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Explaining US Sales Tax Jurisdictions

Overview of U.S. sales tax jurisdictions, the meaning of home rule, and how Kintsugi applies the correct tax rates to sales transactions
Updated 3 months ago

This article explains how U.S. sales tax jurisdictions are organized, what “home rule” means in practice, and how Kintsugi determines the correct tax rates for your transactions. You’ll learn the difference between state‑administered and self‑administered jurisdictions, understand the role of home rule authority, and see how Kintsugi applies the appropriate tax rate based on your location and transaction details.


What Is a Tax Jurisdiction?

A tax jurisdiction is a geographic area that has the legal authority to impose and collect sales tax. In the US, taxing authority exists at multiple levels simultaneously. This layered structure is one of the main reasons US sales tax is more complex than VAT systems in other countries.


The Four Levels of US Taxing Authority

1. State

Every state with a sales tax sets a base state rate. This rate applies statewide on all taxable transactions, regardless of where in the state a sale occurs.

2. County

Counties may add their own sales tax on top of the state rate. County rates vary even within the same state.

3. City or Municipality

Many cities impose an additional sales tax layer. In some states, cities administer and collect this tax independently from the state.

4. Special Districts

Special taxing districts (such as transit districts, stadium districts, or tourism improvement zones) may add a small tax on top of all other layers. These can be very difficult to identify because they do not always follow city or county boundaries.

Example: Combined Rate in Denver, Colorado

State of Colorado: 2.90%

Denver County: 4.81%

City of Denver: 0% (combined in county rate)

Regional Transportation District: 1.00%

Scientific & Cultural Facilities District: 0.10%

Combined Rate: ~8.81%


Destination-Based vs. Origin-Based Sourcing

One of the most important concepts in US sales tax is sourcing: which location's rate applies to a given transaction?

  • Destination-based (most states): Tax is calculated based on where the product is delivered or used, meaning you apply the buyer's local rate. Most states, including California, New York, Florida, and Washington, follow this approach.

  • Origin-based (some states): Tax is calculated based on where the seller is located. States such as Texas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Virginia use origin sourcing for intrastate sales.

  • Mixed sourcing: A few states apply a combination. California, for example, uses origin-based sourcing for the state and county portions, but destination-based sourcing for district taxes. Utah applies origin-based rules for intrastate sales but destination-based rules for out-of-state sales.


What Is Home Rule?

In most states, businesses register once with the state and file a single return. Home rule states are different. In home rule states, individual cities, counties, or parishes have the authority to set and administer their own sales tax rules, completely separate from the state.

This means a business may need to register and file directly with individual local jurisdictions, not just the state government. The US currently has three primary home rule states: Colorado, Louisiana, and Alaska.

Home Rule State

What This Means for Your Business

Colorado

Many cities (Denver, Boulder, Aurora, etc.) require separate registration and filings. Kintsugi manages these separately.

Louisiana

Parishes (counties) administer their own taxes. Remote sellers register with the Louisiana Sales and Use Tax Commission, which handles parish distribution.

Alaska

No state sales tax, but participating local jurisdictions levy their own taxes through the Alaska Remote Sellers Commission (ARSSTC).


How Kintsugi Handles Jurisdictions

Kintsugi uses address-level tax rate data to identify the correct combination of state, county, city, and special district taxes for each transaction. Here is what that means in practice:

  • Kintsugi applies the correct combined rate at the ZIP code or rooftop level (specific address), not just at the state level

  • For home rule jurisdictions, Kintsugi manages the separate filing obligations automatically

  • When a ZIP code spans multiple counties with different rates, Kintsugi uses the most precise location data available to determine the right rate

📌 Note: If you notice a rate discrepancy, it may be due to a ZIP code that crosses county lines. Contact the Kintsugi support team and provide the specific address for verification.


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