Calculate sales tax for any purchase with accurate state and local rates. Compare prices across states and plan your shopping budget.
Some cities/counties add additional local sales tax. Check your local rate.
Discount applied before tax calculation

Frequently Asked Quentions

What is the difference between sales tax and use tax?
Sales tax is collected by retailers at the point of sale within your state. Use tax applies when you purchase taxable items from out-of-state sellers who don't collect sales tax. You're responsible for reporting and paying use tax directly to your state, typically on your income tax return.
Which states have no sales tax?
Five states have no statewide sales tax: Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, and Oregon. However, Alaska allows local municipalities to impose their own sales taxes, so some Alaskan cities do have sales tax.
How do I calculate sales tax on a discounted item?
Always apply the discount first, then calculate sales tax on the discounted price. For example: $100 item with 20% discount = $80 discounted price. With 8% sales tax: $80 × 0.08 = $6.40 tax. Total = $86.40.
Are groceries taxed?
It depends on your state. 38 states exempt most groceries from sales tax, while 12 states tax groceries at the full or reduced rate. Even in states that tax groceries, prescription drugs are almost always exempt.
Do I pay sales tax on online purchases?
Yes, in most cases. Since the 2018 Wayfair Supreme Court decision, most online retailers must collect sales tax if they meet economic thresholds in your state. Major retailers like Amazon, Walmart, and Target now collect sales tax in all states.
What items are typically exempt from sales tax?
Common exemptions include: prescription medications (all states), groceries (38 states), clothing (8 states), medical devices, and most services. However, exemptions vary significantly by state, so check your local rules.
How can I save money on sales tax?
Strategies include: shopping in no-tax states for major purchases, timing purchases during tax holidays, buying exempt items when possible, and understanding local rate variations within your state.
What is a sales tax holiday?
A sales tax holiday is a temporary period (usually a weekend) when certain items are exempt from sales tax. Common holidays include back-to-school (clothing, supplies), Energy Star (appliances), and hurricane preparedness (emergency supplies).
Do I need to report online purchases where no tax was collected?
Technically, yes. You should report these purchases and pay use tax on your state income tax return. However, enforcement is difficult and many consumers don't comply. Some states have a "use tax" line on income tax forms.
How do local sales taxes work?
Many cities, counties, and special districts add their own sales taxes on top of the state rate. These can range from 0.1% to over 5%. Your total combined rate = state rate + local rate. Local rates can vary even within the same county.

Need a Custom Tool?

Contact our team to build a custom calculator.

What is Sales Tax?

Sales tax is a consumption tax imposed by state and local governments on the sale of goods and services. Unlike income tax, which is based on what you earn, sales tax is based on what you spend. It’s typically calculated as a percentage of the purchase price and collected by retailers at the point of sale.

💡 Key Facts About Sales Tax:
  • State-Level Tax: Sales tax rates and rules vary significantly by state
  • Local Additions: Cities and counties can add their own sales taxes
  • Consumption-Based: You only pay when you purchase goods/services
  • Regressive Nature: Affects lower-income households proportionally more
  • Economic Impact: Major revenue source for state and local governments

How Sales Tax Works

When you make a purchase, the retailer calculates the sales tax based on:

  1. Purchase Amount: The price of the item(s) before tax
  2. State Tax Rate: The base percentage set by your state
  3. Local Tax Rate: Additional percentage from city/county
  4. Combined Rate: State + Local = Total sales tax rate

The retailer collects this tax from you and remits it to the appropriate government agencies. You don’t pay sales tax directly to the government—retailers act as collection agents.

