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Tax implication for a digital goods startup: Wyoming incorporated, office in California?

We are a company based in India and are opening a US subsidiary. Our goods are digital - training videos which our customers can watch on our website. We expect the US subsidiary to receive payments from around the world. The rough revenue split would be 50:50 for US:Non-US. We will receive payments via Paypal which integrates into our bank account.

Here is our understanding:

Answer 9114

I cannot answer for WYOMING sales tax.

You should be subject to Wyoming state tax for customers in Wymoming, but you need to check Wyoming’s sales tax law. (Virginia, where we are located, requires we collect sales tax for sales of physical goods (but not digital such as you describe) within the state) Yes, although I am Not a Lawyer.

That is my experience with our company over the last 20 years (we sell software on CD and pay sales tax only to California* and to Virginia (b/c we are based in Virginia). We pay no other state sales taxes (so far!)

One Caveat with *California: They found a clever way to make us register to collect CA sales tax even though we have no physical presence in CA. We sell software (digital and CD) to CA colleges and they required we be signed up as a vendor. THAT, then, required that we agree to collect CA sales tax from everyone but colleges. If you run into this, I’d form a subsidiary for selling to the State (and feel free to mark up your prices ;-). Then ONLY the subsidiary sells to the State.

Answer 9460

Be careful about how you do this. Some states (I don’t know if California is one of them) require that if you have a physical presence in the state (i.e., an office or store location) then you must register as a foreign corporation (not as in non-U.S., simply a business entity formed outside the state), and that could have tax implications.

I’m not a tax specialist, but you’d be wise to spend some time (and, if necessary, a few dollars) talking to someone specifically in California about this, since they’ll be intimately familiar with their state’s laws.

Don’t go cheap in getting good advice or trying to bootstrap your way into things! If you aren’t careful from the very start then it could have very negative consequences down the road. There’s certainly nothing wrong with posting questions on sites like this to get you headed in the right direction, but there’s no substitute for sound professional advice that is specific to your circumstances.

Don’t underestimate just how serious tax problems can wind up being! There have been many small businesses shipwrecked by this simply because the owners were trying to do things the easy way in the expectation of fixing them later once their business was running more smoothly. Be careful, do it right, and research everything thoroughly.

Hope this helps.

Good luck!


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