General information
Categories of Services
Services generally fall into four groups:
- Business services (advertising, IT, consulting, payroll)
- Personal services (dry cleaning, hair care, tanning)
- Professional services (accountants, lawyers, doctors)
- Maintenance & repair services (car repairs, landscaping, building improvements)
State-by-State Rules
- No sales tax at all: NH, OR, MT, AK, DE
- Tax services by default: HI, SD, NM, WV (exceptions must be specified)
- Others (41 states + DC): Tax only services explicitly listed in their statutes
Examples: Hawaii taxes nearly all services; Texas taxes dry cleaning but exempts veterinary services.
Compliance Challenges
Multi-state businesses must understand each state’s rules for every product or service sold. A nexus study is essential when entering a new state or adding a new service line. For example, a CPA firm expanding from Arizona (CPA services untaxed) to New Mexico (CPA services taxable) must register, collect, and remit New Mexico’s Gross Receipts Tax or risk paying it out of pocket.
Compliance Steps
- Register for sales tax permits where you have nexus
- Research and apply correct tax rates (including local rates)
- File and remit returns on time
- Monitor law changes — services untaxed today may become taxable tomorrow
Sales tax on services is one of the most rapidly evolving areas of state tax policy, driven by budget needs and the digital economy. Businesses must stay proactive with nexus reviews, product/service taxability research, and rate updates to avoid costly compliance gaps. Automation tools like TaxJar can simplify multi-state compliance and reduce risk.
Other news from Other countries
Saudi Arabia: ZATCA Sets Rules for 24th Group in E-Invoicing Rollout

The ZATCA has set criteria for selecting establishments in the "Twenty-Fourth Group" for electronic invoicing integration. Notifications will go to those with VAT revenues over SAR 375,000 by June 30, 2026. The second phase includes linking systems to Fatura and issuing specific invoice formats. The first phase started on December 4, 2021, requiring taxpayers to stop using handwritten invoices and... Read more
South Africa Proposes Major VAT Reforms to Modernize Tax System

South Africa’s 2025 draft TLAB and TALAB propose major VAT reforms to modernise the system and close compliance gaps. Key changes include extending intermediary rules to local suppliers, zero-rating silver exports and clinical trial services, exempting all basic education supplies (forcing some schools to deregister), removing low-value import thresholds, and tightening VAT registration with site... Read more
South Africa Releases VAT Draft to Advance E-Invoicing and Digital Reporting

South Africa's National Treasury and Revenue Service introduces e-invoicing, e-reporting, and an interoperability framework to modernize the VAT system. On August 16, 2025, South Africa’s National Treasury and Revenue Service released a draft amending the VAT Law, introducing definitions for e-invoicing, e-reporting, and an interoperability framework to modernize the VAT system. E-invoicing... Read more
New Zealand’s e-Invoicing Mandate: A Concise Overview

New Zealand is transitioning to e-invoicing as a standard, driven by the global Peppol Network and the regional PINT A-NZ specification. The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) oversees the adoption, with central public agencies required to receive e-invoices since March 2022. From January 2026, agencies processing over 2,000 domestic invoices annually must send and receive e-in... Read more
Malaysia Introduces 2025 Tax Reforms: E-Invoicing Rollout

Malaysia's tax authority has introduced new tax measures and compliance requirements for 2025, including mandatory e-invoicing for taxpayers with annual income between 5 and 25 million ringgits, increased support for MSMEs, and a new tax handling branch. On August 22, the Malaysian Tax Authority published e-Bulletin No. 4/2025, which detailed a number of new tax laws and compliance standards for 2... Read more
Indonesia Reforms Digital Tax Collection for E-commerce

Between May and July 2025, Indonesia introduced major reforms to strengthen e-commerce and digital tax collection. PERPRES-68/2025 creates a state-backed system to collect VAT on overseas digital sales, PMK-37/2025 appoints qualifying domestic and foreign platforms (PPMSE) as Article 22 income tax collectors with a 0.5% withholding on sellers’ revenue, and PER-12/2025 tightens VAT reporting and re... Read more