Skip to main content
Home
Home

Gross Receipts Taxes in Washington and Oregon

Gross Receipts Taxes in Washington and Oregon

Tax paperwork

Oregon and Washington share a border, but their tax systems have historically been diametrically opposite. 

Oregon has corporate and personal net income taxes, but no sales tax; Washington has a B&O tax, or gross receipts tax, and a sales tax, but no net income taxes. That changed with Oregon's adoption of its CAT, effective January 1. Now, practitioners and clients alike are comparing the Washington B&O tax and the Oregon CAT, as well as the Ohio CAT, on which the Oregon CAT was modeled.

To start, it may be useful to consider an underlying political observation about Oregon and Washington by Daniel Hauser, an analyst with the Oregon Center for Public Policy. In Hauser's November 2, 2018, commentary, in which he cited a report released by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy before Oregon's enactment of the CAT, he described the tax systems in Oregon and Washington as regressive (although it may be worth noting that, according to the same report, Oregon's tax structure was the 10th least regressive in the country).

Click here to read the full article published by Tax Notes State.

Print and share

Authors

Profile Picture
Partner
GBarton@perkinscoie.com

Notice

Before proceeding, please note: If you are not a current client of Perkins Coie, please do not include any information in this e-mail that you or someone else considers to be of a confidential or secret nature. Perkins Coie has no duty to keep confidential any of the information you provide. Neither the transmission nor receipt of your information is considered a request for legal advice, securing or retaining a lawyer. An attorney-client relationship with Perkins Coie or any lawyer at Perkins Coie is not established until and unless Perkins Coie agrees to such a relationship as memorialized in a separate writing.

206.359.6358

Explore more in

Home
Jump back to top