Vermont alcohol tax permits and rules

It feels like everyone is ordering alcohol online. Does Vermont permit direct-to-consumer (DTC) wine and alcohol shipping? Find out and learn the alcohol (wine, liquor, and beer) tax rates and rules for your state.

Wine, liquor, and beer tax rates for Vermont

Last Updated:

August 01, 2021

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Permit

Licensing

DTC License Required: Yes

License Type: DTC Permit

License Fee: $330

License Expiration: April 30 of each year

License Bond: No

Calculator

Sales tax

State Sales Tax: Yes

State Sales Tax Rate: 6.000%

Local Sales Tax: Yes

Local Sales Tax Range: 0%–1%

Sales Tax on Shipping: Yes

Excise

Alcohol tax

Malt and Vinous Beverage Tax: $0.55/gal

Shipping

Volume limits

Consumer Limit: 12 cases per person annually

Per State Aggregate: Unlimited

Reporting

Returns

Sales and Use Tax: Monthly or quarterly by the 25th

Excise Tax: Quarterly by the 25th

Direct Shipment: Semiannually by the 10th

Record Retention: At least 5 years

Requirements

Product requirements*

Product Restrictions: Only wines produced by the permittee may be sold and shipped to consumers. Direct shipment of wine over 16% prohibited.

Product Registration: No

Registration Fees: N/A

Product Requirements: A holder of any shipping license granted shall: ensure that all containers of alcoholic beverages shipped are clearly labeled: “contains alcohol; signature of individual age 21 or older required for delivery.”

*Nearly all states have some kind of rule regarding how wine must be labeled when being shipped direct to consumer. Please check for the unique rule for your state.

Reporting

Important DTC information

Tax can get complicated when it comes to direct-to-consumer (DTC) shipments. The beverage alcohol industry is different from other industries in that licensed alcohol shippers are required to register for sales tax in most states, independent of economic or physical nexus.

Depending on the state, sales and use tax can be applied at the state, county, city, or special district levels. Address accuracy is important to determine if a location falls into an incorporated or unincorporated section of a county or a special district.

On top of the sales tax requirements, alcohol taxes also apply to DTC shipments. Several states have “markup” taxes, where the retail value of the alcohol is multiplied by a percentage rate. Most of these markup taxes are either required or can be passed through to the consumer. 

Traditional “gallonage”-based excise taxes are also usually due on DTC shipments. Most of the time these are factored into the price of the item and not passed through to the consumer. In a few cases, these excise taxes are required to be passed on to the consumer.

Rules and regulations for your winery, brewery, or other beverage alcohol business change frequently. Avalara for Beverage Alcohol helps distill the beverage alcohol compliance process so you can focus on your business.

Information

Learn more about state alcohol and excise taxes

Vermont DOR site

Please note: Tax rates, rules, and regulations change frequently. Although we hope you'll find this information helpful, this page is for informational purposes only and does not provide legal or tax advice.

Use our beverage alcohol solution to simplify DTC wine shipping

1. Pinpoint tax compliance needs

4. Automate many of your licensing and registration processes

2. Integrate with existing business systems

5. Simplify returns filing, remittance, and reporting processes

3. Streamline tax calculation and exemption management

1. Pinpoint tax compliance needs

2. Integrate with existing business systems

3. Streamline tax calculation and exemption management

4. Automate many of your licensing and registration processes

5. Simplify returns filing, remittance, and reporting processes

Connect with us for better beverage alcohol compliance

Get in touch to see how you can reduce alcohol tax stress.

Connect with us for better beverage alcohol compliance

Get in touch to see how you can reduce alcohol tax stress.