut is predicated on having a significant connection with the state. This is a concept known as nexus. Nexus is a Latin word that means "to bind or tie," and it’s the deciding factor for whether the state has the legal authority to require your business to collect, file, and remit sales tax.

Nexus triggers

Sales tax nexus in all states used to be limited to physical presence: A state could require a business to register and collect and remit sales tax only if it had a physical presence in the state, such as employees or an office, retail store, or warehouse.

In June 2018, the Supreme Court of the United States overruled the physical presence rule with its decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. States are now free to tax businesses based on their economic and virtual connections to the state, or economic nexus.

While physical presence still triggers a sales tax collection obligation in Connecticut, it’s now possible for out-of-state sellers to have sales tax nexus with Connecticut.

Out-of-state sellers

Out-of-state sellers with no physical presence in a state may establish sales tax nexus in the following ways:

Affiliate nexus: Having ties to businesses or affiliates in Connecticut. This includes, but isn’t limited to, the design and development of tangible personal property (goods) sold by the remote retailer, or solicitation of sales of goods on behalf of the retailer.

Click-through nexus: Having an agreement to reward a person(s) in the state for directly or indirectly referring potential purchasers of goods through an internet link, website, or otherwise, and cumulative gross receipts from such referrals to the retailer exceed $100,000 during the four preceding quarterly periods. (The threshold was $250,000 through June 30, 2019.)

Economic nexus: Having a certain amount of economic activity in the state. For sales made on and after December 1, 2018, a remote seller must register with the state then collect and remit Connecticut sales tax if the remote seller meets all of the following criteria (the economic thresholds):

Inventory in the state: Storing property for sale in the state. This includes merchandise owned by Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) merchants and stored in Connecticut in a warehouse owned or operated by Amazon.

Marketplace sales: Making sales through a marketplace. Effective December 1, 2018, marketplace facilitators are responsible for collecting and remitting sales tax on behalf of marketplace sellers in Connecticut.

Trade shows: Attending conventions or trade shows in Connecticut. You may be liable for collecting and remitting Connecticut use tax on orders taken or sales made during Connecticut conventions or trade shows. However, you generally would not have nexus if all the following are true:

If you have sales tax nexus in Connecticut, you’re required to register with the DRS and to charge, collect, and remit the appropriate tax to the state.

Non-collecting seller use tax reporting

The Connecticut Department of Revenue Services requires non-collecting sellers to notify customers about their potential use tax liability, provide customers with an annual purchase summary, and provide the state with a customer information report. The precise nature of these requirements varies from state to state; for more state-specific information, see Connecticut General Statutes Section 12-426(4) and (5).

Trailing nexus

Sales tax nexus can linger even after a retailer ceases the activities that caused it to be “engaged in business” in the state. This is known as trailing nexus. As of June 2019, Connecticut does not have an explicitly defined trailing nexus policy.

Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA)

If you’re an active Amazon seller and you use Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA), you need to know where your inventory is stored and if its presence in a state will trigger nexus. FBA sellers can also download an Inventory Event Detail Report from Amazon Seller Central to identify inventory stored in Connecticut.

If you sell taxable goods to Connecticut residents and have inventory stored in the state, you likely have nexus and an obligation to collect and remit tax. To begin to understand your unique nexus obligations, check out our free economic nexus tool or consult with a trusted tax advisor.

Sourcing sales tax in Connecticut: which rate to collect

In some states, sales tax rates, rules, and regulations are based on the location of the seller and the origin of the sale (origin-based sourcing). In others, sales tax is based on the location of the buyer and the destination of the sale (destination-based sourcing).

Connecticut is a destination-based state. This means you’re responsible for applying the sales tax rate determined by the ship-to address on all taxable sales.