Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
PURPOSE: Chapter 144, RSMo, contains the statutory
provisions governing application of use tax. This rule explains who qualifies
as a marketplace facilitator and how a seller should report their use tax
transactions.
(1) In general,
a marketplace facilitator must collect and remit use tax on behalf of sellers
that utilize the marketplace facilitator's service or services to list tangible
personal property or services for sale regardless of the forum. A marketplace
facilitator who also has their own tangible personal property or services for
retail sale must remit tax for those sales separately.
(2) Definition of Terms.
(A) Nexus-contact with the state.
(B) Economic Nexus-selling tangible personal
property for delivery into this state, provided the seller's gross receipts
from taxable sales from delivery of tangible personal property into this state
in the previous calendar year or current calendar year exceeds one hundred
thousand dollars ($100,000).
(C)
Marketplace Facilitator-a person that facilitates a retail sale by a
marketplace seller by listing or advertising for sale by the marketplace
seller, in any forum, tangible personal property or services that are subject
to tax under Chapter 144, RSMo, and either directly or indirectly through
agreements or arrangements with third parties collects payment from the
purchaser and transmits all or part of the payment to the marketplace
seller.
(D) Marketplace Seller-a
seller that makes sales through any electronic marketplace operated by a
marketplace facilitator.
(3) Basic Application of Taxes.
(A) A marketplace facilitator that
facilitates a retail sale of tangible personal property or taxable services
that are delivered into the state for a marketplace seller should collect and
remit use tax on behalf of the marketplace seller.
(B) A marketplace seller should not report
any sales made through a marketplace facilitator where the marketplace
facilitator reported and remitted the tax. A marketplace seller must keep
records of all sales made through a marketplace facilitator.
(C) If a marketplace facilitator has a
physical presence in the state then it should continue to remit sales tax on
those sales even if it is also remitting use tax on behalf of marketplace
sellers.
(D) A marketplace
facilitator is engaging in business in this state if the sales it facilitates
and its own sales combined are more than one hundred thousand dollars
($100,000) annually.
(4)
Examples.
(A) A seller sells its own tangible
personal property or services in the state and also sells tangible personal
property or services for other sellers. The seller has sales of sixty thousand
dollars ($60,000) and facilitates sales of seventy thousand dollars ($70,000).
Because the total sales are in excess of one hundred thousand dollars
($100,000), the seller is a marketplace facilitator and should collect and
remit on behalf of the other sellers.
(B) A seller sells its own tangible personal
property or services in the state and also sells tangible personal property or
services for other sellers. The seller has sales of forty thousand dollars
($40,000) and facilitates sales of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000). Because
the total sales are less than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), the
seller does not have economic nexus and should not collect and remit on behalf
of the other sellers.
(C) A
marketplace facilitator has a physical presence in the state and makes its own
sales of tangible personal property or services. It should collect and remit
sales tax on its own sales. It should collect and remit use tax on the sales it
facilitates for other sellers.
(D)
A seller has no physical presence in the state and sells less than one hundred
thousand dollars ($100,000) of its own tangible personal property through its
website to addresses in the state of Missouri. The seller does not facilitate
sales for others. The seller is not a marketplace facilitator or marketplace
seller.