This is the structural shift direct selling leaders can’t afford to ignore in 2026.
For companies in the direct selling channel, tax compliance has always required agility. But what we’re heading into in 2026 is not just another cycle of rate changes or administrative updates. It’s a structural shift.
Governments—in the US and globally—are rethinking how they generate revenue. Sales tax, VAT and GST are increasingly at the center of that conversation. And for direct selling organizations operating across state lines and international borders, the implications are significant.
If your model includes independent distributors, cross-border fulfillment, subscription tools, service-based revenue or marketplace-style functionality, you are no longer simply managing tax rates. You are navigating a fundamental change in how jurisdictions define what is taxable; who must collect it; and how it must be reported.
Why Indirect Tax in 2026 Is Changing
In the US, states facing revenue pressures are turning to sales tax as one of the most stable and expandable sources of funding. Rather than raising rates dramatically, many are broadening the tax base—particularly around digital goods and services.
At the same time, international governments are closing VAT gaps and modernizing compliance systems. The European Union’s “VAT in the Digital Age” (ViDA) reforms are introducing structured e-invoicing and near real-time digital reporting across member states. Countries in Asia Pacific and Latin America are investing heavily in e-invoicing, digital transaction logs and AI-driven audit capabilities.
The direction is consistent: more transparency, more digital reporting and broader definitions of taxable activity. For direct selling companies, this shift touches nearly every revenue stream.
Digital Tools and Service Fees Are No Longer Safe Assumptions
Historically, sales tax regimes focused on tangible goods. That model no longer reflects how modern direct selling organizations operate. Today’s revenue mix often includes:
- Distributor subscription fees
- Replicated website access
- Back-office CRM tools
- Digital training platforms
- Virtual events
- Service or fulfillment fees
- Platform or marketplace commissions
States are increasingly categorizing these as taxable digital services, data processing or software—depending on structure. The classification question is becoming as important as the rate itself.
Internationally, VAT regimes already treat many digital services as taxable at the point of consumption.
As digital reporting mandates expand, authorities gain greater visibility into these revenue streams. For leadership teams, the key question is not “Are we compliant today?” but “Have we mapped every revenue stream and confirmed its tax treatment jurisdiction by jurisdiction?”
Marketplace and Platform Exposure Is Growing
Another emerging global trend is shifting tax responsibility from individual sellers to platforms.
In the US, marketplace facilitator laws have been in place for several years. In the EU, marketplaces are increasingly treated as “deemed suppliers” for VAT purposes. That means the platform—not the distributor—may be responsible for collecting and remitting tax on certain transactions.
For direct selling organizations operating hybrid ecommerce models, this creates strategic considerations:
- Are we considered the seller of record?
- Could our platform be treated as a marketplace?
- Who holds liability for VAT or sales tax in cross-border transactions?
As governments look for efficient collection mechanisms, platforms become attractive enforcement points.
The End of De Minimis and Cross-Border Complexity
The recent elimination of the US $800 de minimis threshold for low-value imports dramatically changed cross-border ecommerce. Shipments that once entered duty-free now require full customs documentation and classification.
Other regions are moving in a similar direction. Policymakers are considering reductions or removal of low-value import thresholds—including potential changes to the EU’s €150 threshold, and the United Kingdom is reviewing its own low-value import rules.

For direct selling organizations that ship starter kits, promotional items or small parcel orders internationally, this means:
- More rigorous customs classification.
- HS/HTS code requirements across product catalogs.
- Additional duties layered onto VAT or GST.
- Greater landed cost variability.
Low value does not mean low compliance anymore.
Digital Reporting Is Becoming the Norm
E-invoicing is no longer a pilot concept—it is rapidly becoming a baseline expectation.
The EU’s ViDA reforms will standardize digital reporting for cross-border transactions. India continues expanding its e-invoicing and GST integration requirements. China is codifying VAT enforcement into national law. Brazil is transitioning into a dual VAT structure during tax reform.
Many of these systems rely on structured invoice formats and near real-time reporting to tax authorities.
For direct selling companies with international operations, the compliance burden is shifting from periodic filing to transaction-level visibility, which means:
- Systems must generate compliant e-invoices.
- ERP and tax engines must integrate seamlessly.
- Distributor-facing tools must support structured reporting.
Manual processes simply do not scale in this environment.
Enforcement Is Becoming Data Driven
Across jurisdictions, audit activity is increasingly supported by analytics and AI. In the US, states are leveraging better data to identify nexus exposure and exemption certificate gaps. Internationally, tax authorities are matching invoice data in real time to detect inconsistencies.
For direct selling organizations managing thousands of distributors and high transaction volumes, strong governance around exemption certificates, nexus monitoring, revenue classification and cross-border documentation is no longer optional.
What Direct Selling Leaders Should Be Doing Now

This moment calls for strategy, not reaction.
Leadership teams should be:
- Mapping every revenue stream globally and validating tax treatment.
- Reviewing platform structure to assess marketplace exposure.
- Strengthening cross-border customs and classification controls.
- Preparing systems for structured e-invoicing and digital reporting.
- Implementing automated nexus and registration monitoring.
- Ensuring exemption certificate governance is audit ready.
Indirect tax is no longer a back-office issue. It is a margin issue. A scalability issue. A risk management issue.
The Bigger Picture
What we are witnessing is not temporary volatility. It is a modernization of global tax systems driven by digital commerce. Governments want visibility. They want automation. And increasingly, they expect businesses—particularly platform-based and cross-border models—to shoulder more of the compliance burden.
The direct selling industry has always adapted to regulatory change. But adaptation in this environment requires infrastructure, governance and executive awareness. Indirect tax may not be the most visible part of your growth strategy. In 2026 and beyond, however, it may be one of the most strategic.

NIKI HOCKING serves as a Sales Executive at Avalara, where she works closely with direct selling organizations to strengthen their compliance and operational infrastructure. With more than a decade of experience in consultative sales and regulatory strategy, she partners with executive and finance leaders to navigate complexity, streamline processes and build scalable foundations for long-term growth.
From the May/June 2026 issue of Direct Selling News magazine.
The post Indirect Tax is Expanding—Everywhere, All the Time first appeared on Direct Selling News.



