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Amazon can collect sales tax, VAT, or GST on certain marketplace sales, but it does not eliminate all of your tax obligations.
This guide is for Amazon sellers using FBA, cross-border inventory, or multiple marketplaces across the US, EU, UK, Canada, or Japan.
The three most important actions are to map inventory and sales by country or state, confirm exactly what Amazon collects versus what you must file, and review your entity and tax residency before you expand further.
If you are building an Amazon global tax strategy, do not start with tax rates. Start with tax triggers. For most sellers, the real work begins when inventory moves, a new marketplace opens, imports start landing in a new country, or the owner's personal tax residence no longer matches the business setup.
This guide is educational content for Amazon seller tax compliance planning. It is not legal, tax, or accounting advice, and it should not replace a review by a qualified local adviser.
Bottom line: A workable Amazon global tax strategy begins by separating indirect, income, and import taxes. Do not treat "Amazon collects tax" as a complete answer.
Bottom line: Cross-border seller tax planning only works when you review each marketplace separately. The tax answer for Amazon US is not the same as the answer for Amazon Europe, Amazon UK, Amazon Canada, or Amazon Japan.
In the US, Amazon may collect marketplace sales tax in many jurisdictions, but FBA inventory placement and non-Amazon sales still require a state-by-state nexus review.
In the EU, OSS can simplify many cross-border B2C VAT returns, and marketplaces can be deemed suppliers in some cases, but storing goods in an EU country or making direct sales can still create local VAT work.
The UK has its own VAT marketplace rules, so overseas sellers should review UK VAT separately from EU VAT.
In Canada, platform rules matter. For qualifying goods, the distribution platform operator can have collection duties when vendors are not registered under the normal GST/HST regime, while registered vendors still collect GST/HST on their own supplies.
In Japan, foreign sellers should review both the import consumption tax and post-import domestic sales. Goods stored in Japan before sale can create additional consumption tax filing issues even when the import tax was already paid.
Bottom line: Marketplace tax collection does not decide where your profits are taxed. Entity choice and personal tax residency still control income tax exposure.
Bottom line: Most Amazon seller tax compliance work starts with five yes or no questions, not with a giant tax memo.
1. Do you use FBA or any warehouse outside your home market?
If yes, review sales tax, VAT, or GST where the stock is stored. Inventory location is one of the fastest ways your filing footprint changes.
2. Does Amazon collect tax for this transaction type in this marketplace?
If yes, document exactly what Amazon collects and what it does not. Do not assume the answer is the same for every country, order flow, or sales channel.
3. Do you also sell outside Amazon?
If yes, separate marketplace sales from direct sales immediately. Marketplace collection usually does not solve taxes on your own site, wholesale deals, or invoiced orders.
4. Are you importing goods into the target market?
If yes, define the importer of record, customs value workflow, and document retention process before the next shipment lands.
5. Do the owner's residence and the company's country differ?
If yes, review personal tax residency and company management facts together. This is where profit tax questions usually become more important than marketplace tax questions.
Bottom line: Build one market-by-market tax file before you register anywhere new. Clean data first, registrations second.
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Bottom line: Most penalties and expensive cleanups come from wrong assumptions, not from lack of effort.
Bottom line: The best cross-border tax strategy is the one your team can operate every month without confusion.
Tax planning becomes much easier when product research, market expansion, inventory planning, and compliance review happen in one repeatable sequence instead of as separate last-minute tasks.
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Amazon may collect and remit sales tax for marketplace transactions in jurisdictions with marketplace facilitator rules, but that does not end your state-by-state review. You still need to assess inventory location, direct sales outside Amazon, and record retention.
It can. State guidance can treat inventory stored in a fulfillment center as in-state presence, which is why FBA storage and transfer reports belong in your monthly tax file.
Many do. If you store goods in an EU country, import goods, make domestic supplies there, or have direct sales outside what the marketplace covers, local VAT action may still be required even if Amazon handles some transactions.
No. OSS can simplify many cross-border B2C VAT returns, but it does not replace every local obligation. Local stock storage, domestic sales, or other non-OSS situations can still require country-specific action.
It depends on the transaction and your registration status. In some qualifying goods scenarios, the platform operator has collection duties when the vendor is not registered under the normal GST/HST regime, while registered vendors still collect on their own supplies.
Yes. Selling goods stored in Japan can be treated as a domestic taxable transaction, and import consumption tax paid at the border does not always end the analysis.
Keep Amazon settlement reports, tax reports, warehouse and inventory movement reports, invoices, import entries, tax registration documents, filed returns, exemption certificates, and any tax authority notices. Good records make registration reviews, filings, and audits far easier.
Usually no. Company jurisdiction, management location, personal tax residence, and local anti-avoidance rules all matter. A foreign entity can help in the right setup, but it is not a universal shortcut.
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This guide applies to Amazon sellers reviewing sales tax, VAT or GST, income tax, and customs exposure in the US, EU, UK, Canada, and Japan. It is designed for operational planning and better communication with tax professionals.
It does not cover every state permit rule, treaty position, permanent establishment analysis, transfer pricing issue, customs classification dispute, or personal filing rule. Those questions depend on your exact facts.
Always confirm registration triggers, filing deadlines, invoicing rules, importer of record setup, and income tax treatment with a qualified CPA, VAT adviser, or licensed local tax professional in the jurisdictions involved.
SellerSprite SuccessTeam creates practical content for Amazon sellers focused on research, operations, and cross-border growth. This article is written to help sellers ask better tax questions, build cleaner records, and make expansion decisions with fewer compliance surprises.
For stronger EEAT on publication, pair this article with a named reviewer such as a CPA, CTA, VAT adviser, or licensed tax professional for the jurisdictions you target.
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