NSNexus by State

New York vs Vermont Sales Tax Nexus — Comparison 2026

Updated

Compare economic nexus thresholds, state and local rates, and filing rules in New York and Vermont.

MetricNew YorkVermont
Economic nexus threshold$500,000$100,000
Transaction threshold100200
State rate4.00%6.00%
Avg. local rate4.54%0.36%
Combined state + local8.54%6.36%
Marketplace facilitatorYesYes
Effective since2019-06-242018-07-01

Which state is easier for sellers?

For low-revenue sellers: nexus triggers first in Vermont because of its $100,000 threshold. If you cross that first, you register there first.

On rate: Vermont is friendlier for customers with a combined state + local rate of 6.36% vs 8.54%.

Both states have transaction-count triggers (New York: 100, Vermont: 200).

New York — nexus note

New York sales tax nexus and economic nexus threshold: a business with no New York physical presence is presumed to be a vendor when, in the immediately preceding four sales tax quarters, its gross receipts from tangible personal property delivered into New York exceed $500,000 AND it made more than 100 such sales into New York. Unlike most states, New York uses AND logic -- both thresholds must be met. Gross receipts include taxable and exempt tangible-personal-property sales without expense deductions, and sales transactions include invoices, sales slips, contracts, or other sale memoranda, including sales for resale. New York says marketplace sales should be included in the threshold calculation; after crossing, a remote seller files for registration within 30 days and begins collection 20 days later. Marketplace providers collect New York State and local sales tax on facilitated taxable tangible-personal-property sales delivered to New York, and marketplace sellers remain responsible for non-facilitated sales and taxable transactions outside the marketplace-provider rule. New York Tax Department source data last retrieved 2026-06-08.

Vermont — nexus note

Vermont sales tax nexus and economic nexus threshold: remote sellers must register, collect, and remit Vermont sales tax when Vermont-destination sales reach $100,000 or 200 individual sales transactions during the preceding twelve-month period. The remote-seller rule took effect July 1, 2018 after South Dakota v. Wayfair. Vermont counts taxable and nontaxable sales toward the threshold unless all the seller's Vermont sales are exempt; sellers review the threshold at each calendar-quarter close and generally begin collecting by the first day of the following month after the 30-day analysis window. Marketplace sellers combine direct Vermont sales with marketplace sales when testing the threshold, but do not collect on marketplace transactions where the marketplace is already collecting Vermont sales tax on their behalf. Vermont imposes a 6% state sales tax on retail sales, uses destination-based sourcing, and some municipalities add a 1% local option tax on taxable destination sales. Internet purchases, digital downloads, and prewritten software are listed by the Department as taxable categories unless an exemption applies.

What to do next

Use the nexus calculator to check exactly which of New York and Vermont you've already triggered. Then read each state's full guide:

New York overview →Vermont overview →

Frequently asked questions

Which state has the lower sales tax nexus threshold, New York or Vermont?
Vermont has the lower economic nexus threshold at $100,000, versus $500,000 in New York. A seller's Vermont sales would reach the published Vermont threshold first. 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 New York and Vermont have marketplace facilitator laws?
Yes. Both New York and Vermont 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, New York or Vermont?
Vermont has the lower combined state and local sales tax rate at 6.36%, compared with 8.54% in New York. These are the statewide base rate plus the average local rate; the exact rate depends on the customer's delivery address. As of 2026-06-08.
Do I need to register for sales tax in both New York and Vermont?
It depends on where you cross each state's economic nexus threshold (or have physical presence there). New York's published threshold is $500,000 or 100 transactions, and Vermont's is $100,000 or 200 transactions. 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 New York and Vermont?
New York's economic nexus rule took effect on 2019-06-24, and Vermont's took effect on 2018-07-01. 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: New York 2026-06-08 · Vermont 2026-05-17