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State Tax Updates May 8 2026: California, Maryland, NY, MA, Nevada

What are the most important state tax updates from May 8, 2026? A California appellate court rejected the FTB’s “unitary business” theory against a Texas-based remote contractor, Maryland enacted OBBBA decoupling and PTET changes via the BRFA of 2026, New York’s appellate court affirmed Article 9-A’s P.L. 86-272 internet activity rule, Massachusetts addressed penny-shortage rounding for sales tax, and Nevada proposed an affidavit rule for transfer-tax exemptions.

Multistate tax developments don’t move on a weekly cadence — but this past week was an exception. Deloitte’s State Tax Matters Issue 2026-18 (May 8, 2026) captures five consequential state tax updates may 8 covering remote-worker apportionment, OBBBA conformity, P.L. 86-272 challenges, sales-tax rounding mechanics, and transfer-tax anti-abuse rules. Each affects different taxpayer profiles — but together they signal where state tax controversy is heading in 2026.

At SW Accounting & Consulting Corp, we work with multistate businesses, remote-work employers, and pass-through entity owners who navigate exactly these issues. Below: each item with the practical takeaway and what to verify against your own filings.

California: Nonresident remote worker not a “unitary business” 🌴

A California Court of Appeal reversed summary judgment for the FTB, holding that a Texas-based radiologist working as an independent contractor for a single corporation does not operate a “unitary business” — even though the corporation served clients in California and elsewhere.

Case: A172054, Cal. Ct. App. (5/1/26). The taxpayer was a radiologist analyzing imaging studies remotely from Texas for a third-party corporation that collected studies from California and other states. The FTB asserted the radiologist’s activity was a unitary business apportionable under Cal. Code Regs. tit. 18, § 17951-4(c).

The court rejected this, holding that:

  • The “unitary business” concept generally requires two or more entities commonly owned and integrated.
  • A single sole proprietor engaging in one business activity with one corporation does not fit the unitary business test — even when the customer’s clients span multiple states.
  • The California Supreme Court has never applied unitary theory to facts like these.
⚠ Caveat
The court remanded “for further proceedings” and explicitly stated no opinion as to whether the FTB may tax the nonresident under a different legal theory. The win is on the unitary business theory; the FTB may try other avenues (e.g., source-of-income rules tied to the customer’s location).

Maryland: BRFA of 2026 — OBBBA decoupling and PTET changes 🏛

Maryland’s Budget Reconciliation and Financing Act of 2026 (S.B. 284, signed 4/8/26) selectively decouples from OBBBA bonus depreciation, partially conforms to OBBBA R&D and interest expense changes, and refines Maryland’s PTET regime.

ProvisionMaryland Treatment (TY2026+)
OBBBA special depreciation for qualified production propertyPermanently DECOUPLED
OBBBA enhanced bonus depreciation (manufacturing entities)Partial decoupling — limited to 20% of adjusted basis
OBBBA domestic R&D expensing reinstatementAutomatic conformity
OBBBA business interest expense limitation enhancementAutomatic conformity
BRFA 2025 multistate PTET resident-share modificationDelayed by 1 year + opt-out election allowed

Maryland businesses with significant manufacturing depreciation should run both Maryland and federal computations side-by-side for TY2026 — the partial decoupling creates additional Maryland-only adjustments.

New York: Article 9-A P.L. 86-272 internet activity rule survives 🌐

The New York Appellate Division (Third Department) affirmed that the Department of Taxation’s Article 9-A regulation (20 NYCRR § 1-2.10) addressing P.L. 86-272 immunity for internet-based business activity is NOT preempted by federal statute.

Case: CV-25-0865 (5/7/26). An industry trade association representing remote sellers challenged the Rule, arguing it improperly narrowed P.L. 86-272 immunity. The court held:

  • The Rule “reasonably immunizes” foreign corporations from franchise tax when in-state activities are solicitation, ancillary, or de minimis.
  • It withholds immunity when in-state activities exceed those bounds.
  • Whether specific internet-based functions are “ancillary or de minimis” is a question for as-applied challenges, not facial preemption.
  • The plaintiffs failed to show the Rule “as written” obstructs P.L. 86-272’s purposes.
💡 Expert Insight
The pattern is widening — California, New York, and a growing list of states have been narrowing P.L. 86-272 protection in the digital age. Remote sellers with cookies, online customer service chat, in-app order tracking, or recurring subscription analytics may exceed solicitation. Run a P.L. 86-272 audit against your own digital footprint state-by-state.

