Tax Schedules are made up of one or more tax details. For example, tax details might be:
CA State Sales Tax 7%
Orange County Taz 1.5%
Santa Ana City Sales Tax .5%
Special District Tax .25%
For a total of 9.25%. Each of these taxes could be payable to a different entity and have a different liability account on the balance sheet.
You would create a tax schedule marrying these together, then assign the tax tax schedule to the customers and alternate addresses. Finally, you would make the customer and items as taxable (Pro Tip: EVERY customer should marked as taxable, it is simply that some of them have tax rate of zero. Then create a tax schedule for EVERY reason that the tax rate is zero: Resale, government, non-profit, etc. The Sales Tax reports then make it a snap to file a sales & use tax return).
If Santa Ana, for example, raised the city tax, you only need to go to tax detail maintenance to change one tax detail, rather than going to every Santa Ana customer and address to change them.
As to the calculations, if the customer and item is taxable (labor is most cases is not), Macola calculates the sales amt x the tax rate for each line item on the invoice that is taxable, accumulates it and makes one journal entry per invoice, at the time the invoice is posted.
If you have thousands of tax jurisdictions and are have trouble managing this, there is an Avalara tax integration available, but not for Progression, only for Macola ES or Macola 10.
Let me know if you have any questions.
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