Asked about Rhode Island sales tax, RI use tax, Rhode Island Tax Division filing, Rhode Island SaaS tax, or Rhode Island sales tax compliance.
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Skill Metadata
| Field | Value | |-------|-------| | Jurisdiction | Rhode Island, United States | | Jurisdiction Code | US-RI | | Tax Type | Sales and Use Tax (state only -- no local sales tax) | | State Rate | 7.00% (flat, uniform statewide) | | Local Rates | None | | Primary Statute | Rhode Island General Laws (R.I.G.L.) §44-18 et seq. | | Governing Agency | Rhode Island Division of Taxation | | Portal | https://www.tax.ri.gov | | SST Member | Yes -- Full Member | | Contributor | Open Accounting Skills Registry | | Validated By | Pending -- requires US CPA or EA sign-off | | Validation Date | Pending | | Skill Version | 1.0 | | Confidence Coverage | T1: state rate, basic taxability, filing mechanics. T2: SaaS taxability, clothing exemption threshold, service taxability. T3: audit defense, complex transactions, penalty abatement. | | Format | Restructured to Q1 execution format, April 2026 |
Client Onboarding Questions
| # | Question | Why It Matters | |---|----------|---------------| | 1 | Do you have a Rhode Island sales tax registration / tax ID? | Determines whether registration is needed before filing. | | 2 | What is your current filing frequency (monthly / quarterly / annually)? | Controls which return periods to prepare. | | 3 | What is your nexus type -- physical presence, economic nexus, or both? | Determines registration obligations and applicable rules. | | 4 | Are you a marketplace seller (selling through Amazon, Etsy, etc.)? | Marketplace facilitator may already be collecting on your behalf. | | 5 | What types of products or services do you sell in Rhode Island? | Drives taxability classification under Rhode Island law. | | 6 | Do you sell to exempt entities (government, nonprofits, resellers)? | Determines whether exemption certificates must be collected and retained. | | 7 | Do you have locations, employees, or inventory in Rhode Island? | Physical presence creates nexus independent of economic thresholds. | | 8 | Do you sell into multiple Rhode Island local jurisdictions? | Local tax rates vary; determines compliance complexity. |
Onboarding gate
If the client cannot answer questions 1-4, STOP and gather this information before proceeding.
Skill Metadata
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | Rhode Island, United States |
| Jurisdiction Code | US-RI |
| Tax Type | Sales and Use Tax (state only -- no local sales tax) |
| State Rate | 7.00% (flat, uniform statewide) |
| Local Rates | None |
| Primary Statute | Rhode Island General Laws (R.I.G.L.) §44-18 et seq. |
| Governing Agency | Rhode Island Division of Taxation |
| Portal | https://www.tax.ri.gov |
| SST Member | Yes -- Full Member |
| Contributor | Open Accounting Skills Registry |
| Validated By | Pending -- requires US CPA or EA sign-off |
| Validation Date | Pending |
| Skill Version | 1.0 |
| Confidence Coverage | T1: state rate, basic taxability, filing mechanics. T2: SaaS taxability, clothing exemption threshold, service taxability. T3: audit defense, complex transactions, penalty abatement. |
| Format | Restructured to Q1 execution format, April 2026 |
Client Onboarding Questions
| # | Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Do you have a Rhode Island sales tax registration / tax ID? | Determines whether registration is needed before filing. |
| 2 | What is your current filing frequency (monthly / quarterly / annually)? | Controls which return periods to prepare. |
| 3 | What is your nexus type -- physical presence, economic nexus, or both? | Determines registration obligations and applicable rules. |
| 4 | Are you a marketplace seller (selling through Amazon, Etsy, etc.)? | Marketplace facilitator may already be collecting on your behalf. |
| 5 | What types of products or services do you sell in Rhode Island? | Drives taxability classification under Rhode Island law. |
| 6 | Do you sell to exempt entities (government, nonprofits, resellers)? | Determines whether exemption certificates must be collected and retained. |
| 7 | Do you have locations, employees, or inventory in Rhode Island? | Physical presence creates nexus independent of economic thresholds. |
| 8 | Do you sell into multiple Rhode Island local jurisdictions? | Local tax rates vary; determines compliance complexity. |
Note: This is similar to New York's clothing exemption structure (all-or-nothing) but with a higher threshold ($250 vs. $110). [T1]
Filing Details
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Return Form | T-204R (Sales and Use Tax Return) |
| Filing Frequencies | Monthly (>$200/month avg liability); Quarterly (most others); Annually (very small) |
| Due Date | 20th of the month following the reporting period |
| Portal | https://www.tax.ri.gov |
| E-filing | Required for most filers |
Note: Rhode Island's interest rate of 18% per annum is one of the highest in the nation. [T1]
Economic Nexus Threshold (R.I.G.L. §44-18.2-2)
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Revenue Threshold | $100,000 in Rhode Island sales |
| Transaction Threshold | 200 transactions |
| Test | OR (either threshold triggers nexus) |
| Measurement Period | Current or prior calendar year |
| Effective Date | July 1, 2019 |
Refer to Step 3 for filing frequencies and due dates. [T1]
Situation: A retailer sells a jacket for $249 and a pair of boots for $260.
