New Jersey sales tax rate: What to know about rates, exemptions, and filing requirements

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  1. 导言
  2. What is the New Jersey sales tax rate?
  3. What local sales taxes apply in New Jersey?
    1. 2026 New Jersey sales tax range
  4. What are New Jersey’s sales tax rates by city?
  5. What are New Jersey’s sales tax rates by county?
  6. What is subject to sales tax in New Jersey?
  7. How does New Jersey sales tax work for businesses?
    1. Economic nexus
    2. Registration
    3. Filing frequency
  8. What do New Jersey’s sales tax rules mean for how you collect and remit?
    1. Misclassifying products
    2. UEZ certification
    3. Nexus creep
  9. How Stripe Tax can help

The New Jersey sales tax rate is 6.6250%, and it typically applies uniformly across the state with some exceptions. That makes New Jersey simpler to work with than most states, but there are challenges, such as a broad set of exemptions with specific rules, Urban Enterprise Zones (UEZ) that cut the rate in half for certified retailers, and taxability rules for digital goods and software-as-a-service (SaaS).

Below, we’ll cover where UEZ boundaries change the calculation, which product categories are exempt and which aren’t, and what registration and filing look like for businesses with New Jersey sales tax obligations.

Highlights

  • New Jersey has one statewide sales tax rate of 6.6250% with almost no local add-ons, which makes it one of the more straightforward states for multilocation businesses.

  • Certified retailers in any of New Jersey’s Urban Enterprise Zones charge half the standard rate.

  • Clothing and footwear are exempt with no price threshold, but digital goods and SaaS are taxable in New Jersey.

What is the New Jersey sales tax rate?

New Jersey’s statewide sales tax rate is 6.6250%, and there are almost no additional local county or municipal taxes. The only big exception is the Urban Enterprise Zone rate. Certified retailers that operate in any of New Jersey’s 32 designated UEZ areas charge half the standard rate (3.3125%) on most taxable goods. The zones are in economically distressed municipalities, and the reduced rate is intended to make those retail corridors more competitive, particularly with neighboring Delaware, which has no sales tax.

What local sales taxes apply in New Jersey?

New Jersey typically applies one statewide sales tax rate of 6.6250%, with limited exceptions: certain sales in Atlantic City and parts of Cape May County are subject to additional local taxes, and qualifying sales in its Urban Enterprise Zones are charged a rate of 3.3125%. New Jersey’s UEZ areas include Camden, Elizabeth, Paterson, Trenton, and Newark, all of which are among the most populous.

2026 New Jersey sales tax range

Rate type

Rate

Standard statewide rate

6.6250%

Urban Enterprise Zone rate

3.3125%

Combined minimum rate

3.3125%

Combined maximum rate

6.6250%

What are New Jersey’s sales tax rates by city?

Every New Jersey city has a 6.6250% sales tax rate—except those with active UEZs. Here are rates for some of the state’s most populous cities:

City

Minimum combined rate

Bayonne

6.6250%

Brick

6.6250%

Cherry Hill

6.6250%

Clifton

6.6250%

Edison

6.6250%

Elizabeth

3.3125% (UEZ)

Gloucester Township

6.6250%

Hamilton

6.6250%

Jersey City

6.6250%

Lakewood

6.6250%

Newark

3.3125% (UEZ)

Paterson

3.3125% (UEZ)

Toms River

6.6250%

Trenton

3.3125% (UEZ)

Woodbridge

6.6250%

What are New Jersey’s sales tax rates by county?

Because counties in New Jersey don’t impose a separate sales tax, every county uses the 6.6250% statewide rate. This is affected only by the exceptions described above. Here are a few of the 21 counties:

County
Standard rate
Notable UEZ municipalities
Bergen 6.6250% None
Burlington 6.6250% None
Camden 6.6250% Camden
Essex 6.6250% Newark, Orange
Hudson 6.6250% None
Middlesex 6.6250% Perth Amboy
Monmouth 6.6250% None
Ocean 6.6250% None
Passaic 6.6250% Paterson, Passaic
Union 6.6250% Elizabeth, Plainfield

What is subject to sales tax in New Jersey?

New Jersey taxes the sale of tangible personal property by default, with specific categories exempted. The exemptions are so broad they can surprise many businesses, particularly the clothing exemption, which has no price threshold.

