SandrA9810
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2005
- Messages
- 9,392
It says Walmart is in compliance with state tax laws, yet she hasn't lost a lawsuit yet?
Makes no sense![]()
Don't all stores charge you taxes for the full price before the coupons? I went to CVS yesterday and used a two for one coupon on Dove shampoo. It was on sale and for some reason the two bottles rang up as free but I still paid 36 cents in tax.
There's not supposed to be any sales tax on coupon price. So case in point, like the receipt they showed.
Lysol item - $10
Coupon - $5
Tax - .60 on the full $10, not just the $5 she paid for the item.
If they changed their computer system to reflect "lysol coupon", they would not be allowed to charge sales tax on the coupon. But because the receipt just says "coupon" with no indications of what product it is for, they can get away with charging sales tax on the whole amount of the item.
If it was a general $5 off your next $10 purchase on anything at Walmart, then they could charge sales tax on all items bought in the store, because the coupon is not directly related to an item.
Safeway and Target are pretty good about showing which coupon reflects to which product, but makes a bigger pain when checking out because the computer system denies the coupons more often. Even if you are buying one of the three products available with the coupon.