Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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Perhaps the "Instant Savings" for TT is really a "couponless" coupon, in which Sam's will get reimbursed by TT for the amount of the instant savings. This results in a taxable transaction amount equal to the original price.
Don PS I am not a tax expert…
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Look both ways before crossing. Western PA, Marietta GA, finally TV.... |
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I got to thinking one day about all those people on the Titanic who passed up dessert at dinner that fateful night in an effort to cut back. From then on, I've tried to be a little more flexible. |
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You may want to call ....
Sam's Club Corporate Office Headquarters HQ Wal-mart Stores Inc. Address: 702 Southwest 8th Street Bentonville, AR 72716 Corporate Phone Number: 1-479-273-4000 They would definitely be able to answer your question. |
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This is likely a state sales tax regulation that differentiates between a negotiated sales price (think car buying) and a sale involving a gift card/coupon. In the former, sales tax is paid on the negotiated price. In the latter, sales tax is computed before the gift card/coupon is applied. Again, I doubt this is a Sams Club policy.
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"the difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." |
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"common sense"...you get taxed on how much you spent...not on the full retail of the article...ie: if you buy a new car and the original asking price is X and they only charge you Y then you pay the taxes on Y...not X
Unreal.... |
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A call to FL sales tax is needed to clarifiy
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Nova Water filters |
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Some states require tax be paid on the original price of the item, not the instant rebate price. Costco does the same thing as Sam's.
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New York City, Mission Viejo, CA, Webster, NY |
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I had a recent experience at CVS on a much smaller scale. I looked up Florida sales tax law and found the following simple explanation.
If you get a negotiated price, you pay the tax on that price. If you get a store coupon reducing the price ie 10% discount , you pay tax on the reduced amount. If you get a reduced price due to a manufacturers coupon, you pay tax on the ORIGINAL price. I am not an expert on this issue but that is the example I found on the net. |
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If you call corporate, please let us know.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
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You received an Instant Savings Cost. This is like a rebate not a discount. Think of it as you bought the product at regular cost and receive a form to fill in and mail to the company to get fifteen dollars back. Instead Sams gave you the 15 back right away. Of course you had to pay tax on the amount of your pre-rebate purchase. What exactly, if you still have it, does your receipt say?
Here is the operative language from Sam's Club website " Instant Savings items are subject to availability and dates. Select Instant Savings are available online. For Click 'n' Pull® purchases, Instant Savings can be redeemed at point of sale at the club with the primary membership card. State and local laws may require sales tax to be charged on the pre-discounted price of an item with an Instant Savings offer" The mechanism here is that Sams is receiving not just the 55 dollars you paid, as they are submitting the 15 rebate for you to the Turbo tax company which remits the 15 to Sams. Thus the sale is really the 55 Sams got from you and the 15 from T Tax, or the full listed price of 70 dollars. So Sam's needs to collect sales tax on the 70 it gets. If however, there was no rebate coming from T.Tax and Sams was only getting the 55 from you, then the tax would be on 55 dollars. If you ever use a manufacturer's coupon (not a store coupon) the tax should be on the pre-coupon rate. |
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These tax issues are typically guided by the State. I know in GA (where I previously conducted business) FREE is not always FREE either! In GA If a business sells a product Buy one Get One FREE they have the option to charge tax on the amount of the 2 items and pass along the taxes to the consumer OR absorb the Tax and collect tax on ONLY the purchase amount. I found businesses were split about 50 / 50 on which way they chose to conduct their Tax policy. Either way, the Business has to pay the Tax to the state on BOTH the items therefore many businesses collect tax on the FULL VALUE OF THE ITEMS PURCHASED at regular retail price! I am unsure of what Florida Tax guidance states but it does vary state to state.
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