Economic Nexus Thresholds by State: 2026 Guide

KEY TAKEAWAYS

What You Need to Know Before Reading Further:

  • Economic nexus exists in 45+ states — if you cross a revenue or transaction threshold, you owe sales tax there.
  • The most common threshold is $100,000 in annual sales or 200 transactions into a state.
  • The Wayfair ruling (2018) eliminated the physical presence requirement — remote sellers are now liable.
  • Every state has different rules: thresholds, lookback periods, and what counts as a taxable sale vary widely.
  • Automation tools can help you track thresholds — but human expertise is essential to avoid costly misclassifications and missed nuances.
  • Non-compliance can trigger back taxes, penalties, and state audits — often going back 3–5 years.
  • A professional nexus study is the most reliable first step toward full multi-state compliance.

Introduction

If your business sells products or services across state lines, you have probably asked: do I need to collect sales tax in other states? The answer depends on your economic nexus thresholds by state; the revenue and transaction benchmarks that trigger a legal obligation to register, collect, and remit sales tax.

Since the landmark South Dakota v. Wayfair Supreme Court decision in 2018, states have rapidly enacted economic nexus laws targeting remote sellers. Today, more than 45 states plus Washington D.C. impose economic nexus rules. For ecommerce sellers, Amazon merchants, Shopify store owners, SaaS companies, and any business with multi-state revenue, understanding these thresholds is not optional — it is a core compliance responsibility.

This complete 2026 guide breaks down economic nexus thresholds by state, explains the rules, walks through common scenarios, and shows you exactly what to do if you have crossed a threshold. And while software and automation tools have made monitoring easier, there is no substitute for knowledgeable human guidance when your money and legal standing are on the line.

What Is Economic Nexus?

Definition: Economic nexus is the legal connection between a remote seller and a state, established when the seller exceeds a defined revenue or transaction threshold in that state — regardless of physical presence. Once nexus is established, the seller must register for a sales tax permit, collect sales tax from buyers in that state, and remit it to the state’s department of revenue.

Before the Wayfair ruling, states could only require sellers to collect sales tax if they had a physical presence (a store, warehouse, or employee) in the state. Wayfair changed everything. Now, simply selling enough into a state — regardless of where you are located — can create a tax obligation.

Economic nexus laws are designed to level the playing field between local brick-and-mortar retailers and online sellers. Every year, states collect billions of dollars in previously uncollected remote sales tax under these rules.

Economic Nexus vs. Physical Nexus: What Is the Difference?

Type

Trigger

Example

Physical Nexus

Warehouse, office, employee, or inventory in the state

Amazon FBA inventory stored in a California fulfillment center

Economic Nexus

Exceeding a revenue or transaction threshold

Selling $120,000 worth of goods to New York customers

Affiliate Nexus

In-state affiliate marketers or referral partners

A Texas blogger earns commissions promoting your products

Click-Through Nexus

In-state website referrals above a threshold

Online referral links from an in-state partner website

How Does Economic Nexus Work for Remote Sellers?

When your sales into a state cross an economic nexus threshold, the state gains the right to require you to:

  • Register for a sales tax permit in that state
  • Determine which of your products or services are taxable in that state
  • Collect the correct sales tax rate at the point of sale
  • File sales tax returns on the required schedule (monthly, quarterly, or annually)
  • Remit the collected tax to the state’s department of revenue

The critical detail most sellers overlook: nexus obligations are not automatic from the first dollar of sales. Each state has a specific threshold, and in most states, your obligation begins on a specific date after you cross it — often at the start of the next calendar or fiscal quarter.

This is why accurate record-keeping and threshold monitoring are so important. Missing the date your obligation began can expose you to back taxes and penalties for every sale made after that date.

What Counts Toward the Threshold?

Different states count different things. Generally, most states count:

  • Gross sales of taxable and non-taxable goods shipped to buyers in the state
  • Sales of digital products and SaaS subscriptions (in states that tax these)
  • Exempt sales — even if they are not taxable, they may still count toward your threshold

What generally does NOT count:

  • Sales into states where you already have physical nexus
  • Sales of services (in some states — but not all)
  • Sales fulfilled through a marketplace that has already collected and remitted tax on your behalf (marketplace facilitator rules)

This is where human judgment becomes critical. Many businesses assume that because Amazon or Shopify is collecting tax on marketplace sales, they have no economic nexus exposure. That is not always true — especially if you also sell direct-to-consumer.

