Georgia vs South Carolina Sales Tax Nexus — Comparison 2026
Compare economic nexus thresholds, state and local rates, and filing rules in Georgia and South Carolina.
| Metric | Georgia | South Carolina |
|---|---|---|
| Economic nexus threshold | $100,000 | $100,000 |
| Transaction threshold | 200 | None |
| State rate | 4.00% | 6.00% |
| Avg. local rate | 3.49% | 1.49% |
| Combined state + local | 7.49% | 7.49% |
| Marketplace facilitator | Yes | Yes |
| Effective since | 2020-01-01 | 2018-11-01 |
Which state is easier for sellers?
For low-revenue sellers: nexus triggers first in both states because of its threshold. If you cross that first, you register there first.
On rate: rates are identical or the data is incomplete.
Georgia also adds a 200-transaction trigger that South Carolina doesn't have.
Georgia — nexus note
Economic nexus triggers at more than $100,000 in gross revenue from Georgia retail sales OR 200 or more separate retail sales in the previous or current calendar year. Remote sellers must collect state and applicable local sales tax.
South Carolina — nexus note
South Carolina sales tax nexus and economic nexus threshold: a remote seller has economic nexus when gross revenue exceeds $100,000 in the previous or current calendar year from sales of tangible personal property, products transferred electronically, or services delivered into South Carolina. South Carolina uses a sales-only threshold -- no transaction-count test. Remote sellers with economic nexus must obtain a Retail License and remit South Carolina Sales and Use Tax beginning the first day of the second calendar month after economic nexus is established; licensed remote sellers collect applicable state and local taxes on taxable South Carolina sales. SCDOR marketplace guidance treats marketplace facilitators as retailers responsible for state and local sales/use tax on products sold via the marketplace, and remote marketplace facilitators use the same $100,000 economic nexus standard, counting tangible personal property, products transferred electronically, and services delivered into South Carolina. South Carolina DOR source data last retrieved 2026-06-08.
What to do next
Use the nexus calculator to check exactly which of Georgia and South Carolina you've already triggered. Then read each state's full guide:
Frequently asked questions
- Which state has the lower sales tax nexus threshold, Georgia or South Carolina?
- Both Georgia and South Carolina publish the same economic nexus dollar threshold of $100,000, so a remote seller would reach each state's published threshold at the same level of in-state sales. These are the thresholds published by each state's tax authority as of 2026-06-08; confirm against the official source before registering.
- Do both Georgia and South Carolina have marketplace facilitator laws?
- Yes. Both Georgia and South Carolina have marketplace facilitator laws, so marketplaces such as Amazon, Etsy, and eBay collect and remit sales tax on the sales they facilitate in both states. Direct-to-consumer sales you make outside a marketplace remain your own responsibility once you cross each state's threshold. Verified 2026-06-08.
- Which has the lower sales tax rate, Georgia or South Carolina?
- Georgia and South Carolina have the same combined state and local sales tax rate (7.49%) in our current data as of 2026-06-08. The exact rate still depends on the customer's delivery address.
- Do I need to register for sales tax in both Georgia and South Carolina?
- It depends on where you cross each state's economic nexus threshold (or have physical presence there). Georgia's published threshold is $100,000 or 200 transactions, and South Carolina's is $100,000. You generally register in a state only once you cross its threshold, so you may have an obligation in one, both, or neither. Run the nexus calculator with your actual sales and confirm with each state's official source. Thresholds as of 2026-06-08.
- When did economic nexus take effect in Georgia and South Carolina?
- Georgia's economic nexus rule took effect on 2020-01-01, and South Carolina's took effect on 2018-11-01. Both stem from the 2018 South Dakota v. Wayfair Supreme Court decision, which let states require remote sellers to collect once an economic threshold is met.
Sources
date_retrieved: Georgia 2026-05-27 · South Carolina 2026-06-08
- Georgia: https://dor.georgia.gov/
- Georgia: https://dor.georgia.gov/taxes/sales-use-tax/out-state-sellers
- Georgia: https://www.salestaxinstitute.com/resources/economic-nexus-state-guide
- Georgia: https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/sales-tax-rates/
- South Carolina: https://dor.sc.gov/
- South Carolina: https://dor.sc.gov/index.php/sales-use-tax-index/sales-tax/remote-sellers
- South Carolina: https://dor.sc.gov/sales-use-tax-marketplace-facilitators-and-third-parties-whose-products-are-sold-marketplace-guidance-and-tax
- South Carolina: https://dor.sc.gov/tax/sales
- South Carolina: https://www.salestaxinstitute.com/resources/economic-nexus-state-guide
- South Carolina: https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/sales-tax-rates/