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Illinois’ Incomprehensible Sales Tax Law

During the spring legislative session, the Illinois General Assembly accomplished the seemingly impossible, it passed substantial legislation SB 689 (P A 101-0009) and SB 690 (P A 101-0031) that makes Illinois sales tax law even more confusing and incomprehensible HOW DID THIS HAPPEN?

Here’s some background and context to help us decode this The Retailers’ Occupation Tax (ROT) is imposed on Illinois sellers of tangible personal property The state tax rate is 6 25 percent, and the law authorizes additional locally imposed ROTs Currently, the applicable tax rate is the combination of state and locally imposed taxes in effect at the selling location origin sourcing A Use Tax (UT) is imposed on purchasers of tangible personal property at a rate of 6 25 percent The UT is either paid by a purchaser to a retailer, or if a purchase is made from a retailer who is not required to collect tax (out-of-state retailers without nexus), the purchaser is required to pay the tax directly to the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) There are no locally imposed UTs with the exception of the City of Chicago use tax

Last year, in Wayfair v South Dakota, the U S Supreme Court changed the rules on sales tax nexus Prior to Wayfair, the U S Supreme Court ruled in Quill v North Dakota that a retailer was required to have a physical presence in a state for that state to require the retailer to collect that state’s sales taxes from customers In its Wayfair decision, the U S Supreme Court eliminated the physical presence requirement of Quill and upheld a South Dakota law establishing nexus over retailers with certain levels of economic presence in the form of sales in the state, even absent a physical presence

Anticipating elimination of the physical nexus requirement, Illinois enacted legislation effective Oct 1, 2018 mirroring South Dakota’s nexus standards any out-of-state seller with more than $100,000 in sales or more than 200 separate sales transactions into the state over the course of a year has nexus with Illinois and is required to charge the state’s 6 25 percent UT

A LEVEL PLAYING FIELD?

One of the arguments for eliminating the Quill physical presence nexus requirement was that it would “level the playing field” between brick-and-mortar retailers and their online competitors Prior to Wayfair, online retailers without physical presence in Illinois that were not required to charge Illinois sales tax to their Illinois customers had a significant price advantage over brick-and-mortar retailers

However, Illinois’ move to eliminate the physical presence requirement and establish an economic nexus test lessened, but did not eliminate, the pricing advantage enjoyed by online retailers For example, if an online retailer meets the economic nexus test under the 2018 Illinois law, that retailer is now required to charge the 6 25 percent UT on sales into Illinois

The same sale at a local brick-and-mortar retailer would have to charge the 6 25 percent UT plus all locally imposed taxes, or 9 75 percent currently in Springfield What’s more, online purchases from small sellers those below the $100,000 or 200 transactions thresholds remained sales-tax free at the time of the sale Purchasers remain required to self-assess and pay the UT but as a practical matter most individuals do not comply with this requirement

IDOR didn’t wait long to address the lack of tax on sales by certain small retailers During the spring 2019 legislative session, IDOR proposed legislation as a portion of SB 689 to establish nexus at the marketplace facilitator level (e g Amazon, eBay, or Etsy) rather than based on the sales of each individual seller utilizing such online marketplaces SB 689 provides that if the aggregate sales on the marketplace facilitator’s platform exceed the statutory nexus threshold $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions all sellers on that marketplace platform are required to charge and collect Illinois sales tax

While SB 689’s changes expand Illinois UT collections on sales, they fail to completely level the playing field between online and brick-and-mortar retailers The same item that I buy from a small online marketplace seller will be subject to only a 6 25 percent UT versus my local 9 75 percent sales tax rate

Enter SB 690 containing the Level the Playing Field for Illinois Retail Act This legislation as enacted over the opposition of IDOR is flawed, does not “level the playing field,” is inconsistent with SB 689, is likely not administrable by IDOR, and is likely unconstitutional

The Confusing

SB 690 provides for three categories of retailers: (1) “Remote retailers” who have no physical presence but have economic nexus under the post-Wayfair Illinois nexus standard; (2) out-of-state retailers who do not have brick-and-mortar locations in Illinois but have some sort of pre-Wayfair “physical presence ” nexus within the state; and (3) retailers with a brick-and-mortar presence in Illinois who may also have an online presence

