SOS Logo

Effective August 1, 2021, you will no longer be able to access INBiz using Internet Explorer. To continue using INBiz without disruption, you must use a supported browser. INBiz is accessible on Microsoft Edge (IE replacement), Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox or Apple Safari.




Internet Explorer is no longer supported by Microsoft. To access INBiz, you must use a supported browser. INBiz is accessible on Microsoft Edge (IE replacement), Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox or Apple Safari.


Out-of-State - Taxes & Fees - INBiz
Out-of-State

If your LLC or Corporation was incorporated in Indiana, your business is known as a "domestic" business. If your LLC or Corporation was incorporated in any other state, you're known as a "foreign" business. A foreign business must qualify and register to do business in another state. A company that has a physical presence in a state or repeatedly engages in business transactions in that state is conducting business in that state.

If you conduct any of the following transactions in Indiana, you are considered as conducting business in the state:

  • Have sales of goods or services
  • Provide services or labor
  • Perform construction work
  • Have employees working in the state
  • Own or rent real property
  • Own warehouses in Indiana that ship to customers in the state

Any business meeting these qualifications must register with the Department of Revenue. This registration can be completed in INBiz. After your business is registered in Indiana, you will begin paying state and local income taxes on any profits earned in Indiana and sales tax on any tangible property sold or shipped from the state. Corporations must pay the Indiana Corporate Income Tax, but LLC businesses avoid double taxation. All foreign businesses must adhere to Indiana's employment tax requirements.

Note that Indiana law (IC 6-2.5-2-1) requires a seller without a physical location in Indiana to obtain a registered retail merchant's certificate if the retail merchant’s gross revenue from any combination of:

  1. the sale of tangible personal property that is delivered into Indiana;
  2. a product transferred electronically into Indiana; or
  3. a service delivered in Indiana;

exceeds one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for the calendar year in which the retail transaction is made or for the calendar year preceding the calendar year in which the retail transaction is made.

For purposes other than sales tax, your business may be subject to other taxes such as income or withholding taxes. If you conduct any of the following activities in Indiana, you may be considered to be doing business in the state:

  • Maintenance of an office or other place of business in the state
  • Maintenance of an inventory of merchandise or material for sale distribution, or manufacture, or consigned goods in the state
  • Sale or distribution of merchandise to customers in the state directly from company-owned or operated vehicles where title to the goods passes at the time of sale or distribution
  • Rendering services to customers in the state
  • Ownership, rental or operation of a business or of property (real or personal) in the state
  • Acceptance of orders in the state

Any business meeting these qualifications must register with the Department of Revenue. Businesses having employees in the state must register to remit withholding tax to the Department of Revenue and if the employees are engaging in activities beyond the solicitation sales, the business or its owners will owe Indiana corporate or individual income tax regardless as to whether the business is engaging in any of the other activities listed above. These registrations can be completed in INBiz. All businesses with Indiana employees must also adhere to Indiana's employment tax requirements.

Ready to get started?