Wyoming SaaS Sales Tax Guide & Taxability (2026)
Guide content last reviewed: 2026-06-05
Use this Wyoming SaaS sales tax guide to check 2026software subscription taxability, taxable vs. non-taxable SaaS treatment, bundled services, and when the $100,000 economic nexus threshold creates registration and filing duties. If SaaS is not taxable in Wyoming, crossing the threshold may still mean registering or filing zero-tax returns rather than collecting tax.
Is SaaS taxable in Wyoming?
SaaS taxability varies wildly by state. Wyoming's general sales tax rate is 4.00%, but whether software-as-a-service is subject to that rate depends on the state's definition of “taxable service” or “canned software” and on whether it's delivered to an in-state user.
Regardless of SaaS taxability, the economic nexus threshold of $100,000 applies. If you exceed it on subscription revenue, you register; from there the question becomes what you tax, not whether.
Practical steps for SaaS companies
- Track Wyoming-sourced ARR (use billing country or IP geolocation).
- Determine taxability: consult a CPA or use an automated service that maintains taxability rules by state.
- Register once you cross threshold, even if SaaS is currently non-taxable — rules change.
- Integrate tax calculation into your billing platform (Stripe Tax, Quaderno, Chargebee with Avalara).
SaaS-specific traps to avoid in Wyoming
- Treating SaaS and “canned software” the same way. Many states distinguish between cloud-hosted SaaS and prepackaged downloaded software, with different tax treatments. Check Wyoming's specific definitions before assuming your product falls in either bucket.
- Bundling non-taxable SaaS with taxable services (training, consulting, hosting). Bundle-pricing can make the whole charge taxable if the taxable component isn't separately stated.
- Ignoring use-tax obligations. If your customers are in Wyoming and your SaaS isn't taxable there, the customer may still owe use tax — a detail that can trip up B2B SaaS during audits.
Wyoming nexus note
Wyoming sales tax nexus and economic nexus threshold: effective July 1, 2024, an out-of-state seller without Wyoming physical presence must remit Wyoming sales tax once gross revenue from taxable tangible personal property, admissions, or services delivered into Wyoming exceeds $100,000 in the current or immediately preceding calendar year. Wyoming repealed the prior 200-transaction test, so the current remote-seller trigger is sales-only. Marketplace facilitators are treated as vendors for facilitated marketplace sales and must collect and remit Wyoming sales tax on sales they facilitate into Wyoming, subject to the remote-seller limitations in W.S. 39-15-501.
What to do next
Read the full Wyoming 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
- Is SaaS taxable in Wyoming?
- Wyoming has its own definition of taxable software. Some states (New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington) treat SaaS as taxable; others (California, Florida, Virginia) do not. Verify Wyoming's current rule before assuming.
- Does Wyoming charge sales tax on SaaS in 2026?
- Wyoming's 2026 SaaS sales tax position follows the state's most recent software-taxability ruling. Even when SaaS itself is non-taxable, Wyoming registration is required once you cross $100,000 in Wyoming-sourced revenue. Confirm the latest taxability rule with the Wyoming Department of Revenue before invoicing.
- Do I need to register in Wyoming even if SaaS is non-taxable?
- Yes if you exceed $100,000 in Wyoming revenue. You file zero returns, but registration is required once you cross the threshold.
- What about bundled services — do I tax them at Wyoming rates?
- Mixed bundles (SaaS + consulting + training) generally become fully taxable in Wyoming unless the components are separately itemized on the invoice. Separate-stating lets you apply the right tax to each component.
Sources
date_retrieved: 2026-05-22