Marketplace facilitator tax: Rules, compliance requirements and considerations for businesses
- Marketplace facilitator tax laws shift sales tax collection to the platform, not the seller.
- Not all selling platforms qualify as marketplace facilitators, and state‑by‑state rules and local tax nuances can still create compliance risk.
- Marketplace activity can still impact nexus, registrations and filings, making documentation and coordination across sales channels essential.
The rise of the marketplace facilitator, meaning the platform that enables sales between buyers and third‑party sellers, has transformed the way businesses operate in the digital economy. Platforms like Amazon, eBay and Etsy have created new opportunities to connect buyers and sellers while also making sales tax compliance easier for those sellers.
To successfully conduct business in such a system, it’s important to understand the marketplace facilitator tax implications.
Not all platforms are equal when it comes to sales tax remittance, and laws vary by state. Fully understanding the tax landscape and the role your platforms play in it is essential to keeping up with your business’s obligations.
What is a marketplace facilitator?
The definition of a marketplace facilitator or provider varies but, generally, a marketplace facilitator is a business that facilitates the sales of its marketplace sellers, advertises on behalf of the sellers and processes the payment from the purchaser.
Other activities may also make a business a marketplace facilitator, such as confirming transactions between buyers and sellers, providing fulfillment services, handling customer returns or setting the prices of the products or services sold by sellers through its platform.
List of major marketplace facilitators
Some major marketplace facilitators include:
- Amazon
- eBay
- Walmart
- Etsy
- Wayfair
- Temu
- DoorDash
Difference between marketplace facilitators and e-commerce platforms
A common misconception is that all online selling platforms are marketplace facilitators. However, that is not true. Some platforms, such as Shopify, WooCommerce and Wix, are not marketplace facilitators, meaning they only provide the tools and software for sellers to create their own online stores but do not facilitate the transactions between sellers and buyers.
The differences between marketplace facilitators and e-commerce platforms include:
| Marketplace facilitator | E-commerce platform | |
|---|---|---|
| Core role | Operates a multi seller marketplace | Provides software to run an online store to a single seller |
| Sellers | Many third party sellers | One business (the merchant) |
| Fulfillment | Often marketplace-managed | Merchant-managed or third party |
| Sales tax collection | Marketplace often legally required to collect/remit | Merchant responsible (with platform support tools) |
| Brand control | Limited | High |
| Customer relationships | Mostly owned by the marketplace | Mostly owned by the merchant |
| Fees | Potential per transaction fees and commissions | Potential subscription and payment processing fees |
What are marketplace facilitator tax laws?
Marketplace facilitator tax laws refer to sales and use tax laws that shift tax collection and remittance responsibility from individual sellers to the digital marketplace that facilitates the transaction. When a marketplace qualifies as a “facilitator” under state law, it is required to calculate, collect, remit, and report sales tax on behalf of third‑party sellers using its platform.
All states with a sales tax have a marketplace facilitator (or provider) law.
How marketplace facilitator tax laws work
Marketplace facilitator tax laws shift the responsibility for sales tax calculation, collection, remittance and reporting from individual sellers to the marketplace that facilitates the transaction. When a platform meets a state’s definition of a marketplace facilitator, it is treated as the seller for sales tax purposes on transactions processed through its platform, even though the underlying goods or services belong to third‑party sellers.
Why these laws were created
Marketplace facilitator tax laws were created in response to fundamental changes in how goods and services are sold.
Historically, states relied on individual sellers to collect and remit sales tax, which proved difficult to enforce as sellers without physical presence often fell outside states’ collection authority. The South Dakota v. Wayfair decision in 2018 expanded nexus, creating activities from the physical presence requirement to also include economic activity. Marketplace facilitator laws followed as a practical enforcement solution.
Marketplace facilitator tax rules by state
Most states treat the marketplace facilitator as the seller for sales tax purposes. However, there are some rules that vary by state, including:
- Some states place collection responsibility on marketplace facilitators but involve local tax complexity, home‑rule jurisdictions or centralized versus non‑centralized local filing requirements.
- Rather than a true sales tax, some states require marketplace facilitators to remit gross receipts or excise‑style taxes on facilitated transactions. This distinction affects pricing, exemptions and financial reporting treatment.
- Some states impose marketplace facilitator obligations but offer simplified filing, flat‑rate options or alternative compliance programs designed to reduce administrative burden.
Who is responsible for collecting and remitting sales tax?
