Taxable Money – Wacky Tax Wednesday
Last updated 7.31.2019 to reflect a new policy in Kansas.
Coin dealers and collectors in Indiana are celebrating the recent enactment of House Bill 1046, which creates a sales and use tax exemption for precious-metals bullion, rare coins and paper money. When the exemption takes effect on July 1, 2016, Indiana will become the 33rd state in the union to provide such an exemption. Until then, these items are taxable.
Wait a minute. Money can be subject to sales tax?
Yes, indeed.
Some sorts of money—typically coins, paper money and precious metals—are subject to sales tax in many states. In some states, sales of all types of money are exempt. And in some states, money is sometimes taxable: certain sales are taxable and certain are exempt. Read on to learn what's exempt and taxable where.
Taxable
- Alabama: gold, silver, platinum, palladium, or a combination thereof “that has gone through a refining process and for which the item’s value depends on its mass and purity, and not on its form, numismatic value, or other value" is exempt as of June 1, 2018
- Arkansas: coins, paper money, precious metals
- California: paper money and some coins and bullion
- Colorado: some numismatic pieces may be taxable
- Connecticut: paper money; bullion on transactions of $1,000 or less
- District of Columbia: coins, paper money, and precious metals
- Florida: bullion transactions of $500 or less
- Hawaii: bullions, coins, paper money are subject to general excise tax (GET)
- Indiana: gold, silver or other metal alloys, through June 30, 2016
- Kentucky: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Louisiana: paper money is always taxable; gold, silver, numismatic coins and platinum, gold and silver bullion are temporarily subject to sales tax under Acts 25 and 26, 2016.
- Maine: coins, precious metals (unless the precious metals are delivered to certain depositories)
- Maryland: numismatic items and bullion are subject to tax on transactions of $1,000 or less
- Massachusetts: bullion, coins and paper money transactions of $1,000 or less are taxable
- Minnesota: coins are taxable
- Mississippi: as there is no exemption, sales tax applies
- Montana: local options tax may apply; there is no state sales tax
- Nevada: anything that sells for more than 50% of its face value is taxable (private mint bars and rounds are exempt)
- New Jersey: bullion, coins
- New Mexico: coins, paper money, precious metals (a deduction for investment coins was considered in 2001 but not adopted)
- New York: coins, paper money, and bullion when $1,000 or less
- Pennsylvania: paper money (bullions and coins are exempt)
- Rhode Island: paper money (bullions and coins are exempt)
- Tennessee: coins, paper money, precious metals (classification 3)
- Vermont: bullion, coins, precious metals
- Virginia: gold, silver and platinum bullion when the total sales price per transaction is $1,000 or less
- Washington State: paper money (coins and precious metals are exempt)
- West Virginia: coins, precious metals (an exemption was considered in 2015 but not adopted)
- Wisconsin: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Wyoming: precious metals (taxes on coins and paper money vary by city)
Exempt
- Alaska: exempt at the state level; may be taxed at the local level
- Arizona: coins, paper money, precious metals
- California: coins and bullion when over $1,500 (paper money is taxable)
- Colorado: exempt at the state level; may be taxed at the local level
- Connecticut: rare and antique coins and paper money exempt (Bullion is only exempt when over $1,000)
- Delaware: no state or local sales tax
- Florida: U.S. coins and currency are exempt. Bullion over $500 is exempt.
- Georgia: exempt coins, paper money, precious metals
- Idaho: exempt coins and bullion.
- Illinois: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Indiana: rare coins, paper money and precious metals exempt beginning July 1, 2016
- Iowa: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Kansas: gold or silver coins; and palladium, platinum, gold or silver bullion
- Louisiana: gold, silver or numismatic coins, or platinum, gold or silver bullion are generally exempt (prior to the enactment of H 682, only transactions of more than $1,000 were exempt). However, these products are temporarily subject to tax under Acts 25 and 26, 2016. The zero rate was set to resume on July 1, 2018 (additional information). Due to the enactment of HB 396 in June 2017, sales and purchases of the following are exempt as of Oct. 1, 2017: platinum, gold, or silver bullion valued solely upon its precious metal content, numismatic coins with a sales price of no more than $1,000, numismatic coins sold at a national, statewide, or multi-parish numismatic trade show.
- Maryland: numismatic items and bullion transactions of more than $1,000
- Massachusetts: bullion, coins and paper money transactions of more than $1,000 are exempt
- Michigan: coins, bullion, legal tender
- Minnesota: precious metal bullion (bars or rounds) is exempt as of July 1, 2017.
- Missouri: bullion and coins are exempt
- Montana: there is no state sales tax on coins, paper money or precious metals, but local taxes may apply
- Nebraska: bullion and currency (effective April 2014)
- Nevada: private mint bars and rounds, and coins sold for less than 50% of the face value of the coins (anything that sells for more than 50% of its face value is taxable)
- New Hampshire: there is no sales tax in NH
- New York: bullion when over $1,000
- North Carolina: coins, paper money, precious metals
- North Dakota: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Ohio: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Oklahoma: gold, platinum, palladium and other bullion items (effective November 2014)
- Oregon: no state or local sales tax
- Pennsylvania: bullions and coins are exempt (paper money is taxable)
- Rhode Island: bullions and coins (paper money is taxable)
- South Carolina: coins, paper money, precious metals
- South Dakota: coins, paper money, precious metals
- Texas: gold, silver, numismatic coins and gold, platinum and silver bullion became exempt in 2013 under HB78
- Utah: currency or coinage that is legal tender; sales of an ingot, bar, medallion or decorative coin containing at least 50% gold, silver or platinum that is not legal tender
- Virginia: gold, silver and platinum bullion when the total sales price per transaction exceeds $1,000.
- Washington State: coins, precious metals (paper money is taxable)
Sometimes taxable
- Connecticut: sales of bullion $1,000 or less are taxable; sales over $1,000 are exempt
- Florida: sales of bullion under $500 are taxable; sales over $500 are exempt
- Louisiana: numismatic coins with a sales price of of $1000 or less are exempt; sales over $1000 are taxable as of Oct. 1, 2017
- Maryland: sales of bullion and numismatic items of $1000 and under are exempt; sales over $1000 are taxable
- Massachusetts: sales of bullion, coins and paper money are taxable when $1000 or less, exempt when over $1000
- Nevada: anything that sells for more than 50% of its face value is taxable
- New York: sales of bullion $1,000 or less are taxable; sales over $1,000 are exempt
- Pennsylvania: paper money that is not legal tender in the U.S. is taxable on the full purchase price; paper money that is legal tender in the U.S. is taxable on any amount in excess of face value
- Virginia: sales of bullion $1,000 or less are taxable; sales over $1,000 are exempt (effective July 2015)
- Wyoming: coins and paper money may or may not be taxable, depending on the city
So now you know.
As the list above demonstrates, sales tax laws are subject to change. Sales tax software (SaaS) helps anyone doing business in multiple states comply with current laws. Learn how it works.
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