Alaska E-commerce Sales Tax Nexus Guide — 2026
If your E-commerce business sells $100,000 into Alaska in a calendar year, you have economic nexus and must register, collect, and remit Alaska sales tax.
E-commerce sales tax basics in Alaska
For a direct-to-consumer store (Shopify, WooCommerce, BigCommerce, or custom) shipping to Alaska buyers, the economic nexus trigger is $100,000 in AK-destination revenue. Crossing that bar obligates registration, collection, and periodic filing.
Once registered, charge 0.00% state tax plus the applicable local rate — averaging 1.83% across Alaska but varying by the buyer's shipping ZIP on most tangible personal property. Digital products, subscriptions, and professional services have different treatment — see the Alaska SaaS page if you sell software or digital goods.
Registration + collection checklist
- Register with the Alaska Department of Revenue for a sales tax permit.
- Configure your cart platform to collect tax at the destination rate. Enable AK in your tax settings.
- Charge the combined state + local rate at the customer's delivery address (most states source to ship-to, not ship-from).
- File returns on the cadence your DOR assigns (monthly, quarterly, or annually).
- Track your Alaska-sourced revenue monthly so you know when you're approaching or below threshold for the next period.
Common mistakes e-commerce sellers make in Alaska
- Using origin-based rates (your HQ state's rate) instead of destination rates. Alaska sources to the buyer's ship-to address — charge the AK rate, not your home state's.
- Counting marketplace sales toward the Alaska threshold. Amazon, Etsy, and eBay sales are usually excluded in Alaska; check the specific rule before adding them to your nexus-tracking spreadsheet.
- Waiting until year-end to register. If you cross $100,000 mid-year, you must begin collecting on sales made after the threshold-crossing date — back-tax exposure grows until you register.
- Forgetting to file zero returns once registered. Missing filings trigger penalties even when you owe no tax.
Alaska nexus note
Alaska has no state-level sales tax, but many municipalities impose local sales tax. Remote sellers with $100,000 or more in statewide gross sales must register with the Alaska Remote Sellers Commission (ARSLC) and collect applicable local rates.
What to do next
Read the full Alaska overview for thresholds, filing frequency, marketplace facilitator rules, and registration links. Use the nexus calculator to check whether you have crossed the threshold. For background on the post-Wayfair economic nexus framework, see the pillar guide.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Alaska's e-commerce sales tax in 2026?
- Alaska's 2026 e-commerce sales tax: out-of-state sellers collect once they cross $100,000 in Alaska-destination revenue. Charge the 0.00% state rate plus any applicable local rate at the buyer's ship-to address.
- Do I collect sales tax on every Alaska order?
- You collect Alaska sales tax once you cross the economic nexus threshold ($100,000). Below threshold, you don't need to collect unless you have physical nexus (office, employees, inventory in Alaska).
- What rate do I charge for Alaska e-commerce sales?
- 0.00% state rate, plus any applicable local rate at the customer's ship-to address. Most e-commerce platforms (Shopify, WooCommerce) can apply destination rates automatically when you enable AK in tax settings.
- Do I need to collect sales tax on shipping in Alaska?
- It depends on state-specific rules. Many states tax shipping when the product is taxable; some states exempt shipping if separately stated. Check Alaska's specific policy or use a tax service that encodes the rule.
Sources
date_retrieved: 2026-04-27