South Dakota v. Wayfair: Why This Changed Everything

In June 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. that states could require out-of-state sellers to collect sales tax based solely on economic activity — not physical presence. South Dakota’s law, which set a $100,000 or 200-transaction threshold, became the model for most other states.

Within months, states across the country rushed to enact similar legislation. By 2020, virtually every state with a sales tax had adopted some form of economic nexus law. The result: millions of small and mid-sized businesses suddenly had compliance obligations they had never faced before.

Key Stat: According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, state and local governments were losing an estimated $8 to $13 billion annually in uncollected remote sales tax before the Wayfair ruling.

Economic Nexus Thresholds by State: 2026 Complete Reference Table

The table below outlines the economic nexus thresholds by state for 2026. Note that thresholds and rules can change — always verify directly with each state’s Department of Revenue or consult a qualified sales tax professional.

Important Disclaimer: This table is for informational and educational purposes only. Sales tax laws change frequently. Do not rely solely on this table for compliance decisions. Consult a qualified sales tax professional for guidance specific to your business.

State

Revenue Threshold

Transaction Threshold

Notes

Alabama

$250,000

N/A

Revenue only

Alaska

$100,000

200 transactions

No statewide sales tax; local jurisdictions apply

Arizona

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Arkansas

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

California

$500,000

N/A

Revenue only; higher threshold

Colorado

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Connecticut

$100,000

200 transactions

Both must be met

Florida

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Georgia

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Hawaii

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Idaho

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Illinois

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Indiana

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Iowa

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only; removed transaction threshold 2023

Kansas

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Kentucky

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Louisiana

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Maine

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Maryland

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Massachusetts

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Michigan

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Minnesota

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Mississippi

$250,000

N/A

Revenue only; higher threshold

Missouri

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only; effective Jan 2023

Nebraska

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Nevada

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

New Jersey

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

New Mexico

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

New York

$500,000

100 transactions

Both must be met

North Carolina

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

North Dakota

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Ohio

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Oklahoma

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Pennsylvania

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Rhode Island

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

South Carolina

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

South Dakota

$100,000

200 transactions

Model Wayfair state

Tennessee

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Texas

$500,000

N/A

Revenue only; higher threshold

Utah

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Vermont

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Virginia

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Washington

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Washington D.C.

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

West Virginia

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Wisconsin

$100,000

N/A

Revenue only

Wyoming

$100,000

200 transactions

Either threshold

Note: Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Delaware do not have a statewide sales tax and therefore have no economic nexus thresholds for sales tax purposes. Alaska has no statewide sales tax but some local jurisdictions have enacted their own economic nexus rules.

Which States Have the Highest Economic Nexus Risk for Ecommerce Sellers?

While every state with economic nexus rules presents potential exposure, some states deserve special attention because of their large consumer markets, aggressive enforcement, or nuanced rules:

California — $500,000 Threshold, But Complex Rules

California has a higher $500,000 revenue threshold, but sellers must also navigate complex district taxes, origin vs. destination sourcing rules, and a broad taxable product base. The California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) is well-resourced and proactive about enforcement.

New York — Dual Threshold and High Audit Activity

New York requires both $500,000 in revenue AND 100 transactions. However, New York also has a long history of aggressive sales tax audits. Once you register, maintaining compliance is demanding due to state, county, and city-level tax rates.

Texas — $500,000 Threshold with Service Taxability Complexity

Texas taxes many services that other states exempt, including data processing and internet hosting services. SaaS companies in particular need to evaluate Texas exposure carefully. The $500,000 threshold is higher, but Texas enforcement activity is significant.

Washington State — Broad Taxability, Including SaaS

Washington has one of the broadest taxable product bases in the country. SaaS, digital goods, and many professional services are taxable. The $100,000 threshold means most growing ecommerce businesses will trigger nexus relatively quickly.

