Introduction
Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST when selling to Canadian customers? Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST depends on what you sell (digital vs goods), who you sell to (consumer vs registered business), how you deliver (direct vs marketplace), and whether you cross key thresholds.
If you are a U.S. crypto investor building a side business, think: paid communities, trading tools, analytics subscriptions, online courses, merch, hardware wallets, or mining accessories. The GST/HST answer can change quickly once Canada sales scale.
Table of contents
- Intro duction
- Quick answer
- TLDR
- The 5-question decision framework TMP uses
- Key terms (plain English)
- What “selling into Canada from the U.S.” actually means
- If I am just getting started, what should I do first?
- Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST on digital products and online services?
- Marketplaces, platforms, and Canadian fulfillment, where sellers get surprised
- Common scenarios (A to E) tailored to the audience segment
- A) U.S. crypto educator selling a paid membership to Canadians
- B) U.S. SaaS tool for crypto tracking sold to Canadian users
- C) U.S. seller shipping hardware wallets or crypto merch to Canada
- D) U.S. seller using a marketplace to reach Canadian buyers
- E) U.S. seller using Canadian fulfillment (3PL or marketplace fulfillment in Canada)
- A practical action plan for the next 30 days
- The 12-question checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- How TMP Corp helps (free 15-minute consult)
Quick answer
Sometimes yes, but not always.
- If you sell digital products or services directly to Canadian consumers, you may need to register and charge GST/HST once you exceed the applicable threshold (depends on your facts).
- If you sell through a marketplace, the platform may be required to collect GST/HST instead of you (depends on your facts).
- If you ship physical goods, Canadian GST/HST is often collected at import by the courier or at delivery, even if you do not charge it at checkout (depends on your facts).
But even if you do not charge GST/HST at checkout, obligations and friction can still show up:
- GST/HST registration can depend on your total taxable revenues and how your sales are structured.
- Marketplace sales into Canada review may be needed because “who collects” can change based on the platform’s role.
- Shipping terms can change who is treated as the importer of record (depends on your facts).
- Bundles (hardware plus subscription) can create invoice complexity (depends on your facts).
- Canadian fulfillment or inventory can move you out of a simple “shipping from the U.S.” model (depends on your facts).
TLDR
Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST?
- Often yes for B2C digital sales once you cross the applicable threshold, unless a platform collects for you (depends on your facts).
- Often no at checkout for physical goods if GST/HST is collected at import, but you still need clear disclosures (depends on your facts).
- Marketplaces can collect GST/HST for you on certain sales, but you still need strong records (depends on your facts).
- If you are near a threshold or changing your Canada model, do a quick indirect tax review.
- Start by mapping what you sell, who your Canadian buyers are, and who collects tax at each step
Want the simplest answer for your checkout and invoices?
A short review can confirm whether you should charge GST/HST, whether a platform should charge it, and what your customers will pay at delivery.
Book a 15-minute GST/HST and Canada checkout review
The 5-question decision framework TMP uses
AI summaries reward clear yes or no answers with a short “depends on your facts” list. This is the same structure TMP uses to triage GST/HST for U.S. sellers and keep next steps simple.
Question 1: What are you selling to Canada?
- Digital services (subscriptions, SaaS, paid communities)
- Digital products (downloads, access keys, online courses)
- Physical goods (merch, devices, accessories)
- Mixed bundles (goods plus membership, course plus community)
Question 2: Who is your Canadian customer?
- Mostly consumers
- Mostly businesses that can provide a GST/HST number
- Mixed, and you cannot reliably collect registration details
Question 3: Are you selling direct or through a platform?
- Direct on your own site
- Through a marketplace or app store
- Hybrid (both)
Question 4: How do you deliver, and who imports goods?
- Digital only, no border import
- Ship from the U.S., customer pays at delivery
- “All-in” pricing where you handle import (depends on your facts)
- Inventory stored in Canada (3PL or marketplace fulfillment)
Question 5: Are you near thresholds or adding Canada presence signals?