These items are exempt from New Jersey sales tax:

  • Most unprepared grocery food items sold for home consumption

  • Prescription drugs and most over-the-counter medicines

  • Clothing and footwear, with no per-item price cap

  • Disposable paper products such as diapers and sanitary products

  • Residential heating fuels, including natural gas, oil, and wood

  • Medical devices and equipment

  • Agricultural supplies and livestock

These categories are subject to tax:

  • Prepared food and meals, including restaurant and catering sales

  • Candy and soft drinks, even when sold alongside exempt groceries

  • Cosmetics and toiletries

  • Cleaning supplies

  • Downloaded software, music, and e-books

  • SaaS and most cloud-delivered software

  • Services related to the installation or repair of tangible personal property

How does New Jersey sales tax work for businesses?

New Jersey sales tax operates similarly to that of other states, particularly regarding nexus, registration, and filing requirements. Here’s what you need to know:

Economic nexus

If you have no physical presence in the state but sell to New Jersey customers, you’re required to collect and remit once you exceed $100,000 in sales or 200 separate transactions in the state in the current or prior calendar year.

Physical nexus creates tax obligations in the state and applies independently of other factors. An office, warehouse, employee, or contractor operating in New Jersey establishes nexus regardless of your sales volume. Remote work arrangements and third-party fulfillment centers are commonly overlooked exposures.

Registration

Register through the New Jersey Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services. Once approved, you’ll receive a Certificate of Authority, which you’re legally required to display at your business. Without the certificate, you can’t lawfully collect sales tax in New Jersey.

Filing frequency

New Jersey assigns your filing frequency based on expected annual tax liability. Businesses that collected more than $30,000 in sales and use tax in the previous year and more than $500 in the first month, second month, or both of the current calendar quarter must file monthly, while other businesses file quarterly.

Returns are due on the 20th of the month after the reporting period. Electronic filing is required for most businesses.

What do New Jersey’s sales tax rules mean for how you collect and remit?

New Jersey’s flat structure makes the sales tax process more manageable than that of most states. However, there are a few scenarios to avoid.

Misclassifying products

The grocery and clothing exemptions can get complicated. Prepared food sold at a grocery counter is taxable, but that’s not necessarily true of the same item sealed for home consumption. Candy and soft drinks are taxable even when sold alongside exempt groceries. If your catalog spans these lines, every stock-keeping unit (SKU) needs a classification.

Digital goods can get tricky. New Jersey taxes certain digital goods, but businesses that moved into digital delivery without revisiting their tax setup often miss it. Even if you’re selling software subscriptions or digital downloads to New Jersey customers, those transactions are taxable.

UEZ certification

Operating in a UEZ boundary doesn’t automatically entitle you to charge the reduced rate. You need an active certification from the New Jersey Economic Development Authority, and you can apply it only to eligible goods. Charging the wrong rate creates liability. Stripe’s sales tax calculator gives you a quick combined rate by address without any account setup.

Nexus creep

Pay attention to nexus rules. A remote employee, a fulfillment center holding your inventory, or a contractor working in the state can all create physical nexus.

How Stripe Tax can help

Stripe Tax reduces the complexity of tax compliance so you can focus on growing your business. Stripe Tax helps you monitor your obligations and alerts you when you exceed a sales tax registration threshold based on your Stripe transactions. In addition, it automatically calculates and collects sales tax, value-added tax (VAT), and goods and services tax (GST) on both physical and digital goods and services—in all US states and in more than 100 countries.

Start collecting taxes globally by adding a single line of code to your existing integration, clicking a button in the Dashboard, or using our powerful application programming interface (API).

Stripe Tax can help you:

  • Understand where to register and collect taxes: See where you need to collect taxes based on your Stripe transactions. After you register, switch on tax collection in a new state or country in seconds. You can start collecting taxes by adding one line of code to your existing Stripe integration or add tax collection with the click of a button in the Stripe Dashboard.

  • Register to pay tax: Let Stripe manage your global tax registrations and benefit from a simplified process that prefills application details—saving you time and simplifying compliance with local regulations.

  • Automatically collect tax: Stripe Tax calculates and collects the right amount of tax owed, no matter what or where you sell. It supports hundreds of products and services and is up-to-date on tax rules and rate changes.

  • Simplify filing: Stripe Tax seamlessly integrates with filing partners, so your global filings are accurate and timely. Let our partners manage your filings so you can focus on growing your business.

Learn more about Stripe Tax, or get started today.

本文中的内容仅供一般信息和教育目的,不应被解释为法律或税务建议。Stripe 不保证或担保文章中信息的准确性、完整性、充分性或时效性。您应该寻求在您的司法管辖区获得执业许可的合格律师或会计师的建议,以就您的特定情况提供建议。

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