Illinois — Destination-Based and Origin-Based Rules Coexist

Illinois has a complicated hybrid sourcing model. In-state sellers use origin-based sourcing, while remote sellers use destination-based sourcing — at different tax rates. This creates significant complexity for sellers near the Illinois border or with customers spread across the state.

When Do I Need to Register for Sales Tax After Crossing a Threshold?

Knowing when your registration obligation begins is just as important as knowing whether you have crossed a threshold. States vary on this:

State Example

Obligation Start Date

Lookback Period

South Dakota (model)

The first day of the calendar quarter after crossing threshold

Previous or current calendar year

California

The first day of the calendar quarter after crossing threshold

Previous or current calendar year

New York

As soon as both thresholds are met in the current year

Current calendar year (rolling 12 months)

Texas

The first day of the second month after crossing threshold

Previous 12 calendar months

Washington

Immediately upon crossing threshold

Current or previous calendar year

Missing your registration start date means you may be collecting tax without a permit — which is also a violation — or failing to collect at all, creating back tax liability. Neither is a good position to be in when a state auditor comes knocking.

What Should I Do If I Have Crossed an Economic Nexus Threshold?

Here is a step-by-step action plan if you believe you have crossed or are approaching an economic nexus threshold in any state:

  1. Conduct a Nexus Study: Analyze your sales data for the past 12–24 months by state. Identify every state where you have exceeded or are close to exceeding the threshold.
  2. Determine Taxability: Not all products and services are taxable in all states. Before registering, confirm that what you sell is actually taxable in that state. A professional can help avoid unnecessary registrations.
  3. Identify Your Registration Date: Based on the state’s rules, determine the exact date your obligation began. This affects whether you have back tax exposure.
  4. Register for a Sales Tax Permit: File for a sales tax permit with the state’s Department of Revenue. Some states process applications quickly; others take weeks. Do not collect tax without a permit.
  5. Configure Your Tax Collection: Update your sales platform (Shopify, Amazon Seller Central, WooCommerce, etc.) to collect the correct sales tax for that state.
  6. Address Back Taxes (If Applicable): If you have been selling into a state without collecting tax after you crossed the threshold, consult a professional about your options, including voluntary disclosure programs that can reduce penalties.
  7. Set Up Filing: Establish a schedule for filing and remitting sales tax returns. Know your filing frequency (monthly, quarterly, annual) for each state.
  8. Monitor Ongoing Thresholds: Your business continues to grow. Keep tracking thresholds for new states every year.

Human Expertise Matters Here: Automation tools can identify when you have crossed a numeric threshold, but determining taxability, choosing the right registration date, addressing back-tax exposure, and deciding whether to pursue a Voluntary Disclosure Agreement all require professional judgment. These are decisions that carry real financial and legal consequences — not something to leave to an algorithm.

How Do Marketplace Facilitator Rules Affect Economic Nexus?

If you sell through Amazon, Etsy, Walmart Marketplace, or similar platforms, marketplace facilitator laws may collect and remit sales tax on your behalf in most states. As of 2026, the following states have enacted marketplace facilitator laws requiring platforms to collect and remit:

This is one of the most misunderstood areas of economic nexus compliance. Just because Amazon is remitting sales tax for your FBA sales does not mean you have no nexus obligations. If you also sell direct-to-consumer, operate a separate Shopify store, or have wholesale B2B customers, you may still need to register and collect independently.

Only a qualified sales tax professional can properly evaluate how marketplace sales interact with your total nexus exposure across all your sales channels.

Economic Nexus Rules for SaaS and Digital Goods Companies

For Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) businesses and digital goods sellers, economic nexus creates additional complexity because the taxability of your product varies dramatically by state:

State

SaaS Taxable?

Digital Downloads Taxable?