Sales Tax vs. Value-Added Tax (VAT)

While many countries use Value-Added Tax (VAT), the United States primarily uses sales tax. Here are the key differences:

Feature Sales Tax (USA) VAT (Most Other Countries)
Collection Point Only at final retail sale At every stage of production/distribution
Tax Base Final consumer price Value added at each stage
Visibility Shown separately on receipt Usually included in displayed price
Rate Variation Varies by state and locality Nationally uniform (usually)
Business Impact Businesses don’t pay on business purchases Businesses pay but can reclaim

How to Use the Sales Tax Calculator

Our sales tax calculator makes it easy to determine the total cost of any purchase, including all applicable taxes. Follow these simple steps:

Step 1: Enter Purchase Amount

Input the price of the item or service you’re purchasing. This should be the pre-tax price. If you’re buying multiple identical items, you can either:

  • Enter the price per item and use the quantity field
  • Enter the total price for all items combined
💡 Tip: For large purchases like furniture or electronics, always calculate the total cost including tax before making a decision. A $1,000 item could actually cost $1,080 or more with tax!

Step 2: Select Your State

Choose the state where the purchase will be made. Sales tax rates vary dramatically across states:

  • No Sales Tax: Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon
  • Low Rates (under 5%): Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, New York, Wyoming
  • High Rates (7%+): California, Indiana, Mississippi, New Jersey, Tennessee

Step 3: Add Local Sales Tax (if applicable)

Many cities and counties add their own sales taxes on top of the state rate. For example:

  • Chicago, IL: 10.25% total (6.25% state + 4% local)
  • New York City, NY: 8.875% total (4% state + 4.875% local)
  • Los Angeles, CA: 9.5% total (7.25% state + 2.25% local)

If you’re unsure of your local rate, check your most recent receipt or contact your local government.

Step 4: Enter Quantity and Discounts

If you’re buying multiple items, enter the quantity. If there’s a discount or sale, enter the percentage to see the final cost after both discount and tax.

Important Note on Discount Order:

Discounts are applied before sales tax is calculated. This means you pay tax on the discounted price, not the original price. For example:

  • Item price: $100
  • 20% discount: $20 off
  • Discounted price: $80
  • 8% sales tax on $80: $6.40
  • Total: $86.40 (not $88.00)

Step 5: Calculate and Review Results

Click “Calculate Tax” to see:

  • Total sales tax amount
  • Final cost including tax
  • Tax breakdown by state and local components
  • Per-item tax and total costs
  • State-specific tax information and exemptions

Step 6: Compare States (Optional)

Click “Compare States” to see how your purchase would be taxed in different states. This is useful for:

  • Planning major purchases in low-tax states
  • Understanding tax differences when traveling
  • Online shopping from out-of-state retailers

Sales Tax Calculation Formulas

Understanding the mathematics behind sales tax helps you verify calculations and plan purchases more effectively.

Basic Sales Tax Formula

Sales Tax Amount = Purchase Price × (Sales Tax Rate ÷ 100)

Total Cost = Purchase Price + Sales Tax Amount

Or combined: Total Cost = Purchase Price × (1 + Sales Tax Rate ÷ 100)

With Discounts

Discounted Price = Purchase Price × (1 – Discount Rate ÷ 100)

Sales Tax = Discounted Price × (Sales Tax Rate ÷ 100)

Total Cost = Discounted Price + Sales Tax

With Multiple Items

Subtotal = Price per Item × Quantity

Total Tax = Subtotal × (Sales Tax Rate ÷ 100)

Total Cost = Subtotal + Total Tax

Combined State and Local Tax

Combined Tax Rate = State Rate + Local Rate

Total Tax = Purchase Price × (Combined Tax Rate ÷ 100)

Effective Tax Rate

Effective Tax Rate = (Total Tax ÷ Total Cost) × 100%

This shows what percentage of your total payment goes to tax.

Real-World Examples

Let’s explore practical scenarios to illustrate sales tax calculations:

Example 1: Everyday Purchase

Scenario:

  • Item: Laptop
  • Price: $1,200
  • State: Texas (6.25% state rate)
  • Local Tax: 2% (city/county)
  • Combined Rate: 8.25%

Calculation:

Sales Tax = $1,200 × 8.25% = $1,200 × 0.0825 = $99.00

Total Cost = $1,200 + $99.00 = $1,299.00

Tax Breakdown:

  • State tax (6.25%): $75.00
  • Local tax (2%): $24.00
  • Total tax: $99.00

💡 Insight: That laptop actually costs nearly $100 more than the sticker price!

