Texas Sales Tax Permit
A Texas sales tax permit is a Comptroller registration for businesses that sell or lease taxable items or sell taxable services in Texas.
The permit question is separate from LLC formation. Filing a Certificate of Formation creates the company. A sales tax permit addresses whether the business has to collect and remit Texas sales and use tax.
How to Register for a Texas Sales Tax Permit
Businesses engaged in business in Texas that sell or lease tangible personal property, or sell taxable services in Texas, must register with the Texas Comptroller.
The sales tax permit application is handled online through the Comptroller's eSystems. There is no state filing fee for the permit, and owners should allow 2-3 weeks for the permit.
Before applying, gather the business identification details, responsible-party information, business address, activity description, and tax account information needed for the Comptroller application.
How to Know Which Goods and Services Are Taxable
Texas sales and use tax applies to retail sales, leases, and rentals of most goods and taxable services.
The Texas state sales and use tax rate is 6.25%. Local jurisdictions may add up to 2% more, so the maximum combined rate is 8.25%.
The confirmed Texas rule uses a broad permit trigger: selling or leasing tangible personal property, or selling taxable services, while engaged in business in Texas. Product-specific and service-specific treatment remains [FACT-PENDING: Texas taxable-item and taxable-service treatment for a specific business activity].
Filing Your Texas Sales Tax Return
After a sales tax permit is active, the business has to keep records and file sales tax returns as required by the Texas Comptroller.
Sales tax return frequency, due dates, late penalties, and interest rules remain [FACT-PENDING: Texas sales tax return filing frequency, return due dates, late penalties, and interest].
Keep sales tax records separate from franchise tax records. Sales tax is tied to taxable sales and leases. Franchise tax and the Public Information Report are separate Texas Comptroller obligations for entities with Texas nexus.
Resale Certificate
A resale certificate is different from the sales tax permit itself. It is generally used when a buyer purchases taxable items for resale rather than for its own use.
Resale paperwork is a separate concept, but Texas resale-certificate rules remain [FACT-PENDING: Texas resale certificate requirements, accepted form, and seller verification responsibilities].
Do not assume that a resale certificate replaces the sales tax permit. A business that sells taxable items or taxable services in Texas still needs to address permit registration.
Why Do I Need a Permit?
The permit gives the Texas Comptroller a tax account for the business activity. It connects the business to the sales and use tax system before taxable sales are collected and remitted.
It also creates a practical compliance record. A buyer, supplier, marketplace, landlord, bank, or transaction partner may ask whether the business has the registrations needed for its activity.
For a Texas LLC, this comes after formation planning. The LLC may need a registered agent, Certificate of Formation, operating agreement, tax account setup, sales tax permit, and local or industry permits depending on what the business does.
Can I Sell Without One?
If the business is engaged in business in Texas and sells or leases tangible personal property or sells taxable services, the confirmed Texas rule is that it must register with the Comptroller.
Casual-sale, marketplace, local-event, and low-volume exceptions remain [FACT-PENDING: Texas sales tax permit exceptions for occasional sales, marketplace sellers, temporary sellers, and local events].
Do not treat a formed LLC as permission to skip sales tax registration. Formation and sales tax registration answer different questions.
Repercussions of Selling Without a Permit
Selling without the required permit can create fines or other enforcement consequences.
Texas-specific penalties for selling taxable items or services without the required sales tax permit remain [FACT-PENDING: Texas enforcement consequences for selling taxable items or services without a sales tax permit].
The safer sequence is simple: determine whether the business sells taxable goods or services, register with the Comptroller if required, and keep tax filings current after the permit is active.
Getting Your Permit
Apply through the Texas Comptroller's eSystems. There is no state filing fee, and owners should allow 2-3 weeks for the permit.
The application is not the same as an LLC filing with the Texas Secretary of State. It is a tax registration handled by the Comptroller.
If the company is still being formed, line up the sequence: choose the entity name, file the Certificate of Formation if forming a Texas LLC, set up tax accounts, then handle permit and local licensing requirements tied to the actual business activity.
After You Get Your Permit
After the permit is issued, keep records for taxable sales, tax collected, exempt transactions, resale documents, and return filings.
Also keep the permit work separate from annual entity compliance. Texas LLCs do not file a separate annual report with the Secretary of State, but they do file franchise tax reporting and a Public Information Report with the Texas Comptroller.
If the business changes what it sells, where it sells, or how it sells, revisit the permit and tax account setup before assuming the original registration still covers the new activity.