Economic Nexus Threshold

Texas

Yes (data processing)

Yes

$500,000

Washington

Yes

Yes

$100,000

New York

Yes (certain SaaS)

Yes

$500,000 + 100 transactions

California

Generally No

Generally Yes (some)

$500,000

Florida

Generally No (legislation pending)

No

$100,000

Illinois

No (tangible software, yes)

Yes

$100,000 / 200 transactions

Colorado

No

Yes

$100,000

SaaS companies often sell nationally from day one. By the time they realize they have economic nexus exposure in a dozen states, back-tax liability can be enormous. Early nexus analysis is far less expensive than retroactive compliance.

Economic Nexus Case Studies and Real-World Scenarios

Case Study 1: The Amazon FBA Seller Who Missed Multi-State Nexus

Sarah runs a health and wellness brand on Amazon. She sells nationally through Amazon FBA. In 2024, she crossed $100,000 in sales in eight states. Because Amazon collected and remitted marketplace tax on her FBA sales, she assumed she had no additional obligations.

However, Sarah also runs a Shopify storefront where she handles about 30% of her sales directly. The direct sales were not covered by Amazon’s marketplace facilitation. After a nexus review, it was discovered she had uncollected tax liability in six states going back 18 months.

Through a Voluntary Disclosure Agreement process handled by a sales tax professional, Sarah was able to limit her back-tax exposure and come into compliance with no penalties.

Case Study 2: The SaaS Startup That Grew Too Fast to Track

A B2B SaaS company based in Austin, Texas grew from $500K to $4M in annual recurring revenue in two years. Their customer base was national from the start. By the time their CFO engaged a sales tax consultant, they had crossed economic nexus thresholds in 22 states.

In states like Washington, Texas, and New York, SaaS is taxable. Their back-tax exposure was significant. However, several states had Voluntary Disclosure programs that allowed the company to come forward, cap the lookback period, and avoid interest and penalties.

The total resolution cost was a fraction of what a state audit would have produced. Early intervention by a human expert made the difference.

Case Study 3: The Shopify Seller Who Used Automation — But Still Got It Wrong

Marco used a popular sales tax automation platform that tracked his thresholds. When he crossed $100,000 in Illinois, the platform flagged it and encouraged him to register. What it did not tell him was that Illinois has a complex origin vs. destination sourcing rule that resulted in him collecting the wrong tax rate for over a year.

The correct rate for Marco’s situation was the home rule rate based on his ship-from location, not the destination rate the software was calculating. The overcharge created a customer refund issue and a state reconciliation challenge.

A sales tax professional caught the error during a routine compliance review and corrected the configuration before it became a formal audit finding.

Common Mistakes Businesses Make With Economic Nexus Thresholds

  1. Assuming Marketplace Sales Don’t Create Nexus

Even if a marketplace collects and remits tax, your total sales activity in a state — across all channels — may count toward your economic nexus threshold.

  1. Using the Wrong Lookback Period

Some states use a rolling 12-month lookback; others use a calendar year. Using the wrong period can cause you to miss threshold crossings or believe you are compliant when you are not.

  1. Not Counting Exempt Sales

In most states, all gross sales — including sales of exempt products — count toward the economic nexus threshold. Selling only non-taxable products does not protect you from the registration requirement.

  1. Waiting Too Long to Register

Back-tax exposure grows every day you continue to sell without collecting. States have 3–5 year statute of limitations in most cases, and penalties plus interest can significantly inflate your original tax liability.

  1. Relying Entirely on Automation Software

Tax automation tools are valuable for tracking and calculating, but they are not compliance professionals. They cannot evaluate whether your product is taxable in a given state, navigate voluntary disclosure, or advise you on audit risk. Software is a tool, not a strategy.

  1. Ignoring Local and District Taxes

In states like California, Colorado, and Illinois, local tax rates are imposed on top of state rates. Failing to collect and remit local taxes is as serious a compliance failure as missing the state tax.

  1. Not Monitoring Thresholds Annually

Your sales grow. New states cross threshold every year. A one-time nexus study is a starting point, not a permanent solution. Compliance requires ongoing monitoring.

Why Human Expertise Is Still Essential in the Age of Tax Automation

Technology has genuinely improved sales tax compliance. Platforms like Avalara, TaxJar, and Vertex can automate rate calculations, generate returns, and track threshold proximity. These are valuable tools — but they are not a substitute for professional judgment.