Example 2: Purchase with Discount

Scenario:

  • Item: Television
  • Original Price: $800
  • Discount: 25% off
  • State: California (7.25% state rate)
  • Local Tax: 2% (example city)
  • Combined Rate: 9.25%

Calculation:

Discount Amount = $800 × 25% = $200

Discounted Price = $800 – $200 = $600

Sales Tax = $600 × 9.25% = $600 × 0.0925 = $55.50

Total Cost = $600 + $55.50 = $655.50

💡 Insight: The discount saves you $200 on the price, plus $18.50 in tax ($800×9.25% = $74 vs $55.50), for total savings of $218.50!

Example 3: Multiple Items

Scenario:

  • Items: 4 dining chairs
  • Price per Chair: $150
  • Quantity: 4
  • Subtotal: $600
  • State: Florida (6% state rate)
  • Local Tax: 1% (county)
  • Combined Rate: 7%

Calculation:

Subtotal = $150 × 4 = $600

Sales Tax = $600 × 7% = $600 × 0.07 = $42.00

Total Cost = $600 + $42 = $642.00

Tax per Chair = $42 ÷ 4 = $10.50

Total per Chair = $150 + $10.50 = $160.50

💡 Insight: Each chair costs $10.50 more due to tax. Budget accordingly!

Example 4: Cross-State Shopping

Scenario:

  • Item: Engagement ring
  • Price: $5,000
  • Option A: Buy in New Jersey (7% sales tax)
  • Option B: Buy in Delaware (0% sales tax)

Calculation:

New Jersey:

Sales Tax = $5,000 × 7% = $350

Total Cost = $5,350

Delaware:

Sales Tax = $5,000 × 0% = $0

Total Cost = $5,000

Savings by shopping in Delaware: $350

💡 Insight: For major purchases, it can be worth traveling to a no-sales-tax state. Just factor in travel costs and time!

Example 5: Online Purchase with Use Tax

Scenario:

  • Item: Camera equipment
  • Price: $2,000
  • Purchased from: Out-of-state online retailer
  • No tax collected: Retailer doesn’t have nexus
  • Your State: Massachusetts (6.25% sales tax)

Calculation:

Use Tax Owed = $2,000 × 6.25% = $125.00

💡 Insight: Even if the retailer doesn’t collect sales tax, you may still owe “use tax” to your home state. This is often reported on state income tax returns.

State-by-State Sales Tax Comparison

Sales tax rates vary dramatically across the United States. Here’s a comprehensive comparison:

States with No Sales Tax

Five states have no statewide sales tax:

  • Alaska: No state sales tax, but local municipalities can impose their own (up to 7.5%)
  • Delaware: No sales tax at any level
  • Montana: No state sales tax, but some resort areas have local option taxes
  • New Hampshire: No sales tax and no income tax (true tax haven)
  • Oregon: No sales tax, funded by higher income taxes instead

States with Lowest Sales Tax Rates

State State Rate Avg. Combined Rate* Notes
Colorado 2.90% 7.72% Low state rate, but high local taxes in many areas
Wyoming 4.00% 5.33% Consistently low combined rates
Wisconsin 5.00% 5.43% Restricts local sales taxes
Maine 5.50% 5.50% No local sales taxes allowed
Vermont 6.00% 6.24% Limited local tax additions

*Average combined state + local rate

States with Highest Sales Tax Rates

State State Rate Avg. Combined Rate* Notes
California 7.25% 8.85% Highest base state rate in the nation
Tennessee 7.00% 9.55% High local taxes push combined rates very high
Louisiana 4.45% 9.56% Low state rate but extremely high local taxes
Washington 6.50% 9.29% No income tax, relies heavily on sales tax
Alabama 4.00% 9.29% High local taxes, especially in cities
💡 Shopping Strategy: For major purchases, consider the total combined rate, not just the state rate. Louisiana has a relatively low 4.45% state rate but averages 9.56% total due to local taxes!

