Bucko:
I've had cases where I didn't order stuff from the UK when the retailer had no way to remove the VAT for items shipped to Canada,
There you go - that's my solution and I'm not the only one. I guess they lost a sale! haha Great for economy stimulation. Multiply by 10 and you see how it works - the state could collect let's sat $10 income tax from 10 sellers selling ten $10 items, instead they collect $2 from one seller and one buyer because the other 9 buyers didn't order. You could argue a fifty-fifty scenario and where does it go? Same $10, nothing gained, and lost five potential repeated customers and that adds up to loss again.
That's why I applaud as a very smart a decision not to run after taxes and duties at the border known to be a drop off and pick up point. Like where we go from Vancouver. Still, they specifically ask - is it for private use or commercial? I've been there dozens of times and only paid when it was a larger amount. It makes a difference to Canadian customs, but apparently not to WA and Ebay as their tax collecting pony.
Just as we mentioned VAT and UK. Here is a quick copy-paste of how it works in the UK:
If you buy goods online from outside the EU for delivery to the UK, you'll have to pay Customs Duty (if over £120 value) and Import VAT (if over £18) on top of the purchase price (including duties), though Customs Duty is waived if the amount of the calculated duty payable is £7 or less.
So you see again - if a grandpa buys a £10 ball pen, he doesn't pay any duties! But if that grandpa was living in Canada and purchased the same ball pen, have it shipped to pick up at a parcel drop off service specifically designed for this (and bringing lots of revenue to the WA state) when he goes on weekend across the border to spend some dollar at a pub, he is already out of a dollar local tax before he even crossed that border!
So, the problem I have is with Ebay acting as nondiscriminatory tax collector. Ebay has been around for how many years.. over 20? It was founded as a place for ordinary people to buy and sell. And it still is in many ways. Did it have a choice to comply with Washington state? Maybe yes maybe not. But the Washington lawmakers, for example, are just trying hard to find ways to squeeze some dollar out without thinking. Stupid in my opinion in other words. It's not the first time stupid decisions are made on a government level.
<>>>>>Stan, plenty of other states do exactly the same thing. Washington was just slow to catch up. If you were a WA state retailer, would you be happy that you had to charge sales tax to your customers but the same items purchased somewhere out of state and shipped to WA was tax free?
That's how global market works, doesn't it? It's not 1980's with no Internet, not even 2000's! And how many of those retailers buy items they sell somewhere else? Bring cheap furniture from Indonesia? Do they get business tax breaks? Do they file business income tax claiming expenses? WHo pays then the tax on what they get back? An ordinary buyer like me or a grandma across the hall.
I want to stress that my problem is with how it's being done in case of Ebay, not that states want to collect sales tax.
>>>plenty of other states do exactly the same thing. Washington was just slow to catch up.
That's not the case. Just look at the photo - it's a screenshot of exactly where it's happening. Washington is the only state collecting full tax on, again, not a sale but a zip code!
I suppose you didn't read this. There are 3 other states that will join on July 01. Where are the other 40+ states?
Now, when I order in Canada to have it shipped to BC I pay only 5% GST. A total sales tax in BC is 12%, for those who don't know. Same from businesses in other provinces - just GST. I don't pay any provincial local tax! When I buy from Craigslist, Kijiji, or any other private seller anywhere else - I don't pay tax. I don't pay tax on petty small items I bring with me to the airport, up to the limit of course. Just like with cash, you don't even need to declare up to $10,000! How do I know these things - I've crossed borders probably close to 300 times. All over the world, in most common ways you can think of: foot, car, bus, train, ship and a plane, so you could say I've tested it well.
Anyway, it's getting long... I don't want to make a list of where and how it is wrong again, and I bet if lawyers and business people come to a meeting and discuss this they come with very thick binders. Sales tax is what it is, a sales tax on goods purchased. If there were no goods purchased, there should be no tax charge especially done in such a way, like through Ebay, especially considering how it is done - just mindlessly automatically applied 9.18% in Washington for example. We can talk about how many stupid policies, purchases have been made on the government level, wasted literally billions of dollars (I'm speaking about Canada), so I just don't buy any reasoning behind this what is happening on Ebay at face value.
And what if the item is damaged and you have to return it? Or it's lost. Do you get it back or just what you paid the seller? I haven't seen anything about this. Do you get this tax refunded? Tax is government money, at least that where it should end. So, whom I should ask for my money back?
I haven't tested it yet but I'm curious - if you buy from a Washington based seller and ship it to any of the 40+ states, which don't participate in this idiocy. Are you being charged that Washington sales tax? If they would't, it would confirm they collect money for a zip code under a pretense of charging sales tax. I wouldn't be surprised though if they collect it both ways.