NSNexus by State

Oklahoma Digital Products Sales Tax Guide — 2026

Updated

Guide content last reviewed: 2026-06-04

If your Digital Products business sells $100,000 into Oklahoma in a calendar year, you have economic nexus and must register, collect, and remit Oklahoma sales tax.

Sales tax on digital products in Oklahoma

“Digital products” covers eBooks, audiobooks, video downloads, online courses, streaming subscriptions, digital artwork, stock photos, music, and similar non-physical delivered goods. Whether Oklahoma taxes them depends on how the state classifies the product — “specified digital products”, “electronic transfer of canned software”, or a service. Rules vary more than for physical goods.

If taxable in Oklahoma, the product is subject to 4.50% state rate plus any applicable local rate based on the buyer's address.

Which digital products does Oklahoma tax?

Most states sort digital goods using the Streamlined Sales Tax definition of “specified digital products”, which splits them into three subcategories a state can tax or exempt independently:

  • Digital audio-visual works — downloaded or streamed movies, shows, and recorded events. Streaming video subscriptions fall here.
  • Digital audio works — downloaded or streamed music, podcasts, audiobooks, and ringtones. Streaming music subscriptions fall here.
  • Digital books — eBooks. Newspapers, periodicals, blogs, and databases are excluded from the “book” definition and follow their own rules.

Because a state may tax one subcategory and exempt another, “are digital products taxable” rarely has a single yes/no answer. Where Oklahoma taxes a subcategory, the charge is subject to the 4.50% state rate plus any local rate at the buyer’s address. Software subscriptions (SaaS and electronically delivered “canned” software) sit outside this framework and follow Oklahoma’s separate software-taxability rule — see the SaaS guide for that determination.

Framework source: Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board — “Specified Digital Products” definition (SSUTA §332). date_retrieved: 2026-06-04. State-by-state taxability still varies; verify each subcategory with the Oklahoma Department of Revenue before invoicing.

Key distinctions

  • Specified digital products. Many states (adopting Streamlined Sales Tax definitions) tax SDPs — digital audio/video/books.
  • Online courses and education. Most states treat live-instruction courses as non-taxable services but treat pre-recorded course access as taxable digital products. Watch for this split if you sell both.
  • Subscriptions. Bundled subscription boxes with mixed digital + physical content are often taxed as a single taxable bundle — you can't allocate across taxable and non-taxable components unless the invoice separately states them.
  • B2B vs B2C. Some states exempt B2B digital products when bought for resale or when the buyer has a direct-pay permit. Keep certificates on file.

Common digital-product mistakes in Oklahoma

  • Treating all digital products the same across states — eBook tax treatment differs from SaaS, which differs from streaming.
  • Bundling digital + physical goods without a line-item breakdown. Most states tax the full bundle at the physical rate if not itemized.
  • Applying origin-based sourcing (your state's rate) when most states source digital products to the buyer's billing or shipping address.

Oklahoma nexus note

Oklahoma sales tax nexus and economic nexus threshold: any seller without Oklahoma physical presence that made more than $100,000 in taxable Oklahoma sales during the preceding or current calendar year must register with the Oklahoma Tax Commission and collect Oklahoma state and local sales tax on sales delivered or sourced to an Oklahoma address. Oklahoma uses a sales-only remote-seller threshold -- no transaction-count test. Oklahoma marketplace facilitators have a separate lower marketplace threshold: a facilitator with at least $10,000 of Oklahoma taxable sales during the immediately preceding 12 months must file an election with OTC to collect and remit or comply with statutory notice/reporting requirements. Oklahoma Tax Commission source data last retrieved 2026-06-08.

What to do next

Read the full Oklahoma 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

Are digital products taxable in Oklahoma in 2026?
For 2026, Oklahoma follows its existing "specified digital products" definition. Where the product is taxable, Oklahoma applies the 4.50% state rate plus any applicable local rates at the buyer's address; non-taxable categories (often live services or specific exemptions) remain outside collection. Confirm category-by-category status with the Oklahoma Department of Revenue before invoicing.
Does Oklahoma tax digital downloads (eBooks, music, etc.)?
Oklahoma has specific rules for "specified digital products". Some states treat all digital goods as taxable; others exempt specific categories. Check the current Oklahoma DOR guidance for your product type.
Are online courses taxable in Oklahoma?
Live-instruction courses are usually non-taxable services. Pre-recorded or on-demand courses are often taxable as specified digital products. Check Oklahoma's specific definitions.
Do I apply Oklahoma's general rate to digital products?
Yes — if the product is taxable, the 4.50% state rate plus applicable local rates apply at the buyer's address.
Does Oklahoma charge sales tax on digital streaming services in 2026?
Under the "specified digital products" framework most states use, streaming video is a "digital audio-visual work" and streaming music is a "digital audio work." Where Oklahoma taxes that subcategory, the streaming charge is subject to the 4.50% state rate plus any local rate at the buyer's address; where Oklahoma exempts it, the subscription is not taxed. States can tax one subcategory and exempt another, so confirm Oklahoma's current treatment with its Department of Revenue.
Are digital software subscriptions taxable in Oklahoma in 2026?
Digital software subscriptions usually fall outside the "specified digital products" rules and are taxed instead under Oklahoma's prewritten ("canned") software and SaaS rules. If Oklahoma taxes electronically delivered software or SaaS, the subscription is taxable at the 4.50% state rate plus local rates; if Oklahoma treats SaaS as a non-taxable service, the subscription is not taxed. Check the Oklahoma SaaS guide and confirm with the Department of Revenue before invoicing.

Sources

date_retrieved: 2026-06-08