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Marketplace facilitator law

North Dakota marketplace facilitator law

If you sell on Amazon, Etsy, eBay or Walmart, North Dakota's marketplace facilitator law decides who collects the tax — the platform or you. Here's how it works and what it means for your own registration.

By John DoeReviewed by Jane Doe, CPAUpdated June 2026How we verify

Confidence: moderate

Parts of this page (often the trailing-nexus timing) are still being verified, so our confidence here is moderate rather than high. Confirm anything you act on with North Dakota Office of State Tax Commissioner or a tax professional before you register or deregister.

Has a marketplace law?
Yes
Facilitator collects & remits?
Yes
In effect since
October 2019
Counts toward your threshold?
No

Source: North Dakota Office of State Tax Commissioner

Does North Dakota have a marketplace facilitator law?

Marketplace facilitators must collect and remit North Dakota sales and use tax (including local taxes) on all sales they facilitate if they exceed $100,000 in gross sales into the state in the current or previous calendar year. Facilitators with any physical presence in ND must collect regardless of volume. Marketplace sales facilitated by a registered facilitator are excluded from the individual remote seller's threshold calculation.

Do you still need your own permit?

If you sell only through registered marketplaces in North Dakota, the platform collects and remits the tax, so you often don't need your own permit for those sales. And in North Dakota, facilitated sales don't count toward your own threshold.

Direct sales (Shopify, WooCommerce) are different

Sales through your own store aren't facilitated by anyone — you collect North Dakota tax on those yourself once you're registered. Many sellers are registered in North Dakota only because of marketplace sales the platform already handles, which is exactly the kind of registration worth reviewing.

Where TrailingZero fits

TrailingZero connects to your store read-only, maps where you actually have nexus state by state, and separates your marketplace-collected sales from your direct sales in North Dakota, so you only stay registered where you truly need to be. During any wind-down it can file the zero-dollar returns so nothing lapses — and you only pay for the states you genuinely keep. Run a free audit anytime; this page is free education either way.

North Dakota Marketplace law FAQ

Does North Dakota require marketplaces to collect sales tax?
Yes. Marketplace facilitators must collect and remit North Dakota sales and use tax (including local taxes) on all sales they facilitate if they exceed $100,000 in gross sales into the state in the current or previous calendar year.
If I only sell on Amazon, do I need to register in North Dakota?
Often no for those facilitated sales, since the marketplace collects and remits.
Is this tax advice?
No. This page is general education built from public sources and the rules change often. Confirm your specific situation with the state's tax authority or your accountant before you register or deregister.

More on North Dakota sales tax

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Sources

Primary sources reviewed for this page. Data current as of June 2026.

TrailingZerois software, not a CPA or law firm, and this page is general education — not tax or legal advice. State rules and thresholds change frequently; confirm your situation with the state's tax authority or your accountant before you register or deregister. See how we research and review this data in our editorial & accuracy policy.