This is an interesting situation that has to do with the seller's operational characteristics. I'll give an example that really pushed the envelope back when I lived in Idaho. A sporting good company, Cabela's, opened a retail store in Idaho, which one would think would mean that now all those Idaho outdoorsmen who had been ordering from Cabela's would have to pay Idaho sales tax. Not so. Cabela's successfully argued that their mail order/internet business was a separate entity from their retail stores, and so, do not have to collect Idaho sales tax and send it to the state. Note that this has nothing to do with trying to save their customers money on taxes.nukebass wrote: Musician's Friend doesn't charge sales tax unless you are in Kansas, I think, but Guitar Center does. I guess that's because they are treated as different entities even though they are owned by the same parent company. This all gets too confusing.
I suspect the same situation exists for Musician's Friend/Guitar Center. Guitar Center has retail stores, Musician's Friend is internet/mail order only. Since MF's distribution center is in Kansas, the state charges its resident's sales tax because the retail operation is in the state...