Sales Tax Exemptions and Exceptions

Not all purchases are subject to sales tax. Each state has exemptions for certain items and situations:

Commonly Exempt Items

Item Category Typical Exemption Status Examples
Groceries Exempt in 38 states Most food for home consumption
Prescription Drugs Exempt in all states Medications with doctor prescription
Clothing Exempt in 8 states Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin
Non-Prescription Drugs Taxed in most states Aspirin, vitamins, first aid supplies
Prepared Food Taxed in most states Restaurant meals, hot deli items
Services Generally exempt Haircuts, repairs, professional services (varies widely)

State-Specific Exemptions

Massachusetts:

  • Clothing under $175 exempt
  • Groceries exempt
  • Prescription drugs exempt

Texas:

  • Groceries exempt
  • Prescription drugs exempt
  • Over-the-counter medicines exempt
  • Clothing taxed

California:

  • Groceries exempt
  • Prescription drugs exempt
  • Clothing taxed
  • Most services exempt (but not all)

Sales Tax Holidays

Many states offer temporary sales tax holidays for specific items:

  • Back-to-School: Clothing, school supplies, computers (typically August)
  • Energy Star: Energy-efficient appliances
  • Hurricane Preparedness: Emergency supplies
  • Disaster Preparedness: Generators, batteries, etc.

During these holidays, qualifying items are exempt from sales tax for a limited time (usually a weekend).

Online Shopping and Sales Tax

The landscape of online sales tax changed dramatically with the 2018 Supreme Court decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair.

Pre-Wayfair Era (Before 2018)

Online retailers only had to collect sales tax if they had a “physical presence” (nexus) in the customer’s state. This meant many online purchases were tax-free.

Post-Wayfair Era (2018-Present)

States can now require out-of-state sellers to collect sales tax if they meet certain economic thresholds (typically $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions annually in the state).

What This Means for Consumers

  • Major retailers (Amazon, Walmart, Target) now collect sales tax in all states
  • Small online sellers may still not collect tax if below thresholds
  • You may owe use tax on purchases where no tax was collected
  • Marketplace facilitators (Etsy, eBay) often collect tax on behalf of sellers
⚠️ Important: Even if an online retailer doesn’t collect sales tax, you may still owe “use tax” to your home state. This is typically reported on your state income tax return, though enforcement is challenging.

Tax-Free Online Shopping Strategies

  1. Shop from small sellers below economic nexus thresholds
  2. Buy from states with no sales tax (if seller is located there)
  3. Look for tax-free holidays that apply to online purchases
  4. Consider purchasing in person in no-tax states for major items

Sales Tax Planning Strategies

Smart consumers can save significant money through strategic sales tax planning:

1. Cross-Border Shopping

For major purchases, consider traveling to nearby states with lower or no sales tax:

  • New York residents: Shop in New Hampshire or Delaware
  • California residents: Shop in Oregon (no sales tax)
  • Midwest residents: Consider Montana or New Hampshire
💡 Pro Tip: Factor in travel costs, time, and potential shipping restrictions. The savings should justify the effort.

