Supreme Court’s internet sales tax ruling may be a nightmare for small businesses

In the wake of yesterday's Supreme Court ruling, e-commerce companies are understandably both concerned and uncertain of their future. The 5-4 verdict overruled a 1992 precedent set by the case Quill v. North Dakota that only addressed mail-order businesses at the time, but it became a powerful legal bedrock for the e-commerce industry. It let companies without a robust physical infrastructure thrive during and after the dot-com boom by exempting purchases from sales tax, so long as the seller did not have a physical operation in the state where the customer resided. Now, following the court's decision, states can start charging sales tax on internet purchases even when a retailer has no physical presence in that state.

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