Under SB 690, remote retailers are subject to state and local ROTs on their sales to Illinois customers This is a bizarre concept since these sellers are, by definition, not located in Illinois and have no Illinois brick-and-mortar presence the fundamental requirement of being subject to the ROT prior to this legislation In addition, remote retailers are required to determine the tax rate on sales to their Illinois customers based on the combined state and local tax rate at their customers’ locations, or more simply, destination sourcing The use of destination sourcing is contrary to the treatment of brickand-mortar sellers who are required to use origin-based sourcing the combined state and local tax rate in effect at the location of the sale

The second category of sellers out-of-state sellers without Illinois brick-and-mortar locations who have traditional physical presence nexus continue to charge and collect the state’s 6 25 percent UT on sales to their Illinois customers, except when the sales are fulfilled from inventory in a warehouse in Illinois, in which case they charge the combined state and local ROT rate in effect at the location of the warehouse For example, if I buy an item from Amazon and it ships from their Kenosha, Wis warehouse, I am charged 6 25 percent, but if the same item ships from their Joliet, Ill warehouse, I am charged the tax rate in effect in Joliet This tax treatment is the same as current law

The third category of sellers retailers with a brick-and-mortar presence in Illinois who may also have an online presence charge the combined state and local tax rate in effect at their brick-andmortar location They use origin-based sourcing and continue to do so if selling online on their own platform or through a marketplace facilitator

The Incomprehensible

Combining SB 689 and SB 690 results in several different tax treatments of a sale Let’s say I decide to purchase a new printer for my office:

1 If the purchase is made from an online seller without a physical connection to Illinois through a marketplace like Amazon, I am charged Illinois’ 6 25 percent UT

2 If the purchase is made from an online seller without a physical connection to Illinois that also doesn’t meet the $100,000 or 200 transactions nexus, I am not charged any Illinois sales tax

3 If the purchase is made from an online seller without a physical connection to Illinois but exceeds the $100,000 or 200 transactions nexus test, and I have the printer delivered to my home, I am charged the ROT of 7 25 percent in effect at my home in suburban Springfield If the same purchase is delivered to my Springfield office, the tax rate increases to 9 75 percent

4 If the purchase is made online from a retailer with a physical connection to Illinois but who doesn’t have a brick-and-mortar store and doesn’t ship the printer from an Illinois warehouse, I am charged Illinois’ 6 25 percent UT

5 If the purchase is made online from the same retailer as in example 4, but in this instance the printer is shipped from a warehouse in Joliet, I am charged the 8 75 percent ROT in effect in Joliet

6 If the purchase is made over the counter at a retailer in Springfield, I am charged Springfield’s 9 75 percent tax rate

7 If the purchase is made online from a brick-and-mortar retailer located in the City of Chicago, I am charged Chicago’s 10 25 percent tax rate

That was a long-winded way of saying the enacted legislation does little to level the playing field It just makes Illinois’ historically convoluted and confusing tax system even more convoluted and confusing It will also encourage strategic tax planning by both retailers and consumers Here are two obvious examples:

First, any remote retailer would be wise to establish some type of physical connection to Illinois to eliminate its remote retailer status and convert its tax collection status from ROT to UT According to the nexus definition in the legislation, remote retailer status can be changed by simply sending an agent into Illinois periodically, thus establishing physical presence for sales tax purposes

Second, purchasers located in high sales tax rate jurisdictions will be wise to not make purchases from remote retailers to minimize the amount of taxes due on purchases

Finally, I haven’t even attempted to address what appear to be constitutional problems with the legislation The uniformity clause in Article IX, Section 2 of the Illinois Constitution provides that “in any law classifying the subject or objects of non-property taxes or fees, the classes shall be reasonable and the subjects and objects within each class shall be taxed uniformly ” I don’t see how this legislation withstands a constitutional challenge

I’ve heard there will be an attempt to “fix” this legislation in the fall veto session All I know at this juncture is that there is no easy fix

Illinois CPA Society member

Nicole Presperin, CPA, is a senior director in Aon plc’s New Ventures Group She was awarded the Illinois CPA Society’s 2019 Young Professional Leadership Award in recognition of her outstanding leadership skills in her career, for public or community service, and for her involvement in professional organizations Presperin is co-president for the Ronald McDonald House (RMH) Auxiliary Board, is involved with the local RMH Board of Directors, and served on the RMH Auxiliary Council Alignment Task Force

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