2. Timing Purchases for Tax Holidays

Plan major purchases around sales tax holidays:

  • August: Back-to-school holidays in many states
  • Spring: Energy Star appliance holidays
  • Hurricane season: Preparedness holidays in coastal states

3. Understanding Delivery vs. Pickup

Sales tax is typically based on the delivery location, not the store location. This means:

  • Buying online and having it shipped to a no-tax state saves money
  • Some retailers offer “ship to store” options to optimize tax location
  • Business purchases may have different rules

4. Business Purchases and Resale Certificates

If you’re buying for business use or resale, you may be exempt from sales tax:

  • Resale Certificate: For items you’ll resell
  • Exemption Certificate: For business equipment and supplies
  • Agricultural Exemptions: For farming equipment and supplies

5. Leasing vs. Buying

In some states, leasing may have different tax treatment than buying:

  • Cars: Some states tax only the lease payments, not the full value
  • Equipment: Lease payments may be fully deductible for businesses

Sales tax laws continue to evolve. Here are emerging trends to watch:

1. Digital Goods and Services Taxation

States are increasingly taxing digital products:

  • Streaming services (Netflix, Spotify)
  • Software downloads and SaaS
  • E-books and digital media
  • Online gaming and virtual items

2. Economic Nexus Expansion

More states are adopting economic nexus standards, and thresholds may decrease over time, capturing more small sellers.

3. Marketplace Facilitator Laws

Platforms like Amazon, Etsy, and eBay are increasingly responsible for collecting and remitting sales tax on behalf of third-party sellers.

4. Local Tax Complexity

Cities and counties continue to add local sales taxes, creating a patchwork of rates that can change block by block in some areas.

5. Sales Tax Automation

Increased use of technology for:

  • Real-time rate calculation
  • Automated filing and remittance
  • AI-powered compliance monitoring

Final Recommendations

Based on our comprehensive analysis, here are our key recommendations:

For Everyday Shoppers:

  1. Always calculate total cost including tax before making purchase decisions
  2. Know your local combined rate (state + local) for accurate budgeting
  3. Take advantage of tax holidays for planned major purchases
  4. Compare prices across state lines for expensive items
  5. Keep receipts for potential returns or warranty claims

For Major Purchases:

  • Research tax rates in nearby states
  • Consider timing around tax holidays
  • Factor tax into negotiation (ask for “out-the-door” pricing)
  • Understand delivery location tax implications

For Online Shoppers:

  • Understand that most major retailers now collect sales tax
  • Be aware of potential use tax obligations
  • Check if your state offers online tax holiday shopping
  • Consider shipping to lower-tax locations if possible

For Business Owners:

  • Understand nexus requirements in all states where you sell
  • Implement sales tax automation software
  • Keep detailed records of exempt sales
  • Stay updated on changing economic nexus thresholds

🎯 Key Takeaway:

Sales tax may seem small on individual purchases, but it adds up significantly over time. A family spending $50,000 annually on taxable goods in an 8% tax state pays $4,000 in sales tax each year. Understanding and planning for sales tax can save you hundreds or thousands of dollars annually.

Thanks for Reading!

We hope this comprehensive guide helps you understand sales tax calculation and make smarter purchasing decisions. Remember to use our sales tax calculator whenever you’re planning a purchase to understand the true total cost.

Disclaimer

The information provided in this calculator and article is for educational and informational purposes only. Calculator Mafia (www.calculatormafia.com) is not a tax advisor, CPA firm, or financial planning service. The calculations provided are estimates based on current tax laws and may not reflect your actual tax liability.

Sales tax laws vary by state, county, city, and even special districts. Local tax rates can change frequently. This calculator provides state-level rates and allows manual entry of local rates, but cannot guarantee accuracy for all jurisdictions. Always verify current rates with your local tax authority.

Some items may be exempt from sales tax in your jurisdiction (groceries, prescription drugs, clothing, etc.). This calculator does not account for all possible exemptions, special rules, or tax holidays. For specific tax advice, consult with a qualified tax professional or your state’s department of revenue.

Calculator Mafia makes no warranties about the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of the calculations. Users rely on this information at their own risk. Calculator Mafia shall not be liable for any losses, damages, or tax penalties resulting from the use of this calculator or information provided.

The examples and scenarios provided are hypothetical and for illustrative purposes only. They do not constitute tax advice or recommendations for any specific individual or situation.

For official sales tax information, please contact your state’s department of revenue or visit their official website.

Scroll to Top