What Is A Trainling Nexus: The "Sticky" Tax Obligation
Understanding Trailing Nexus: The "Sticky" Tax Obligation
The concept recognizes that nexus-creating activities have a residual effect on your business's ability to make sales in the state. For example, if a salesperson solicited sales in a state, those sales don't immediately stop when the salesperson leaves—the sales continue as a direct result of that earlier work, and states want tax on these residual sales.
Trailing nexus provisions in states like California mean businesses cannot immediately deregister when sales drop below thresholds. California requires continued collection for the remainder of the year plus the following year, even if the threshold isn't met in year two. This "sticky nexus" creates ongoing obligations that outlast the triggering activity.
What It Means: You must continue collecting and remitting sales tax for a period of time even after you no longer meet the economic nexus threshold or cease physical presence in a state.
Why Trailing Nexus Exists
The concept recognizes that nexus-creating activities have a residual effect on your business's ability to make sales in the state.
Example: If a salesperson solicited sales in a state, those sales don't immediately stop when the salesperson leaves—the sales continue as a direct result of that earlier work, and states want tax on these residual sales.
States with Explicit Trailing Nexus Provisions
7 States with Documented Trailing Nexus Policies:
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California - Most Restrictive
- Must collect for remainder of current calendar year PLUS the entire following calendar year
- Applies to both physical nexus and economic nexus
- Example: If you exceed $500,000 in 2025 but not in 2026, you must still collect through all of 2027
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Colorado
- Required to maintain license and collect for the entire calendar year if previous year exceeded $100,000 threshold
- Must collect throughout the following year
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Iowa
- Must remain registered throughout "year 2" if economic nexus established in "year 1"
- If threshold not met in year 2, may cancel permit and cease collecting
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Washington
- Must continue collecting for remainder of calendar year PLUS one additional calendar year after ceasing business
- Business & Occupation (B&O) tax liability lasts until end of calendar year after stopping business
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Texas
- Revenue must drop below economic nexus threshold for 12 consecutive months before collection obligation ends
- Note: Texas eliminated its previous trailing nexus policy in 2015
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Michigan
- Must remain registered until a full calendar year passes without meeting either component of the economic nexus threshold
- Example: Meet threshold in 2025 but not 2026, may cancel registration in 2027
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Maryland
- Can discontinue collecting once below threshold
- BUT must properly close account and maintain records demonstrating criteria weren't met
Critical Compliance Requirements During Trailing Nexus Period
Even though you're below the threshold, you must continue to:
- File sales tax returns - On time at the frequency required by the state
- Collect and remit sales tax - On all residual sales in the state
- Respond to audits or notices - If you receive communication from the state
- Maintain accurate records - Documentation proving when nexus ceased
CRITICAL WARNING: Never Just Stop Filing
You CANNOT simply stop collecting and filing returns when you think nexus has ended.
Required Actions:
- Verify that all nexus-creating activity has ceased
- Confirm you no longer have a trailing sales tax obligation
- File all required returns during the trailing period
- Formally close your account with the state
Ignoring trailing nexus can result in penalties, interest, and audit risk—even years later, since there's no statute of limitations for unfiled returns.
States Without Clear Guidance
Many states haven't explicitly stated their trailing nexus policies, but that doesn't mean they won't enforce them:
- Several states have yet to give guidance on when businesses can cancel sales tax permits after dropping below thresholds
- States that haven't explicitly stated trailing nexus provisions could still attempt to establish precedent
- When in doubt, consult a tax professional before deregistering
Best Practices for Managing Trailing Nexus
Strategic Approach:
- Take a long-term view: If you expect to cross the threshold again within 1-2 years, consider staying registered to avoid the disruption of canceling and re-registering
- File zero returns: Even in states without trailing nexus policies, file zero returns to confirm cessation of business activities
- Document everything: Keep detailed records of when and why sales dropped below thresholds
- Monitor all states: Track your obligations across all registered states, not just high-volume ones
- Use automation: Sales tax software can track trailing nexus periods and remind you when you can legally deregister
Veronica Jeans
eCommerce Strategist | Shopify Expert | 7-Figure Business Coach
I have integrated my extensive knowledge in the field of eCommerce and Shopify, along with my international financial expertise, to offer up a playbook for generating income online.