Registration guide
Should I register for sales tax in Kansas?
Before you register for sales tax in Kansas, check whether you actually have to. Registering when you don't owe just adds a recurring return — here's exactly when Kansas requires it.
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 Kansas Department of Revenue (KDOR) or a tax professional before you register or deregister.
- Economic threshold
- $100,000 in sales
- Measured over
- current or immediately preceding calendar year
- In effect since
- July 2021
- Marketplace sales count?
- No
- Registration fee
- Free
When you must register
You must register in Kansas if you have physical presence there (inventory, staff, an office) or you cross $100,000 in sales (current or immediately preceding calendar year). Below that, with no physical presence, you generally don't have to.
Nexus & savings calculator
Estimate whether you still have nexus in Kansas — and what canceling could save.
Kansas no longer counts transactions — only sales matter here.
- Physical presence
- Sales over $100,000
- Transactions (not counted here)
Based on these numbers you likely no longer have nexus in Kansas. You can usually deregister after clearing the trailing-nexus window and filing your final return.
Trailing nexus: Kansas 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
Estimate only — general education, not tax advice. Confirm with Kansas's tax authority before you register or deregister.
When registration is required in Kansas
Kansas requires registration once you cross $100,000 in sales, measured over current or immediately preceding calendar year. Kansas has never used a transaction-count trigger — only the sales figure matters.
Physical presence registers you regardless of sales. Physical presence — including employees, offices, warehouses, inventory stored in-state (e.g., Amazon FBA), or affiliated representatives — creates nexus regardless of sales volume, at thresholds lower than economic nexus.
The marketplace nuance most sellers miss
If you sell only through a marketplace like Amazon or Etsy, the marketplace facilitator generally collects and remits Kansas tax for you, so you may not need your own permit. In Kansas, facilitated sales do not count toward your own threshold.
How to register in Kansas
Register through Kansas Customer Service Center (KCSC), which is free. Register online via the KCSC portal, in person at a KDOR office (same-day processing), or by mail/fax using Form CR-16 (Kansas Business Tax Application), at least 3–4 weeks before anticipated first sale.
Don't over-register
Most over-registered sellers signed up defensively across many states after 2018. If you're under Kansas's threshold with no physical presence, registering early just creates a recurring zero-dollar return. Register when you truly must — and track the states where you can stop.
Where TrailingZero fits
TrailingZero connects to your store read-only, maps where you actually have nexus state by state, and flags when you genuinely cross Kansas's threshold — and where you've already dropped below and can deregister. 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.
Kansas Should I register FAQ
- Do I need to collect sales tax in Kansas?
- Only once you have nexus: physical presence, or crossing $100,000 in sales over current or immediately preceding calendar year. Under that, with no physical presence, you generally don't.
- Does Kansas still count transactions?
- Kansas has never used a transaction-count trigger — only the sales figure matters.
- Do marketplace sales count toward the Kansas threshold?
- No — facilitated sales do not count toward your own threshold in Kansas.
- 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 Kansas sales tax
See what you can stop paying in Kansas
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Other states
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Primary sources reviewed for this page. Data current as of June 2026.
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/busclosedsold.html
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/forms-btreg.html
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/pdf/cr108.pdf
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/faqs-taxsales.html
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/pub1510.html
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/taxmarketplace.html
- https://www.ksrevenue.gov/sstpoverview.html
- https://www.salestaxinstitute.com/resources/economic-nexus-state-guide
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.