Politics & Government

Amazon to Charge Virginians Sales Tax

Amazon.com will begin collecting and paying Virginia state sales tax next year under an agreement announced by Gov. Bob McDonnell.

By Christine Stoddard and Daniel Lombardo
Capital News Service

Bid farewell to tax-free buys from the world’s most popular online store.

Amazon.com, the Seattle-based e-tailer of books and other products, next year will begin collecting and paying Virginia state sales tax under an agreement announced by Gov. Bob McDonnell.

Find out what's happening in Annandalewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Holmes Run Acres resident Jason Hart said he was glad Virginia was able to come to a compromise with Amazon.

“It was good to see that this was a mutually agreed upon decision than a rather than a contentious one,” said Hart, who has been a frequent Amazon shopper for several years.

Find out what's happening in Annandalewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Hart said he doesn’t think the tax will affect how often he shops on Amazon because the convenience of the site is still better than the alternative of going out and find the product he wants.

“Whenever I need something, my first thought is does Amazon have it? It’s the convenience of not having to go out. I’ve bought everything from breakfast cereal to a chain saw. An extra 5 percent isn't fun but it's still more convenient than running to the store to pick something,” said Hart.

McDonnell made the announcement as the General Assembly gave final approval to Senate Bill 597, which expands on an existing state law requiring online businesses with facilities in Virginia to pay the state’s 5 percent sales tax.

“This bill helps to ensure that online retailers with a physical presence in Virginia are treated the same as traditional brick-and-mortar retailers who are already required to collect and remit existing sales taxes on goods sold in the commonwealth,” the governor said.

McDonnell said his office, legislators, Amazon and traditional retailers had reached an agreement on the legislation. Amazon has pledged to collect sales tax on goods bought by Virginians beginning Sept. 1, 2013. The effective date could move to Jan. 1, 2014, if Congress adopts federal legislation governing sales tax collections by online businesses.

Sen. Frank Wagner, the sponsor of SB 597, said Virginia can expect to gain at least $23 million in tax revenues from Amazon in 2013 alone.

“As Black Friday and Cyber Monday have shown in recent years, the Internet retail sector is a fully developed and thriving member of the community of retail merchants,” Wagner said. “I’m glad to have sponsored this legislation that provides a level playing field for both brick-and-mortar retailers as well as those on the Internet.”

Rob Shinn of the Virginia Alliance for Main Street Fairness, which represents hundreds of retailers, called the agreement “a significant step toward tax fairness for the retail community by ensuring the same rules apply to all retailers doing business in Virginia.”

Traditional stores maintained that Amazon should have been paying sales taxes all along.

A press release from Virginia Retail Merchants Association stated, “State law requires that online retailers with a physical presence in the commonwealth collect sales tax on purchases from individuals with a Virginia address, but Amazon has been using a loophole to avoid those taxes.”

Amazon runs a warehouse in Sterling, VA and a data center at an undisclosed site in Virginia. But the company got around the state law by creating a separate subsidiary to handle distribution – and the Virginia Department of Taxation ruled in 2007 that Amazon was not required to collect and remit sale taxes.

When e-tailers don’t collect sales tax, state law requires Virginia purchasers to include the tax in their state income tax return. But most people don’t, officials say.

The Virginia retail industry has been lobbying the state government to require Amazon to collect sales tax. The issue came to a head after Amazon announced plans to open distribution centers in Chesterfield and Dinwiddie counties in late 2012. The centers, which would employ a total of 1,350 people, represent a combined investment of $135 million.

The eastern Chesterfield center will measure 1 million square feet and be located at Meadowville Technology Park. The Dinwiddie center will be located at Dinwiddie Commerce Park.

The state offered Amazon incentives to locate the distribution facilities in Virginia. The Governor’s Opportunity Fund will provide $3.5 million for the centers, while the Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission will contribute $850,000.

Traditional retailers groused about the deal because of Amazon’s refusal to collect sales tax.

“They’ve gone to great lengths to avoid it; this is kind of part of their business model,” said Laurie Aldrich, president of the Virginia Retail Merchants Association.

“Every time they went to open up a distribution center or a warehouse, they tried to set up their corporation where they could avoid collecting the tax. In 2007 in Virginia, they went and asked if they would be required to collect a tax if they set up their corporate structure a certain way.”

As a result, Virginians have been avoiding sales tax – and essentially getting a 5 percent discount – by buying products from Amazon instead of from a brick-and-mortar retailer.

“Retailers are not afraid of competition. They all want to be playing by the same rules,” Aldrich said. “It was really just an unfair advantage.”

After McDonnell announced the agreement on SB 597, the bill was approved 95-2 by the House of Delegates and 37-3 by the Senate. The legislation now goes to the governor to be signed into law.

Amazon says it supports the bill.

“Amazon is very grateful to Gov. McDonnell for his focus on Virginia jobs and for his efforts to work with other governors toward national resolution of the sales tax issue this year,” Paul Misener, the company’s vice president of global policy, said in a statement.

States in which Amazon currently collects state sales tax: Washington, Kentucky, North Dakota, Kansas and New York.

Patch Editor Sherell Williams contributed to this story.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here