# What South Dakota v. Wayfair Means for Sales Tax Compliance Today

Mar 10, 2026Arnold L.

What South Dakota v. Wayfair Means for Sales Tax Compliance Today

The South Dakota v. Wayfair decision changed the way businesses think about sales tax in the United States. Before the ruling, many online sellers focused on whether they had a physical presence in a state. After the decision, states gained much broader authority to require out-of-state businesses to collect and remit sales tax when they cross certain sales-based thresholds.

For founders, eCommerce brands, and growing companies, the practical lesson is simple: sales tax compliance is no longer limited to the state where a business is headquartered. If your company sells across state lines, the Wayfair decision may affect where you need to register, collect, file, and remit.

This article explains what the ruling changed, what economic nexus means, how businesses can assess risk, and how to build a practical compliance process that supports growth instead of slowing it down.

What the Wayfair Decision Changed

The Wayfair ruling was not about creating sales tax from scratch. States already had sales tax systems. What changed was the standard used to decide when an out-of-state business must participate in that system.

Under the older physical presence approach, a business generally needed offices, employees, inventory, or another tangible footprint in a state before being required to collect sales tax there. That rule made sense when commerce was more local, but it became harder to apply as online sales expanded.

Wayfair shifted the focus toward economic activity. In other words, a state may require a business to collect sales tax based on the volume of sales or number of transactions it has with customers in that state, even if the business has no office or warehouse there.

That change matters because modern businesses often reach customers nationwide from a single location. A brand can cross into taxable obligations in several states without ever opening an additional office.

Understanding Nexus

Nexus is the connection between a business and a state that can create tax obligations. If a business has nexus in a state, it may have to register, collect the appropriate tax, file returns, and maintain records.

There are two major forms of nexus to understand:

  • Physical nexus: created by a physical footprint such as an office, employee, inventory, or store.
  • Economic nexus: created when a business reaches a state’s sales or transaction threshold.

Wayfair made economic nexus the main issue for many remote sellers. That means a business can owe sales tax compliance duties in states where it has no physical facility at all.

Why Economic Nexus Matters

Economic nexus changed the compliance burden for businesses of all sizes, especially companies that rely on eCommerce, online marketplaces, and direct-to-consumer sales.

A business may trigger economic nexus by exceeding a dollar threshold, a transaction threshold, or both. States set their own rules, and those rules can differ in important ways.

Common variations include:

  • Different sales thresholds from state to state
  • Different transaction thresholds from state to state
  • Different measurement periods, such as the current year, prior year, or rolling 12 months
  • Different registration deadlines after nexus is established
  • Different rules for marketplace sales and exempt transactions

Because the rules are not uniform, businesses cannot rely on a single nationwide threshold. Compliance requires tracking activity state by state.

What Types of Businesses Are Most Affected

Wayfair affects nearly any business that sells into multiple states, but some models face greater complexity than others.

eCommerce sellers

Online retailers often reach customers in many states quickly. A sales spike from a promotion, product launch, or holiday season can create nexus in places the business was not expecting.

Marketplace sellers

Businesses that sell through third-party marketplaces may need to understand how marketplace facilitator laws apply. In some states, marketplace sales are collected by the platform. In others, the seller may still have reporting obligations or need to track marketplace and direct sales separately.

Subscription businesses

Digital subscriptions, recurring services, and SaaS-type models may face complicated taxability questions depending on state law, product classification, and billing structure.

Manufacturers and wholesalers expanding into direct sales

A business that traditionally sold through distributors may encounter new sales tax issues once it begins selling directly to customers in multiple states.

Startups and growing small businesses

Early-stage companies often focus on growth first and compliance later. That approach can create avoidable exposure if sales accelerate faster than tax tracking systems.

Common Compliance Risks After Wayfair

The biggest Wayfair-related risks are rarely dramatic on day one. They usually build over time.

Missing a nexus threshold

If a business does not monitor sales by state, it may not realize it has crossed a threshold until months later. By then, the business may already be behind on registration and collection.

Registering too late

Some states expect businesses to register shortly after nexus is established. Delayed registration can create back taxes, interest, and penalties.

Charging the wrong rate

Sales tax rates can vary by state, county, city, and special district. Collecting the wrong rate can create customer disputes and reconciliation problems.

Filing in the wrong jurisdiction

A business may collect tax correctly but still fail to file in the right state, or miss local filing requirements.

