This guide provides an overview of Sales Tax in North Dakota, including applicable rates, registration requirements, compliance obligations, and filing deadlines. It is designed for businesses engaging in transactions within North Dakota.
cities and 20 counties impose their own local option sales taxes.
The following conditions might establish a physical nexus in North Dakota:
In North Dakota, although many services are not taxable, certain services are subject to sales tax.
North Dakota is a destination-based state, so you calculate sales tax by applying the combined state and local tax rate for the customer’s delivery location to the taxable sale amount.
Taxable sales generally include tangible personal property delivered in-state, certain taxable services, and sales to in-state customers where you have nexus. Many digital goods and non-tangible services may be exempt. Prewritten (canned) software, downloaded or on media, is taxable, while SaaS is generally not.
Get an ND sales & use tax permit through the Tax Commissioner’s ND TAP portal. Gather basic business info, apply online under “Sales and Use Tax Account,” and submit. No fee or annual renewal. Approval authorizes you to collect ND sales tax.
Once registered, apply the destination-based ND rate (5% plus any local tax), collect it at sale, keep detailed records, and file/remit on your set schedule. For digital sales, confirm nexus and taxability.
In North Dakota, filing frequency (monthly, quarterly, or annually) is based on your business’s tax activity. Returns are due the last day of the following month for monthly filers, and zero-sales returns must still be filed. All returns are submitted electronically via ND TAP, and late filing or payment incurs penalties starting at 5% (or $5) per month.
Generally no — SaaS is treated as a service with no tangible property transfer and is not subject to North Dakota sales tax. However, if you are delivering prewritten software (download or media) rather than a service, that would be taxable.
Yes — North Dakota’s economic nexus rule mandates registration and collection once you exceed $100,000 in gross taxable sales into ND in the current or prior calendar year, even without physical presence.
Your filing frequency (monthly, quarterly, annual) will be determined by the ND Office of State Tax Commissioner based on your expected tax liability. If you collect relatively little tax, you may file quarterly or annually; if more, you’ll be monthly. Regardless, you must file even if you had zero tax for the period.
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