SaaS LLC compliance
For software-as-a-service: state-by-state taxability variation, R&D credits, international VAT, the foreign-LLC trap.
SaaS founders have the simplest compliance picture in some ways (no physical inventory) and the most complicated in others (state-by-state taxability of cloud software varies wildly).
1. Sales tax on SaaS varies by state
Some states tax SaaS like any other service or product. Some explicitly exempt it. Some tax only certain types of SaaS (B2B vs B2C, hosted vs downloaded). The map changes annually.
Current major exempters of SaaS: California, Florida (for some), Georgia, Illinois (mostly), Virginia. Major taxers: Texas, New York, Washington, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Hawaii.
If you serve customers in taxer states and cross economic nexus thresholds, you owe sales tax. Software-specific tax automation (Anrok, TaxJar) handles the state-by-state matrix automatically.
2. R&D tax credits (federal + state)
Software development qualifies for the federal R&D tax credit under IRC 41. Wages, contractor payments, and cloud hosting costs all qualify. For pre-revenue startups, the credit can be claimed against payroll tax up to $500,000/year via Form 8974.
Most state-level R&D credits stack on top of federal. California, New York, and Texas have generous state credits specifically.
This is one of the highest-ROI tax activities a SaaS LLC can do. The work to document and claim is real but not extreme; the credit can be 6-10% of qualified R&D spend.
3. International VAT
If you have EU, UK, or other international customers, you may owe VAT collection. EU VAT applies to B2C digital services regardless of where you are based; B2B is generally exempt with reverse charge. UK VAT applies above £85,000 in UK sales.
VAT registration is a state-by-state (country-by-country, really) decision. Tools like Anrok and Stripe Tax handle the OSS/MOSS schemes for EU automatic compliance.
4. The foreign-LLC trap
SaaS founders often want to form in Delaware "for future fundraising flexibility" · even when they live in California and have zero current investors. The cost of this: Delaware $300/yr LLC franchise tax + California $800/yr LLC franchise tax + California foreign LLC registration + duplicate compliance tracking. Total: ~$1,200/yr in state fees plus our service.
If you are not raising or are early enough that the round is hypothetical, form in your home state. When you actually raise, convert to a Delaware C-Corp at that point.
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