13 states hold sales tax holidays in August; 2 from July continue into this month
Tuesday, July 02, 2024
Update Aug. 6, 2024: Classes have resumed in some school districts. Others will open their doors to students soon. And most across the United States will be in session by the end of this month. So, it's no surprise that parents are shopping for supplies, especially in states holding back-to-school sales tax holidays. Two that started in July, in Florida and Ohio, are wrapping up into this month. And three others, in starting date order, begin this weekend: Texas from Friday, Aug. 9, though Sunday, Aug. 11; Massachusetts from Saturday, Aug. 10, through Sunday, Aug. 11; and Maryland, from Sunday, Aug. 11, through Saturday, Aug. 17. The sales tax holidays underway now or soon to be are highlighted in yellow in the tables below.
Summer arrives in full force in July. So do the annual — cover your ears, children — back-to-school tax holidays.
Yes, classes will resume before you know it. And this month, shoppers in five states and Puerto Rico will get some tax-free savings during events typically touted as school-related. In reality, lot of us long past school days can enjoy many of the tax-exempt items.
If your state doesn’t hold a sales tax holiday in July, all might not be lost. The tax-free purchasing continues into August, with events starting that month in 13 states.
The tables below for July and August were compiled using information from the various state tax departments, as well as the Sales Tax Institute, Federation of Tax Administrators, and Avalara. They give you an overview of what will be exempt in participating states.
Click on the table links for more details. Note, however, that some links, particularly those for the August tax-free days, still go to last year's tax holidays. They will be updated as the holiday dates near.
July 2024 State Sales Taxes Holidays |
||
State & Sales Tax Rate |
Holiday Days |
Tax-Free Products |
Alabama 4% |
Clothing $100 or less |
|
Florida 6% |
Clothing $100 or less |
|
Mississippi 7% |
Clothing and footwear $100 or less |
|
Ohio 5.75% |
Clothing $75 or less |
|
Puerto Rico 11.5% |
School supplies |
|
Tennessee 7% |
Friday, July 28 |
Clothing $100 or less |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
August 2024 State Sales Taxes Holidays |
||
State & Sales Tax Rate |
Holiday Days |
Tax-Free Products |
Arkansas 6.5% |
Clothing $100 or less |
|
Connecticut 6.35% |
Clothing and footwear $100 or less |
|
Iowa 6% |
Clothing and footwear priced at less than $100 |
|
Maryland 6% |
Clothing and footwear $100 or less |
|
Massachusetts 6.25% |
Almost every personal item |
|
Missouri 4.225% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
Clothing $100 or less |
New Jersey 6.625% |
Computers less than $3,000 |
|
New Mexico 5% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
Clothing or shoes $100 or less |
Oklahoma 4.5% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
Clothing, footwear $100 or less |
South Carolina 6% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
No purchase price limit |
Texas 6.25% |
Clothing, footwear, backpacks |
|
Virginia 5.3% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
School supplies $20 or less |
West Virginia 6% |
Friday, Aug. 2 |
Clothing, footwear $125 or less |
Shop wisely: The word tax in tax holidays is a dead giveaway that the events might not be as easy as shoppers hope.
As with tax filing, dates matter. While an event might be advertised as a weekend tax holiday, it could be in effect on just Saturday and Sunday, or Friday could make it a long weekend. Make sure you know when the holiday applies.
That's the first of 6 shopping tips to maximize sales tax holiday savings. Check it out, then make your list. That's also one of the tax holiday shopping suggestions.
You also might find these items of interest:
- Tax holidays are popular, but bad tax policy
- Sales tax jurisdictions across the United States
- 5 sales-tax-free states are perfect places to shop year-round
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