Resolution:
Situation: A SaaS company from California sells subscriptions to RI businesses. The company assumes SaaS is not taxable based on their experience in CA.
Resolution:
Situation: A seller discovers they failed to remit RI sales tax for 12 months.
Resolution:
Situation: A restaurant charges $50 for a meal. What is the total tax?
Resolution:
Situation: Customer buys: shirt ($50), pants ($100), jacket ($260), shoes ($249).
Resolution:
Situation: A company sells a bundle including SaaS access ($200), digital music streaming ($50), and a physical product ($100) to an RI customer. Single invoice.
Resolution:
Situation: A company discovers 3 years of uncollected RI sales tax. The potential interest at 18% per annum is substantial.
Resolution:
Input: Seller in Providence sells $1,000 of electronics. RI rate = 7%. Expected output: Tax = $1,000 x 7% = $70.00. Total = $1,070.00.
Input: Customer buys a $200 jacket in Warwick. RI rate = 7%. Expected output: Clothing under $250 is EXEMPT. Tax = $0. Total = $200.00.
Input: Customer buys $300 boots in Newport. RI rate = 7%. Expected output: Clothing $250+ is FULLY taxable. Tax = $300 x 7% = $21.00. Total = $321.00.
Input: SaaS company charges RI business $500/month. RI rate = 7%. Expected output: SaaS IS taxable in RI. Tax = $500 x 7% = $35.00. Total = $535.00.
Input: Customer has $80 dinner in Providence. Sales tax = 7%, meals tax = 1%. Total = 8%. Expected output: Tax = $80 x 8% = $6.40. Total = $86.40.
Input: Guest stays 3 nights at a Providence hotel at $200/night. Total lodging rate = 13%. Expected output: Room = $600. Tax = $600 x 13% = $78.00. Total = $678.00.
Input: Customer buys a $240 coat (exempt) and a $260 dress (taxable). RI rate = 7%. Expected output: Coat ($240 < $250): exempt. Dress ($260 >= $250): fully taxable. Tax = $260 x 7% = $18.20. Total = $518.20.
Input: Customer downloads $25 e-book. RI rate = 7%. Expected output: Digital downloads are taxable. Tax = $25 x 7% = $1.75. Total = $26.75.
Reviewer Escalation Protocol
| Trigger | Action |
|---|---|
| Any [T3] tagged item encountered | STOP. Do not guess. Escalate to licensed CPA, EA, or tax attorney. |
| Client has audit notice or assessment | Escalate immediately. Do not advise on audit response. |
| Multi-state nexus question involving 3+ states | Flag for senior reviewer with multi-state experience. |
| Penalty abatement or voluntary disclosure | Escalate to licensed professional with state-specific experience. |
| Ambiguous taxability of a product/service | Present both interpretations to reviewer with supporting authority. |
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Other Rhode Island computations in the OpenAccountants Tax Library.
State Sales Tax Rate
7.00%R.I.G.L. §44-18-18
No local sales taxes
Rhode Island does NOT permit local sales taxes. The 7% rate is the total rate statewide.
Sourcing method
Rhode Island uses destination-based sourcing. As an SST member, Rhode Island follows SSUTA sourcing rules.
