Business tax compliance: What it is and how it works

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  1. 导言
  2. What is business tax compliance?
  3. How does business tax compliance work?
    1. Corporate income tax
    2. Payroll taxes
    3. Sales tax
  4. What filing and reporting obligations does business tax compliance include?
  5. How does international expansion affect business tax compliance?
    1. PE
    2. Transfer pricing
    3. Indirect tax registration
  6. What are the risks of getting business tax compliance wrong?
    1. Financial penalties
    2. Retroactive tax exposure
    3. Due diligence risk
    4. Audit exposure
  7. Is your business tax compliance strategy actually working?
    1. Do you know your nexus exposure?
    2. Are your records ready for reconstruction?
    3. Is your compliance process keeping pace with your business?
    4. Are you using the right tools?
  8. How Stripe Tax can help

Business tax compliance is the ongoing process of meeting all of your business’s tax obligations. These obligations can include corporate income tax, payroll taxes, sales tax, value-added tax (VAT), international information returns, transfer pricing, permanent establishment (PE) risk, and more. Each one has its own deadlines, forms, and penalties for errors. The businesses that handle compliance well treat it as a business function with defined ownership.

Below, we’ll explore how compliance works across tax types, how international expansion reshapes your business obligations, and what’s at risk if you make an error.

Highlights

  • Economic nexus rules mean you can have sales tax obligations in US states you’ve never had a physical presence in.

  • International expansion creates compliance exposure well beyond registration, such as PE risk, transfer pricing documentation requirements, and obligations for sales tax, VAT, or goods and services tax (GST).

  • If a tax authority determines that you should’ve been filing in a jurisdiction earlier, you could owe back taxes, interest, and penalties.

What is business tax compliance?

Business tax compliance means calculating what you owe, filing accurate returns on time, paying taxes when they’re due, and maintaining records that withstand scrutiny from tax authorities. It always runs behind the scenes and affects payroll, revenue recognition, procurement, and expansion decisions. As your company grows—whether by entering new markets, adding employees, or selling new products—your tax obligations scale with it.

How does business tax compliance work?

Businesses typically manage several types of taxes simultaneously. Each tax has its own rules for how to calculate what’s due, deposit payments, and file returns.

Here’s what US businesses handle for tax compliance.

Corporate income tax

Corporate income tax is calculated on net profit after allowable deductions. In the US, C corporations pay federal corporate income tax at a flat 21.0% rate plus any applicable state corporate tax, which ranges from 0% in states such as Wyoming and South Dakota to 11.5% for the top bracket in New Jersey.

Payroll taxes

Employers are responsible for withholding and remitting several taxes from employee wages, including:

  • Federal income tax (7.65%)

  • Social Security tax (6.20% of wages, up to $176,100)

  • Medicare (1.45% per employee)

Sales tax

Sales tax is imposed at the state and local levels in the US. There’s no federal sales tax. Since the 2018 South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., et al. ruling, states can require out-of-state ecommerce businesses to collect and remit sales tax once they exceed an economic nexus threshold, even if they don’t have a physical presence in the state. In most states, this threshold is $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions annually, although some states have different thresholds.

What filing and reporting obligations does business tax compliance include?

The filing calendar for a midsize US business spans multiple deadlines that run in parallel. This is because several different tax types don’t share the same schedules or forms.

Common obligations include the following:

  • Quarterly estimated tax payments: Businesses make estimated income tax payments throughout the year. Pass-through entities generally use Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 1040-ES, while corporations use Form 1120-W. These payments are due April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15.

  • Payroll tax deposits and reconciliation: Payroll taxes are deposited according to an IRS schedule. Employers file Form 941 quarterly to reconcile the amounts withheld and deposited.

  • Annual income tax return: Pass-through entities typically file by March 16 (Form 1065 or Schedule K-1), while C corporations generally file by April 15 (Form 1120). Filing extensions are available, but they don’t extend the deadline for paying taxes owed.

  • Employee and contractor reporting: Forms W-2 and 1099 must be provided to recipients by January 31 and filed with the Social Security Administration (SSA) or IRS shortly afterward.

  • Sales tax returns: Sales tax returns are usually filed monthly, quarterly, or annually, depending on your assigned filing frequency in each state you’re registered in.

