As a business operating in Nebraska, you have a duty to remit your taxes to the state from the sales you make. Depending on your exact location, you may also have tax obligations to your county and your city. This means you need to collect sales and use tax, and also file tax returns regularly.
Many ways are available to determine what taxes you collect and remit. In certain cases, if you make sales outside city limits, you must track them separately from those made within city limits. Do you have specific obligations, as a business owner in Lincoln, Nebraska? Let's take a look.
The City of Lincoln (as the state capital and the Lancaster County seat), does charge a sales tax on commercial transactions within the city limits. You have to add a 1.75% tax to all sales including tangible item sales (excluding certain kinds of prescription medications and even some types of medical devices). While most services are considered untaxable in the State of Nebraska, there are a few exceptions. You can see the exemptions and recently asked questions here.
In all, you require a 7.25% collection on the sales you make, of which 5.5% goes to the state. You do have a reprieve, however. Nebraska allows businesspeople to withhold a small percentage of the collected sales and use tax in what is known as a Collection Discount. The discount also serves as compensation for your efforts to collect, compile, and comply with the state tax regulation.
You can keep 2.5% of the first $3,000 you collect in a month, for every location you're currently operating in within the state.
Do note, the US Supreme Court Decision in South Dakota vs Wayfair does not affect the meaning of business nexus in the context of Nebraska's tax revenue laws. As of January 1, 2019, the state considers vendors making $100,000 and above in annual sales or upwards of 200 transactions to have economic nexus in the state.
Based on the sales you make, your sales tax account status with the revenue service, and other criteria. You could end up having to file tax returns monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, or on an annual basis.
To file quarterly, you need to file the returns by the following dates;
For monthly filing, ensure you do so by the 20th of the following month. As an example, for sales made in January, file your taxes by February 20th. For annual filing, say 2022, consider filing them by January 20th, 2023.
After doing the tedious work of calculating what you owe the state and city of Lincoln, submit the returns and collection to the concerned tax collection service. Nebraska also allows electronic filing for sales tax returns. In case you're making payments of $9,000 or more, you need to do so via EFT, then file the Form 10 return electronically.
If you're unsure about filing your taxes electronically, you can still do so via snail mail. You have to fill out Nebraska Form 10 and mail it to the Nebraska Department of Revenue. Note, however, that filing via mail takes significantly longer to process the returns and payment.
Let's face it, taxes aren't everyone's favorite thing to do. What's more, sitting down to handle them takes you away from doing what you really should be doing; running your business. Instead, you should let us at Keep-On-Booking handle tax-related matters on your behalf. Whether it's
reconciling or reporting, sorting out
sales tax, and
more, we can do it all.