While not all 50 US States have corporate income taxes - the corporation, if it had a physical office in each of the 50 States, YES, that would likely be enough nexus in each State individually to make it liable for any applicable income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, and so on.Quote from Vinny1:does the company pay state income taxes on their profits to all 50 states or just to the state where it is headquartered?
Quote from traderstatus:
While not all 50 US States have corporate income taxes - the corporation, if it had a physical office in each of the 50 States, YES, that would likely be enough nexus in each State individually to make it liable for any applicable income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, and so on.
There could be an a few States where this would not be enough nexus, but for most of them it would be.
Quote from traderstatus:
While not all 50 US States have corporate income taxes - the corporation, if it had a physical office in each of the 50 States, YES, that would likely be enough nexus in each State individually to make it liable for any applicable income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes, and so on.
There could be an a few States where this would not be enough nexus, but for most of them it would be.
Each State has its own rules for allocation. These are usually based on a weighted formula using the amount of compensation paid, the amount of sales revenue, and the amount of hard assets in use (owned or rented) such as offices and equipment.Quote from Vinny1:How would a company figure out how much it owes to each state? Do they just allocate the profit that they earned in each state and pay the tax accordingly?
Quote from Vinny1:
What if a company only employs independent contractors, not employees, in all 50 states; would the company then be exempt from owing state income taxes to all the states and only pay to the state where the company is based out of?