Marketplace facilitators, such as Amazon, eBay and Etsy, are required by all states that have a sales tax to charge and collect sales tax on behalf of the sellers who sell products or services through their platforms, regardless of whether the sellers have a physical presence or economic nexus in the state. This is intended to simplify sales tax compliance for sellers and to help ensure that the states collect the tax revenue from the growing online commerce.
Marketplace facilitator vs. seller responsibilities
Marketplace facilitators are generally responsible for correctly applying sales tax on sales made by sellers through their platforms.
While marketplace sales may be excluded from a seller’s own tax collection responsibilities in many states, sellers are still responsible for:
- Understanding where marketplace rules apply.
- Maintaining documentation.
- Reporting marketplace sales correctly on returns.
Sales made outside of marketplace facilitators’ platforms still remain the responsibility of the seller for sales tax purposes. You need to fully understand the arrangement with any third-party marketplace facilitator platform or e-commerce platform to avoid problems with under-collected or uncollected sales tax.
You should also review sales tax settings when using non-marketplace facilitator platforms so that sales tax is not collected in states you did not intend to collect because you do not have nexus in those states.
Impact on multi-state nexus filing requirements
Marketplace facilitators can impact multistate nexus filing in several ways:
- If you sell your products or services through a marketplace facilitator, you should check the sales tax policies and requirements of the platform and the states where you make sales. You may need to register with the states where the marketplace facilitator collects and remits sales tax on your behalf or where you have other sales activities that create nexus, such as storing inventory in the facilitator’s warehouses.
- If you sell your products or services through another method outside of marketplace facilitators, such as your own website, a physical location or through in-person salespeople, you should determine your sales tax nexus and obligations in the states where you make sales and register, collect and remit sales tax accordingly. Your sales through marketplace facilitators may create an economic nexus that would require you to collect sales tax on sales made outside of the marketplace.
Reporting requirements for marketplace sellers
While marketplace facilitator laws often shift sales tax collection and remittance responsibility to the marketplace, they do not eliminate reporting obligations for marketplace sellers. Sellers must still account for marketplace activity accurately in their tax filings, financial records and audit documentation.
In most states, sellers are required to report gross marketplace sales on their sales tax returns, even if the tax itself was collected and remitted by the facilitator. These sales are typically reported as deductible or non‑taxable marketplace transactions, supported by documentation showing the marketplace assumed collection responsibility.
Sellers are also responsible for maintaining detailed records, including marketplace statements, exemption data, gross receipts by state and evidence of tax collected by the facilitator. States increasingly expect sellers to substantiate why tax was not remitted directly, especially when businesses operate across multiple sales channels or marketplaces.
How to stay compliant with marketplace facilitator tax laws
Staying compliant with marketplace facilitator tax laws requires more than relying on the marketplace to collect and remit tax. To maintain compliance, sellers can:
- Identify where facilitator rules apply: Confirm which states, sales channels and transactions are covered by marketplace facilitator laws and where the seller may still retain responsibility.
- Report marketplace sales correctly: Even when tax is collected by the facilitator, gross marketplace sales often must still be reported and deducted on sales tax returns.
- Maintain supporting documentation: Retain proof that the marketplace collected and remitted tax, including agreements and transaction‑level reports.
- Monitor nexus and registrations: Marketplace sales may still count toward economic nexus or registration thresholds, even when collection is shifted to the facilitator.
- Coordinate across teams: Ensure tax, finance and ecommerce teams use consistent data and controls to support scalable, defensible compliance.
Marketplace facilitator tax FAQ
Marketplace facilitator laws can simplify sales tax collection, but they don’t remove all compliance concerns. Some frequent compliance questions include:
Do marketplace sellers still need to collect sales tax?
In many cases, no. Marketplace facilitator laws shift sales tax collection and remittance to the marketplace for transactions made on that platform. However, sellers are still responsible for collection on direct sales, and for accurate reporting and compliance related to marketplace transactions.
Are all states required to follow marketplace facilitator laws?
No. Marketplace facilitator laws are enacted at the state level, and while all states with a sales tax have adopted them, the rules vary by jurisdiction. States without a general sales tax do not apply these laws, and differences in definitions, thresholds and local tax treatment can still impact seller obligations.
How Wipfli can help
The state and local tax landscape can be complicated, but Wipfli’s dedicated team of professionals can simplify things and help ensure that your business is in compliance. Contact us today to see how we can help you clarify complex tax situations and keep your business running smoothly.
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