In some recent FOG posts I've seen the suggestion that buying online from an out-of-state retailer is a way to get Festool products more cheaply because you don't have to pay sales tax.
I live in Illinois, and I buy Festool both online and from brick-and-mortar stores here. When an online retailer does not collect sales tax because it doesn't have a physical presence in Illinois, I still have to pay tax. There is a "use tax" that is the difference between any sales tax I actually paid and the sales tax I would have paid at a store in Illinois. So the tax amount for me is the same whether I make the purchase in Illinois, online, or on a road trip to a state with lower taxes.
The problem for Illinois with the use tax is that reporting is on the honor system. The tax isn't collected at the point of sale. Instead, buyers are supposed to keep purchase receipts and self-report when filing annual Illinois tax returns. As itemizing is a hassle, the state offers a straight tax alternative based on income. Regardless, there's no way for the state to check how much people have spent at out-of-state retailers. This means that many people who don't want to pay this tax do not pay it.
While I don't like many of the spending decisions made by the Illinois state government, I still pay my taxes. I've really liked seeing FOG users speak up against abuse of Festool's generous return policy and for supporting Festool's manufacturing jobs in Germany. I hope that FOG readers who may not have already will take the time to learn what their state's use tax obligations are and then do the right thing and pay the proper amounts.
I live in Illinois, and I buy Festool both online and from brick-and-mortar stores here. When an online retailer does not collect sales tax because it doesn't have a physical presence in Illinois, I still have to pay tax. There is a "use tax" that is the difference between any sales tax I actually paid and the sales tax I would have paid at a store in Illinois. So the tax amount for me is the same whether I make the purchase in Illinois, online, or on a road trip to a state with lower taxes.
The problem for Illinois with the use tax is that reporting is on the honor system. The tax isn't collected at the point of sale. Instead, buyers are supposed to keep purchase receipts and self-report when filing annual Illinois tax returns. As itemizing is a hassle, the state offers a straight tax alternative based on income. Regardless, there's no way for the state to check how much people have spent at out-of-state retailers. This means that many people who don't want to pay this tax do not pay it.
While I don't like many of the spending decisions made by the Illinois state government, I still pay my taxes. I've really liked seeing FOG users speak up against abuse of Festool's generous return policy and for supporting Festool's manufacturing jobs in Germany. I hope that FOG readers who may not have already will take the time to learn what their state's use tax obligations are and then do the right thing and pay the proper amounts.