
"Vail Resorts disclosed that it would begin separately charging a blended sales tax of approximately 3.2% on all multi-resort Epic Pass products, framing it as a compliance realignment."
"New Hampshire imposes no state or local retail sales tax, and the state is known for its strongly anti-tax political culture, having repeatedly rejected proposals to introduce one."
"When a skier in Manchester or Nashua buys an Epic Day Pass or full Epic Pass to ski those hills, they're now being charged approximately 3.2% at checkout."
"The charge reflects a blended rate derived from the taxable jurisdictions across the entire Epic Pass network, in states like Colorado, Vermont, California, and others."
Vail Resorts announced a 3.2% blended sales tax on Epic Pass products, citing compliance with tax laws across its ski areas. New Hampshire, known for its lack of sales tax, has residents upset as they now see this charge on their receipts. The tax is not collected by the state but is based on rates from other states where Vail operates. This change has sparked complaints among skiers who value New Hampshire's anti-tax stance and fiscal philosophy.
Read at SnowBrains
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