Incomplete recordkeeping

If records are not organized, a company may struggle to prove when nexus began, which sales were exempt, or how tax was calculated.

Misclassifying products or services

The taxability of a product can differ from state to state. Misclassification can lead to under-collection or over-collection.

How to Determine Whether Your Business Has Nexus

A practical nexus review does not need to be complicated, but it does need to be consistent.

Start by reviewing:

  • Where your business has physical presence
  • Where employees, contractors, or inventory are located
  • Where customers are buying your products or services
  • How much revenue you generated in each state
  • How many transactions occurred in each state
  • Whether marketplace sales are included in your totals under state rules
  • Whether any exempt sales should be counted or excluded

Businesses should also review how thresholds are measured. Some states look at current-year activity, while others use trailing periods or prior calendar periods. The measurement method can change when a business is considered to have crossed the line.

Because the details differ by state, a business should avoid making assumptions based on what worked in one jurisdiction.

What To Do After Nexus Is Triggered

Once a business determines that nexus exists, the next steps should be handled methodically.

1. Register in the relevant state

A business generally needs to register before it begins collecting sales tax there. Registration may involve obtaining a sales tax permit or comparable account.

2. Update tax settings

Checkout systems, invoicing tools, and accounting software should reflect the correct tax rules for each state and locality where the business must collect.

3. Start collecting tax properly

The business should collect the correct tax amount on taxable sales starting from the required effective date.

4. File returns on time

States may require monthly, quarterly, or annual filing depending on the account and volume of sales. Even if no tax is due for a period, filing rules may still apply.

5. Reconcile records regularly

Sales reports, exemption certificates, filings, and payment records should be reviewed against accounting data to catch errors early.

6. Review thresholds continuously

Nexus is not a one-time determination. Business growth, seasonal changes, new channels, and new state rules can all change the compliance picture.

Why Multi-State Compliance Becomes Complex Fast

The complexity of post-Wayfair compliance is not just about the number of states. It is also about the number of moving parts.

A business may need to manage:

  • Different threshold rules in each state
  • Different filing calendars and due dates
  • Local taxes layered on top of state taxes
  • Taxability differences by product category
  • Marketplace and direct sales treated differently
  • Exemption documentation and audit support
  • Software configuration across checkout, ERP, and accounting systems

For a growing company, these obligations can consume time that should be spent on sales, hiring, and product development. That is why many businesses benefit from building compliance processes early instead of waiting until tax issues become urgent.

How Zenind Supports Founders and Growing Businesses

Zenind helps business owners build and maintain a compliant company from the start. While Wayfair is a sales tax issue, it fits into a broader compliance mindset: once a business starts growing, the owner needs systems that support registration, organization, and ongoing requirements.

For founders, that means:

  • Keeping company formation and compliance tasks organized
  • Staying on top of important filings and deadlines
  • Building a structure that supports growth across state lines
  • Reducing the chance that compliance work gets lost as the business scales

If your company is expanding beyond your home state, strong administrative systems matter. Formation is only the first step. Ongoing compliance is what keeps growth sustainable.

A Practical Compliance Checklist

Use this checklist to stay ahead of Wayfair-related obligations:

  • Track sales and transactions by state
  • Review physical presence and remote activity regularly
  • Compare activity against each state’s nexus thresholds
  • Confirm whether marketplace sales are included
  • Register promptly when nexus is established
  • Configure tax software correctly
  • Maintain exemption certificates and supporting records
  • Reconcile collected tax with filed returns
  • Monitor law changes on a continuing basis

When To Get Professional Help

Sales tax rules can be technical, and mistakes can be costly. Professional support is especially valuable when:

  • Your business sells in many states
  • You are unsure when nexus began
  • You have mixed product or service taxability
  • Your business uses both marketplace and direct sales channels
  • You are expanding quickly and need a repeatable compliance process

A qualified accountant, tax advisor, or compliance service can help you interpret state rules, set up filings, and reduce the chance of avoidable errors.

Final Thoughts

South Dakota v. Wayfair reshaped sales tax compliance by giving states greater authority to require out-of-state businesses to collect tax based on economic activity. For modern companies, that means sales tax obligations can arise well before a business has any physical presence in a state.

The best response is not to guess. It is to track activity carefully, understand where nexus exists, register on time, and keep records organized. Businesses that build compliance into their operating process will be better positioned to grow without creating avoidable tax risk.

As your company expands, Zenind can help you stay organized with the foundational compliance work that supports long-term growth.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

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