Unprepared grocery food
ExemptR.I.G.L. §44-18-30(7)
Prepared food (restaurant meals)
Taxable at 8% (1% meals/beverage tax + 7% sales tax, but the meals tax is structured as a separate 1% additional tax)
Candy
Taxable
Soft drinks
Taxable
Clothing and footwear exemption threshold
$250 per itemR.I.G.L. §44-18-30(27)
Prescription drugs
ExemptR.I.G.L. §44-18-30(8)
OTC drugs
Taxable
DME
Exempt
Prosthetics
Exempt
Taxable services
Telecommunications, cable/satellite TV, storage, pet grooming, cleaning (commercial), laundry/dry cleaning, pest control, security/alarm, printing.
Exempt services
Professional services (legal, accounting, medical, engineering), personal care (haircuts), education, financial services.
SaaS
Taxable at the full 7% rate. Rhode Island specifically taxes prewritten computer software regardless of the method of delivery or access, including SaaS.R.I.G.L. §44-18-7(8)
Canned software (physical and electronic)
Taxable
Custom software
Exempt
Digital downloads
Taxable
Streaming services
Taxable
Machinery/equipment used directly in manufacturing
ExemptR.I.G.L. §44-18-30(22)
Raw materials for resale
Exempt under resale
Hotel rooms and transient accommodations combined rate
13%
Short-term rentals (Airbnb)
Same combined rate applies
Meals (prepared food from restaurants) combined rate
8%
Filing Details
| Field | Detail | |-------|--------| | Return Form | T-204R (Sales and Use Tax Return) | | Filing Frequencies | Monthly (>$200/month avg liability); Quarterly (most others); Annually (very small) | | Due Date | 20th of the month following the reporting period | | Portal | https://www.tax.ri.gov | | E-filing | Required for most filers |
Vendor discount
Rhode Island does NOT offer a vendor discount for timely filing.
Late filing penalty
10% of tax due or $50, whichever is greater
Interest rate on unpaid tax
18% per annum (1.5% per month)
Fraud penalty
50% of tax due
General deductibility framework
Exemptions identified in Step 2 above are the primary deductibility rules for Rhode Island. Key categories:
Resale exemption
Valid resale certificate required. Retain for the statutory period.
Exempt organizations
Government entities and qualifying nonprofits -- require exemption certificate on file.
Agricultural exemptions
Where applicable per Step 2.
Manufacturing exemptions
Where applicable per Step 2.
Exemption certificate retention
All exemption certificates must be collected at or before the time of sale and retained per the state's statute of limitations.
Economic Nexus Threshold
| Field | Detail | |-------|--------| | Revenue Threshold | $100,000 in Rhode Island sales | | Transaction Threshold | 200 transactions | | Test | OR (either threshold triggers nexus) | | Measurement Period | Current or prior calendar year | | Effective Date | July 1, 2019 |R.I.G.L. §44-18.2-2
Marketplace facilitator collection requirement
Rhode Island requires marketplace facilitators to collect and remit.R.I.G.L. §44-18.2-3
SST registration status
Full SST member. SSTRS and CSPs available.
No local tax add-ons
NEVER apply local tax add-ons in Rhode Island. There are NO local sales taxes. 7% is the total rate.
SaaS not exempt
NEVER assume SaaS is exempt in Rhode Island. It is explicitly taxable at 7%.
Clothing exemption not a deduction
NEVER apply the clothing exemption as a deduction. It is all-or-nothing at the $250 threshold.
Meals/beverage tax not to be forgotten
NEVER forget the separate 1% meals/beverage tax on prepared food. Total on meals = 8%.
Late payment penalty not underestimated
NEVER underestimate the penalty for late payment. RI charges 18% per annum interest.
Grocery food not taxed
NEVER tax grocery food in Rhode Island. Unprepared food is exempt.
No manual computation
NEVER compute any number -- all arithmetic is handled by the deterministic engine, not Claude.
Reviewer Escalation Protocol
| Trigger | Action | |---------|--------| | Any [T3] tagged item encountered | STOP. Do not guess. Escalate to licensed CPA, EA, or tax attorney. | | Client has audit notice or assessment | Escalate immediately. Do not advise on audit response. | | Multi-state nexus question involving 3+ states | Flag for senior reviewer with multi-state experience. | | Penalty abatement or voluntary disclosure | Escalate to licensed professional with state-specific experience. | | Ambiguous taxability of a product/service | Present both interpretations to reviewer with supporting authority. |
Rendered from the canonical facts model. General reference only — confirm with a qualified professional before acting.
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