The rise of remote work has significantly changed how businesses operate across state lines. While remote work offers flexibility for employers and employees, it can also create unexpected sales tax obligations when employees work from states where a company does not have a traditional office. In many states, the presence of a remote employee can create physical nexus, meaning the business may be required to register for sales tax and begin collecting tax on transactions within that state. For companies with distributed teams, understanding how remote employees affect tax nexus is an important part of maintaining compliance.
What Is Remote Employee Nexus
Remote employee nexus occurs when a worker performs services from a state where the company does not otherwise have a physical location. Because the employee is considered to be operating on behalf of the company, states may treat the employee’s location as a physical business presence.
This can create sales tax nexus even if:
- The company has no office in the state
- The employee works from home
- The business has no warehouse or inventory there
Once nexus exists, the business may be required to register for sales tax and comply with state filing requirements.
3PL Warehouses and Sales Tax Nexus
How Remote Workers Trigger Sales Tax Nexus
Remote employees may create nexus in several ways depending on their role and activities.
Examples include:
- Sales employees working from another state
- Customer service representatives operating remotely
- Technical staff supporting products from home offices
- Consultants performing services within a state
In many jurisdictions, any employee performing work on behalf of the business can establish nexus.
Economic Nexus Calculator Explained
Remote Work Expansion and Nexus Risk
Remote work expanded rapidly during the COVID-19 pandemic, causing many companies to unknowingly create nexus in new states. Businesses that once operated in a single state may now have employees working across multiple jurisdictions.
Common situations include:
- Employees relocating to different states
- Remote hiring across the country
- Temporary work-from-home arrangements
- Distributed SaaS and technology teams
Each of these situations can create new state tax obligations.
Remote Employees vs Economic Nexus
Remote employees create physical nexus, which is different from economic nexus.
Economic nexus is triggered when sales activity exceeds defined thresholds such as:
- $100,000 in annual sales
- 200 transactions within a state
Economic Nexus Thresholds by State
Many businesses with remote employees may also trigger economic nexus as their sales grow.
Sales Tax Exposure From Remote Workers
Businesses often develop tax exposure when remote employees create nexus before the company registers for sales tax.
Exposure may occur when:
- Employees move to new states
- Remote teams expand quickly
- Tax obligations are not tracked
- Sales activity continues without tax collection
Over time, this can lead to unpaid tax liability across multiple states.
How Businesses Track Employee Nexus
Companies with remote teams typically evaluate nexus risk by reviewing:
- Employee locations
- Remote hiring records
- Payroll data by state
- Sales activity within each state
This information helps determine whether physical nexus or economic nexus obligations exist.
How TaxMap Helps Businesses Track Nexus
TaxMap helps businesses analyze multi-state operations and identify where tax obligations may exist.
The platform evaluates:
- Employee locations
- State nexus rules
- Sales thresholds
- Potential compliance requirements
This helps businesses identify nexus risk early and plan appropriate compliance strategies.