  • International information returns: Businesses with foreign ownership, entities, or financial accounts might also need to file forms for interests in foreign corporations (Form 5471), interests in foreign partnerships (Form 8865), or specified foreign financial assets (Form 8938). Penalties for missing these filings are assessed per form, per year, and they can escalate quickly.

How does international expansion affect business tax compliance?

Expanding your business into other countries fundamentally changes your tax obligations. There are three factors that drive many of the requirements.

PE

Generally, countries tax foreign businesses only when they have a PE, which means a meaningful presence in that country. That might arise from:

  • A fixed place of business

  • A dependent agent who regularly concludes contracts on the company’s behalf

  • Substantial economic activity without a physical presence

The threshold for creating a PE can be lower than businesses expect. For example, a salesperson who works remotely in another country might be enough to activate PE status. Once that happens, the business could owe corporate income tax on profits attributable to that establishment.

Transfer pricing

When related companies operate in multiple countries, the prices charged between them—known as “intercompany transactions”—must follow the arm’s length principle. Tax authorities require transactions between related parties to be priced as if they occurred between independent businesses, which prevents companies from shifting profits to lower-tax jurisdictions. Documenting that your transfer prices meet this standard is itself an obligation, and documentation requirements have tightened in most developed markets over the past decade.

Indirect tax registration

Selling internationally can create tax obligations even in the absence of a physical presence.

Most countries outside the US use VAT or GST instead of sales tax. These taxes are collected at multiple points along the supply chain. Businesses charge tax on their sales but reclaim the tax paid on their inputs. As a result, that tax ultimately applies only to the value added at each stage.

For example, the EU requires non-EU businesses to register and collect VAT on digital services sold to EU customers from the first euro of sales. Countries including the UK, India, Australia, and Canada have similar regimes.

If you sell software, subscriptions, or any digital content internationally, you should expect to have VAT or GST obligations in markets where you’ve never had a physical presence.

What are the risks of getting business tax compliance wrong?

The consequences of noncompliance are specific, compounding, and often disproportionate to the original error. The further back the exposure runs, the worse the problem is.

These are the risks of getting compliance wrong.

Financial penalties

The IRS imposes a failure-to-file penalty of 5.0% of unpaid taxes per month, up to 25.0%. The failure-to-pay penalty is 0.5% per month, and interest accrues on both the penalty and the principal.

International reporting penalties can be even steeper. Missing forms to report foreign bank and financial accounts can trigger penalties of at least $10,000 per form per year, or more for willful violations.

Retroactive tax exposure

If a tax authority determines that you should’ve been filing in a jurisdiction earlier, it assesses the tax retroactively. For instance, a US state might conclude that your company established sales tax nexus four years ago and you could then owe several years of back taxes, interest, and penalties.

Due diligence risk

Tax compliance is a standard part of investor and acquisition due diligence. Unresolved liabilities often appear as contingent liabilities, which can delay deals or reduce valuations. In regulated industries or government contracting, compliance failures can also affect licensing and eligibility contracts.

Audit exposure

Businesses with multilayered sales across the US and other countries, inconsistent reporting practices, or frequent amended returns might face increased audit scrutiny. Good documentation and consistent treatment make audits as manageable as possible.

Is your business tax compliance strategy actually working?

Having a strategy and executing it reliably are different things. When it comes to your current setup, consider the following.

Do you know your nexus exposure?

If you’ve been selling across multiple US states for several years, there’s a reasonable chance you’ve exceeded nexus thresholds somewhere. A reverse audit, which is a review of historical sales data to identify where thresholds were exceeded, can discover obligations before a state does.

Are your records ready for reconstruction?

Good tax records should include transaction-level data, clear explanations of judgment calls, and documentation created at the time decisions were made.

Is your compliance process keeping pace with your business?

Entering a new market, launching new products, and forming new entities all create additional tax obligations. Building compliance processes early can prevent costly catch-up later.

Are you using the right tools?

Automated tax calculation can minimize manual errors and help maintain accurate records. Stripe Tax automatically updates tax rates and rules based on location and product type, and stores the data needed for reporting.

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, VAT, and 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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