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Seller's guide

Sales tax in Arizona

Everything an online seller needs to know about sales tax in Arizona: the rate, when you have to register, marketplace rules, filing, and when you can cancel — in plain English.

By John DoeReviewed by Jane Doe, CPAUpdated June 2026How we verify
Statewide base rate
5.6%
Economic threshold
$100,000 in sales
Marketplace law
Yes
Trailing nexus
≈ 12 mo
Tax authority
Arizona Department of Revenue (ADOR)

Source: Arizona Department of Revenue (ADOR)

Nexus & savings calculator

Estimate whether you still have nexus in Arizona — and what canceling could save.

$

Arizona no longer counts transactions — only sales matter here.

$
  • Physical presence
  • Sales over $100,000
  • Transactions (not counted here)
Likely eligible to cancel

Based on these numbers you likely no longer have nexus in Arizona. You can usually deregister after clearing the trailing-nexus window and filing your final return.

Trailing nexus: Arizona applies trailing nexus — expect to keep filing for roughly 12 months after your nexus ends. Confirm the exact window before canceling.

You could stop paying

$600/ yr

How to cancel in Arizona →

Estimate only — general education, not tax advice. Confirm with Arizona's tax authority before you register or deregister.

Do you need to collect sales tax in Arizona?

You have a duty to collect once you have nexus: physical presence (inventory, staff, an office) or economic nexus from crossing $100,000 in sales over previous or current calendar year. Arizona has never used a transaction-count trigger — only the sales figure matters.

The Arizona rate

Arizona's statewide Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) base rate is 5.6%. Counties and municipalities add their own rates on top; combined rates range from approximately 5.6% (unincorporated areas) to 11.2% in some cities.

Marketplace and direct sales

Marketplaces like Amazon collect Arizona tax for you, but those sales don't count toward your own threshold. Direct sales on your own store you collect yourself.

Filing and zero returns

Once registered, Arizona requires a return every assigned period even when you owe $0 — miss one and you can face penalties. Filing frequency is assigned by ADOR based on estimated annual combined TPT liability: Annual if under $2,000/year; Quarterly if $2,000–$8,000/year; Monthly if over $8,000/year.

When you can cancel

If your Arizona returns are mostly $0, you may be over-registered. Canceling your Arizona TPT license makes sense if your direct gross retail sales to Arizona customers fell below $100,000 in the most recent full calendar year AND you do not expect to meet the threshold again — under ARS 42-5044, you are not required to remit for the year after a non-threshold year and may then cancel. The main catch is that cancellation is not automatic: you must actively close your account on AZTaxes.gov or submit a Business Account Update form, file a final TPT return, and ensure all prior-period liabilities are settled, since cancellation does not extinguish past obligations.

Where TrailingZero fits

TrailingZero connects to your store read-only, maps where you actually have nexus state by state, and maps your real nexus in Arizona and flags whether you should register, keep filing, or cancel. 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.

Arizona Sales tax guide FAQ

Does Arizona have a sales tax?
Yes. The statewide base rate is 5.6%. Remote sellers collect it once they have nexus.
When do I have to register for sales tax in Arizona?
When you have physical presence there or cross $100,000 in sales over previous or current calendar year.
Can I cancel my Arizona registration if I'm under the threshold?
Generally yes, after clearing Arizona's trailing-nexus window and filing a final return.
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 Arizona sales tax

See what you can stop paying in Arizona

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Other states

See all states →

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.