klyau6 said:
do Apple resellers not charge tax or something? is it just Apple Retail stores and their online store?
Currently, there is no tax collectable on
INTERSTATE Commerce (citizens of one state buy something in another state [across state lines] from their state). Reason - one state has no right to charge or collect a TAX on SALES made (transacted through commerce) in another state, this would infringe on federal INTERSTATE COMMERCE, and that is a Constitutional no-no.
We pay taxes on
INTRASTATE transactions where we live, meaning within our own state, county, city, neighborhood.
That's why you see statements on websites saying (NO Sales Tax, except residents of ARIZONA) if Arizona is where the "business" is
domiciled . Phone orders made to California from Arizona qualify as Interstate Commerce, as long as DELIVERY is outside of California. If you come to California to save shipping, you will probably save shipping, but you will now have to pay the local sales - because DELIVERY was NOT covered within the meaning of INTERSTATE COMMERCE.
There are some states like NEVADA which have NO SALES TAX (and maybe either Deleware or New Hampshire , but I can't remember).
Then states like COLORADO have 10% sales tax, while Arizona is only 8%.
So, if you live in TEXAS and buy a computer from a "store"
domiciled in LOUISIANA, NEW YORK or CALIFORNIA, you probably will not have to pay tax. The only advantage someone in COLORADO would have in buying an Apple Computer while in NEW MEXICO is that maybe the Sales Tax charged in Santa Fe is only 5%, or half what it a 10% Sales Tax is back home in Denver.
There are EXCEPTIONS to this (and every) RULE, and it is NOT a good exception.. Large corporations like IBM, APPLE, XEROX, and GENERAL MOTORS are "domesticated" (have a business presence) in virtually every state in the union, and pay local taxes, INCLUDING SALES TAX, in each state where they are in fact
domiciled.
So, it
doesn't make any difference whether you buy at an Apple Retail Store in your state or in the state next door, Apple is going to collect the "local sales tax" where that store is physically located.
If you buy from the
online Apple Store, then Apple adds your "local state sales tax" where the SHIPMENT is going to be DELIVERED, usually to where you live, not where Apple answers the phone, office that processes the order, or even where their warehouse is located.
Therefore, if you want to AVOID PAYING TAXES that you would normally pay in your home state (Colorado, for example)
pick an online catalog / warehouse store that does NOT operate in your home state of Colorado, otherwise, you are going to pay $470 in 10% Sales Taxes on a new G5 Dual something plus a 20" Cinema Display that totals $4,700. If you buy from Apple online or at the Denver Apple Store, the total bill is $4,700 + $470 tax = $5,170.
With the money you save from paying taxes, you could buy AppleCare for the new CPU and LCD monitor (which Apple includes FREE when you buy both at the same time from Apple) plus .Mac for a full year, and maybe some software. Or, you could be a "good citizen" and pay your taxes.
😉