Minnesota Sales Tax for Dropshipping Sellers — 2026 Guide
If your Dropshipping business sells $100,000 or 200 transactions into Minnesota in a calendar year, you have economic nexus and must register, collect, and remit Minnesota sales tax.
Dropshipping sales tax in Minnesota
Dropshipping into Minnesota raises three distinct tax questions. First, you (the retailer) have to collect and remit Minnesota sales tax on your retail sales if you exceed $100,000 or 200 transactions. Second, your dropship supplier may charge YOU sales tax on the wholesale invoice if they have Minnesota nexus and you can't present a valid resale certificate. Third, the marketplace (if any) handles its own tax on facilitated transactions.
Minnesota applies 6.88% as the base state rate; local add-ons average 1.26%.
Resale certificate rules
- If you have a Minnesota sales tax permit, you can usually issue your dropshipper a MN resale certificate to avoid being charged sales tax on the wholesale invoice.
- Some states (notably California, Florida, Massachusetts, Tennessee, and a few others) require the buyer to hold an IN-STATE registration before issuing a resale certificate — a home-state certificate isn't enough.
- Streamlined Sales Tax (SST) states accept the uniform Multistate Certificate; others have their own forms.
Common dropshipping mistakes in Minnesota
- Treating your dropshipper's nexus as if it obligates them to collect from the end customer — no, they invoice you at wholesale; you invoice the customer at retail. Only the retail transaction is subject to collection duty.
- Forgetting that your retail revenue into Minnesota still counts toward the economic nexus threshold, independent of the dropshipping arrangement.
- Not keeping resale certificates on file — your supplier will charge you tax (and you'll have already collected from the customer), eroding margin.
Minnesota nexus note
Economic nexus in Minnesota triggers when remote sellers exceed $100,000 in gross sales OR 200 or more separate transactions into Minnesota in the current or preceding calendar year — whichever is met first.
What to do next
Read the full Minnesota 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
- Who collects Minnesota sales tax on dropshipped orders?
- You do, as the retailer. Your dropshipper invoices you at wholesale; you invoice the customer at retail. Collection duty follows the retail transaction — that's you.
- Will my dropshipper charge me Minnesota sales tax on the wholesale?
- Only if your dropshipper has Minnesota nexus AND you can't provide a valid MN resale certificate. Obtain resale certificates for every state where your dropshipper operates.
- Does dropshipping trigger economic nexus in Minnesota?
- Yes, your retail revenue into Minnesota still counts toward the $100,000 in gross sales OR 200 transactions threshold, independent of how fulfillment happens.