Here is what software cannot do:

  • Evaluate whether your specific product or service is taxable in a given state — this requires statutory analysis and often professional interpretation.
  • Advise you on Voluntary Disclosure Agreements that can limit back-tax exposure and waive penalties.
  • Represent you in a sales tax audit or negotiate with state revenue departments.
  • Identify nexus-creating activities you may not have considered, such as trade shows, remote employees, or drop-shipping arrangements.
  • Provide strategic guidance on business structure decisions that affect your overall tax exposure.

Sales tax is one of the most frequently changing areas of U.S. tax law. State legislatures and revenue departments regularly update thresholds, taxability rules, and filing requirements. What was compliant last year may not be this year. The value of a dedicated, knowledgeable human advisor — someone who does this every day and stays current — cannot be replicated by software.

Economic Nexus Compliance Checklist for 2026

Complete this checklist to assess your current economic nexus compliance status:

  • Run a sales analysis by state for the previous 12–24 months to identify threshold crossings.
  • Confirm which of your products/services are taxable in each state you sell into.
  • Verify your registration status in every state where you have crossed a threshold.
  • Check your marketplace sales to understand what platforms are collecting on your behalf.
  • Review the lookback period and registration date for any new nexus states.
  • Evaluate any back-tax exposure and consider Voluntary Disclosure if you have been non-compliant.
  • Configure your ecommerce platform(s) to collect correct sales tax rates in all nexus states.
  • Establish your sales tax filing schedule for each registered state.
  • Set up a monitoring system to alert you when approaching thresholds in new states.
  • Review your compliance status at least annually, or when your business changes significantly.
  • Consult a sales tax professional for a formal nexus study if you have not done so recently.

Conclusion: Economic Nexus Thresholds by State Are a Moving Target — Get Expert Help

Understanding economic nexus thresholds by state is not a one-time exercise. It is an ongoing compliance discipline that grows more complex as your business scales. The post-Wayfair landscape has made every remote seller a potential target for multi-state tax enforcement, and the stakes are high: uncollected back taxes, penalties, interest, and the burden of responding to state audits.

While technology has made threshold tracking easier, the most successful businesses pair automation tools with experienced human professionals. A qualified sales tax expert can conduct a proper nexus study, evaluate your specific product taxability, identify back-tax exposure, navigate Voluntary Disclosure Agreements, and provide ongoing monitoring — things no software can do on its own.

Your sales tax compliance is too important to leave to guesswork or software alone. The economic nexus rules are complex, state-specific, and constantly evolving. Investing in expert guidance now is always less expensive than resolving an audit later.

 

FAQ

The most common economic nexus threshold is $100,000 in annual gross sales or 200 separate transactions into a state, whichever is reached first. This threshold was modeled on South Dakota's law, which was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018. However, some states — including California, Texas, and New York — have higher revenue thresholds. Always verify the current threshold with the specific state.

In most states, yes — your gross sales including exempt sales count toward the economic nexus threshold. However, if all of your sales in a state are exempt, you may not be required to collect and remit tax even after registering. Registration and collection requirements are separate questions. A sales tax professional can help you determine your actual obligations.

You likely have back-tax liability from the date your obligation began. The good news is that most states offer Voluntary Disclosure Programs (VDAs) that allow you to come forward proactively, cap the lookback period (often to 3 years or less), and waive penalties and sometimes interest. Acting voluntarily — before a state initiates an audit — almost always produces a better outcome. Consult a sales tax professional as soon as possible.

Yes. Amazon stores FBA inventory in fulfillment centers located across the country. Having inventory stored in a state creates physical nexus in that state, regardless of your economic nexus status. This means your sales tax obligations may begin from the day Amazon first stored your inventory in a given state — which could predate any economic nexus threshold crossing.

SaaS taxability is one of the most complex and rapidly evolving areas of sales tax law. Each state takes a different approach: some tax SaaS broadly, some tax only specific types of software, and some do not tax it at all. Even within states that tax SaaS, the classification of your product — as data processing, information services, or digital goods — may affect the rate and taxability. This determination almost always requires professional analysis.

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