Massachusetts: Penny shortage rounding for sales tax 💰

Massachusetts Directive 26-1 confirms that vendors must calculate sales tax to the exact cent regardless of payment method, and remit based on pre-rounding totals — even if cash payments round to the nearest nickel.

Practical mechanics:

  1. Calculate sales tax on the exact cent sales price.
  2. Show the exact tax amount on the receipt/invoice.
  3. Remit the exact amount to the DOR — before any cash rounding.
  4. Subsequent rounding to the nickel for cash payment doesn’t change the tax remittance.

For POS systems serving Massachusetts retailers, this is a configuration check. The penny-out, round-cash trend will affect every state with a sales tax in coming months.

Nevada: Transfer tax exemption affidavit proposed 🏠

Nevada’s Tax Commission (LCB File No. R084-26P, 5/1/26) proposed a rule requiring transfer tax exemption claimants to file an affidavit attesting that the transfer is not motivated by tax avoidance.

For Nevada real property transactions involving common ownership transfers (entity-to-entity, beneficial-interest transfers, business reorganizations), the proposed affidavit creates an additional documentation burden — and a perjury risk for false attestations. If you’re planning a Nevada real property transfer with a tax-exempt structure, monitor finalization of this rule and bake the attestation requirement into your closing checklist.

What should multistate tax teams do this week? ✅

  1. Remote contractor / nonresident sourcing audit. If you have CA-related receipts from out-of-state contractors, document why activity does (or does not) constitute a unitary business in light of the CA Court of Appeal ruling.
  2. Maryland depreciation modeling. For TY2026, run Maryland tax under both pre- and post-BRFA-2026 rules. Confirm where decoupling creates Maryland-only adjustments.
  3. P.L. 86-272 digital footprint review. Inventory in-state internet-driven activities (cookies, customer service, subscription telemetry). Document the position that they are solicitation/ancillary/de minimis — or quantify the franchise tax exposure if they aren’t.
  4. Massachusetts POS reconfiguration. Sales tax must remain pre-rounding. Audit your vendor systems before the penny shortage arrives.
  5. Nevada transfer-tax exemption checklist. Add affidavit requirement to your transfer-tax claim workflow once the rule is finalized.

Frequently Asked Questions 🗂

Q: Does the California ruling protect all out-of-state remote contractors?
A: No. The court only rejected the unitary business theory in this specific fact pattern. The FTB may pursue other theories (source-of-income rules, payroll tax theories). Each case turns on facts. The takeaway: a sole proprietor with one corporate customer is generally not a unitary business under California law.
Q: Does Maryland decouple from all OBBBA depreciation provisions?
A: No — only selectively. Maryland decouples from OBBBA’s special depreciation for qualified production property and partially decouples from enhanced bonus depreciation for manufacturing. It conforms to OBBBA’s R&D expensing reinstatement and business interest expense limitation enhancement.
Q: What’s the impact of NY’s P.L. 86-272 ruling on remote sellers?
A: The Article 9-A Rule remains effective. Remote sellers with internet-based activities exceeding solicitation/ancillary/de minimis activity in NY may owe franchise tax. As-applied challenges to specific activities remain available, but the facial preemption argument was rejected.
Q: Does Massachusetts allow rounding sales tax for cash transactions?
A: No. Sales tax must be calculated and remitted on the exact pre-rounding sale price. Subsequent cash rounding (up or down to the nearest nickel) is for the customer’s payment only and does not change the tax remittance.
Q: When does Nevada’s transfer-tax affidavit rule take effect?
A: The rule was proposed (LCB File No. R084-26P) on May 1, 2026 — not yet finalized. Public comment and Tax Commission review precede final adoption. Watch the Nevada Tax Commission docket.

For Deloitte State Tax Matters Issue 2026-18, see taxathand.com. CA Court of Appeal opinions are at courts.ca.gov. NY Appellate Division decisions are on the NY State Courts portal.

Need help with multistate apportionment, OBBBA conformity analysis, P.L. 86-272 review, or transfer-tax structuring? SW Accounting & Consulting Corp’s state and local tax team supports businesses across all 50 states — book a consultation.

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