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The Minnesota Department of Revenue (MNDOR) is an agency of the U.S. state of Minnesota. It manages and enforces the reporting, payment, and receipt of taxes owed to the state, as well as some other fees. [1] As of 2017, the department administered more than 30 taxes totaling almost $21 billion per year. [2]
More than two dozen Minnesota cities and five counties will have local sales tax proposals on their ballots this fall after the Legislature approved a record number of sales tax proposals in 2023 ...
With higher taxes, more consumers are starting to reconsider where they shop, [22] according to a study conducted in Minnesota and Wisconsin, [23] where the sales tax was raised on cigarettes. Effects of higher sales tax were not shown immediately in sales, but about six months after the taxes were raised. [ 23 ]
There is no sales tax on food items, but prepared meals purchased in a restaurant are subject to a meal tax of 6.25% (in some towns voters chose to add a local 0.75% tax, raising the meal tax to 7%, with that incremental revenue coming back to the town). Sales tax on liquor was repealed in a 2010 referendum vote.
For most taxpayers, the deadline for filing 2021 state taxes in Minnesota is April 18, 2022. Residents and businesses may be eager to know when their state tax refunds will arrive. However, knowing...
The Streamlined Sales Tax Project (SSTP), first organized in March 2000, is intended to simplify and modernize sales and use tax collection and administration in the United States. It arose in response to efforts by Congress to permanently prohibit states from collecting sales tax on online commerce.
Since 1974, Minnesota has offered same-day registration. Eligible voters can show up to their polling location with one valid form of identification and verification of address.
The sales tax in Minnesota for most items is 6.875% effective July 1, 2009. [29] The state does not charge sales tax on clothing, some services, or food items for home consumption. [30] The state legislature may allow municipalities to institute local sales taxes and special local taxes, such as the 0.5% supplemental sales tax in Minneapolis. [31]