3 Tax Complexities E-Commerce Systems Should Address

As more companies race to provide unique customer experiences, the importance of supporting technology involved in key customer touch points, such as sales transactions, continues to increase. E-commerce systems are a great example of how retailers help shape the customer experience by driving a seamless interaction with their customers across numerous commerce channels.

Vertex Inc.

To accomplish this, it is crucial for e-commerce systems to include streamlined tax calculation, reporting and compliance functionality. When tax calculations for online transactions are inaccurate or so noticeable as to be disruptive, they can give rise to customer experience problems and potentially costly compliance risks. Given the volatile combination of compliance challenges many online sellers now confront, avoiding tax-related inaccuracies and disruptions can be difficult.

However, by understanding potential sources of complexity, purchasers of e-commerce systems can make better buying decisions by ensuring a solution contains the functionality needed to address tax-compliance requirements as seamlessly as possible:

  1. Rapidly Changing US Sales Tax Rules and Rates:In 2018, 619 standard sales tax rate changes (to state, municipal and local sales tax rates) occurred throughout the US. During the past decade, there were a total of 5,886 standard new and changed sales tax rates — with an average of 588 changes annually during that stretch.
  2. New Global Tax Rules:Tax functions in global companies also must contend with new VAT rules in Europe and a surging movement among global tax authorities to tax e-commerce transactions within the jurisdiction where the customer resides. Increasing numbers of countries in Europe and Asia have either implemented new tax rules targeting digital activities or are considering doing so. The UK’s digital tax rules take effect in 2020, for example, while approval of France’s new digital taxation proposal is expected this year.
  3. Large Product Mixes and Customer Expectations:Retailers that offer thousands of products through their storefronts also face the ongoing challenge of categorising and managing those products to ensure taxes are accurately calculated on each product depending on a range of factors, including product types, transaction locations and tax exemption status.

An effective e-commerce system contains functionality that mitigates those areas of complexity while also improving sales tax capabilities — without costly custom integration development. There are a handful of tax-related questions to ask when considering a new solution. I’ll discuss more about this specific evaluation criteria in another Tax Matters post.

Explore more resources from our industry influencers:

Brian Wilchusky, Director, Global SAP Partnership, Vertex Inc. The Vertex Industry Influencers provide insights regarding the impact of tax regulations, policy, enforcement and emerging technology trends on global businesses.

Brian Wilchusky

Director, Global SAP Partnership

See All Resources by Brian

Brian Wilchusky leads our Global SAP partnership, responsible for growing the Vertex relationship across all areas of SAP’s business and developing innovative solutions for the SAP customer base. Brian has over 25 years of experience in partner and channel development, marketing, product management and software sales. He holds a B.S. from the Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

It's Time to Automate Transaction Tax

Every day, companies are transitioning from traditional, manual upkeep of sales tax to automation. Let us keep you compliant and free your organization from the burden of tax.

EXPLORE SOLUTION
Person purchasing product using credit card payment terminal.