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QUESTIONS & ANSWERS ABOUT TRUSTFILE
Q1: What does Trustfile do?
Trustfile provides software and a tax-processing system that allow
businesses to prepare, file and pay state and local business taxes electronically.
In this way, it helps companies reduce the time they spend complying with
business-tax filing requirements of federal, state and local revenue agencies.
Q2: What kinds of business taxes are involved?
Trustfile helps businesses quickly and accurately prepare, file and
pay the following:
- Sales/use taxes in Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, South Carolina and Wisconsin. (Use tax is paid by a buyer for using,
storing, distributing or consuming tangible personal property or taxable services inside a jurisdiction)
- Unemployment-compensation tax in Florida
- Solid waste tax in Florida
- Property tax in Georgia
Q3: What is the process for filing business taxes?
The Federal Internal Revenue Service, 45 states, the District of Columbia and some 200 local
revenue agencies all require businesses to file separate returns for business taxes. Companies
must file a return electronically (including online and telephonic filing) or on paper to each
agency that requires it on a strict monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual schedule.
Let’s look even more closely: Forty-six states impose a general excise/sales and use tax.
Four of those states allow cities or counties/parishes to impose and administer their own
local-level sales taxes. The majority of the states allow cities/counties to impose taxes at
various rates that are collected on the state return. Some states require companies to report
all of their activity on a single form, while others require that they report their activities
separately for every location.
Q4: So businesses might have to file many business-tax returns?
Clearly, based on the answer to the above question, the level of complexity and the knowledge
needed to comply fully with states’ business-tax requirements can be significant.
Consider the following examples:
- Large companies: An appliance retailer with 350 stores that delivers products
nationwide must comply with the laws of each jurisdiction into which it delivers
goods. It files some 550 returns each month.
- Regional companies: A franchise that owns the right to 25 stores — 10 in
Tennessee, 8 in Louisiana and 7 in Texas — files 26 returns each month. Tennessee
and Texas make the franchisee file for each separate location, but in Louisiana it
must file for the state and each parish in which it does business.
- Single locations/small businesses: A plumber in Louisiana contracts to do business
with customers in various parishes around his location. Each parish imposes various tax
rates based on the town in the parish. Thus, the plumber must register and file returns
with each parish in which he works. He may even have to file returns in months when he
has not done any business.
Q5: What’s driving the demand for Trustfile’s products and services?
State revenue agencies are under legislative and taxpayer pressure to improve customer
service and use technology to increase the efficiency of tax collection. A number of states
accept voluntary electronic filing (“e-filing”) of business taxes.
However, Congress has required that 80 percent of Federal business tax returns be filed
electronically by 2007. Following this lead, state revenue agencies recently have begun
mandating businesses to file their returns electronically. The number of states with
e-filing mandates is increasing each year, requiring more and more businesses to file tax
returns electronically.
In those states with mandates, the state typically offers a ‘free’ Web-based
filing option as well as the option to file by telephone. While these options are adequate
for many small businesses, a large segment of the business population needs a more powerful,
feature-rich filing alternative such as Trustfile.
Q6: Where are e-filing mandates in place right now?
Arkansas, Florida, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Oklahoma,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas.
Q7: Why would companies use Trustfile products and service?
Collecting, filing and paying sales, use and unemployment-compensation taxes to government
revenue agencies is time consuming, expensive and prone to error. In addition, individual
state revenue agencies' filing sites are configured in a wide variety of ways. Businesses that
file electronically in a number of states must learn, use and trust as many agency systems.
Businesses operating in states that have voluntary e-filing have resisted e-filing because of
the multiplicity of systems and processes. Trustfile’s research and feedback from existing
customers shows that business-tax filers welcome a single, economical, streamlined clearinghouse
for all revenue agencies in the U.S. versus multiple, diverse agency systems.
Tax laws change annually, and it’s quite difficult, if sometimes impossible, for taxpayers
to keep up. Trustfile continuously updates its software and tax-processing system with current
tax laws and regulations.
Q8: What products and services does Trustfile offer?
Software for filing Connecticut sales/use tax; software for filing Florida sales/use tax,
unemployment compensation tax and solid waste tax; software for filing Georgia sales tax and
property tax; software for filing Illinois sales/use tax; software for filing Louisiana
sales/use tax; software for filing Maryland sales/use tax; software for filing New Jersey
sales/use tax; software for filing Pennsylvania sales/use tax; software for filing South
Carolina sales tax; software for filing Tennessee sales/use tax; and software for filing
Wisconsin sales/use tax.
Q9: How do Trustfile's services work?
Trustfile offers a simple, secure, fast, cost-effective, and more accurate alternative to
filing an electronic or paper return to individual states. Incorporating “smart”
electronic forms software and including all necessary tax rates and current revenue agency
requirements, Trustfile employs software technology and electronic transmission capabilities
to provide low-cost, secure, fast movement of business-tax filing and payment data between
business and government.
Q10: Why should businesses pay for filing software when they can just
use free state tax-filing websites?
- State e-filing sites typically do not offer the ability to import
data. Trustfile enables businesses to quickly and easily import their
tax data.
- Multi-state filers must learn to use multiple sites with different
features, structures, navigation and more, for each state in which they
file. Trustfile offers a single point of entry for filers in multiple
states.
- Businesses generally must manage separate log-in information for
each location in which they file. For multi-state filers, using Trustfile
eliminates the need to manage multiple log-ins.
- State e-filing websites do not offer simple access to businesses’ filing
history. Trustfile provides easy access to filing history, useful if companies
need to look up past filings for reference or to comply with an audit.
- Trustfile ensures users’ data is securely stored on their own systems.
- Trustfile has been facilitating business-tax filing for nearly
20 years and was the first company in the U.S. certified for e-filing
by a state department of revenue. Trustfile uses that expertise to track
and meet state and local revenue-agency requirements to ensure filer
compliance.
Q11: Who are potential Trustfile customers?
Trustfile’s market is businesses with a requirement to file business taxes in states
where Trustfile provides service. Currently, our customer base numbers some 16,000 businesses
in those states. Some of these businesses are mandated filers. Many are businesses that
simply want the convenience of filing electronically.
Q12: How does Trustfile ensure its software and transmission work with revenue
agencies’ filing sites?
Trustfile maintains an extensive network of contacts with government revenue departments.
We keep up with all new tax laws and make sure our software is up to date, and businesses are
filing and paying with the correct numbers and percentages that states need. Users need only
click Trustfile software’s update button to update their software and ensure the
latest compliance.
States certify Trustfile software before it is released. In most cases, states certify Trustfile
software by testing it to ensure that data requirements, calculations, etc., are accurate. In
other states, certification means that the state has determined that Trustfile software sends
the correct data to the state computers.
Q13: What else on the horizon could affect business-tax filers?
More states--Illinois and Wisconsin among them--have e-filing mandates on their future legislative
agendas, with other states sure to follow suit.
In addition, current law does not require online and direct mail companies to collect and pay sales
taxes on transactions that occur in jurisdictions where they do not have a physical presence. Many
states, however, are considering legislation to require sales tax collection by these companies.
This will add another wrinkle to businesses’ already complicated business-tax requirements.
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