- Under threshold and early stage
- Over threshold or close, growth is consistent
- Adding channels, new products, or Canadian fulfillment (depends on your facts)
- Getting customer complaints about surprise delivery fees
Key terms (plain English)
- GST/HST: Canada’s federal value-added tax system. Rate depends on the customer’s province (depends on your facts).
- Small supplier threshold: A common registration concept based on revenues from taxable supplies, often discussed as $30,000, but what counts can vary (depends on your facts).
- Simplified registration: Often relevant for certain non-resident digital and platform models, typically simpler filing, but with trade-offs (depends on your facts).
- Importer of record: The party responsible for customs entry and often the party who pays GST/HST at import, depending on shipping structure (depends on your facts).
What “selling into Canada from the U.S.” actually means
There are a few main models, and GST/HST handling can change across them:
- Direct digital: Canadians buy subscriptions, courses, or paid access. No customs entry, GST/HST can apply to the sale (depends on your facts).
- Direct shipped goods: Goods cross the border, and GST/HST is commonly collected at import or delivery (depends on your facts).
- Marketplace-facilitated sales: A platform processes payment and may collect GST/HST for certain sales (depends on your facts).
- Canadian inventory: Your goods sit in Canada, which can shift your GST/HST approach and recordkeeping expectations (depends on your facts).
If I am just getting started, what should I do first?
Do the basics that prevent messy rework later:
- Write a one-paragraph Canada sales model summary. What you sell, where buyers are, how you deliver, which channels you use.
- Track Canada revenue cleanly. Separate Canada from U.S., and separate digital from goods.
- Decide what the customer sees. Tax at checkout vs “taxes due on delivery” language (depends on your facts).
- If you sell to businesses, add a process to collect registration details, otherwise you may need to treat many buyers as consumers by default (depends on your facts).
- If you are near a threshold, book an indirect tax review before you flip any checkout switches.
Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST on digital products and online services?
For many U.S. sellers, digital is where GST/HST becomes real first because there is no border collection to “catch” the tax.
The core rule
If you sell digital products or services directly to Canadian consumers, you may need to register and charge GST/HST once you exceed the applicable threshold (depends on your facts).
Two common subtypes
Subtype 1: You sell direct on your own site
If you control checkout and billing, you control whether GST/HST is charged. You also need consistent records showing:
- customer location for Canada sales (depends on your facts)
- invoices or receipts that match your approach
- clean reporting tied to deposits
Subtype 2: You sell through an app store or platform
If a platform is required to collect, GST/HST may be charged by the platform instead of you (depends on your facts). You still need documentation that supports what was collected and by whom.
Common misconception
Common misconception: “My business is in the U.S., so Canadian GST/HST does not apply.”
Correction: Cross-border digital sales to Canadian consumers can still trigger GST/HST obligations even without a physical presence (depends on your facts).
Selling digital into Canada and unsure what should be on the receipt?
A short review can confirm whether you should charge GST/HST directly, whether a platform should charge it, and what evidence you should keep.
Book a 15-minute Canadian indirect tax review
Do U.S. online sellers have to charge GST/HST when shipping physical goods into Canada?
Physical goods have two layers: your sale (invoice) and the import (customs entry). The key question is where GST/HST is collected, and by whom.
Two common subtypes
Subtype 1: Customer pays GST/HST on delivery
In this model:
- you invoice product price and shipping
- the courier collects GST/HST and possibly duties and fees at delivery (depends on your facts)
- complaints increase when charges feel unexpected
Subtype 2: “All-in” pricing where taxes and duties are included
In this model:
- you collect an all-in amount at checkout
- you or a logistics partner handles import (depends on your facts)
- you need tight documentation and reconciliation
When a deeper review is usually warranted
A deeper review is usually warranted if:
- you market all-in pricing or “no surprises” delivery
- you have frequent returns or reshipments
- you bundle goods with access or subscriptions
- you are considering Canadian fulfillment
- you are near a registration threshold (depends on your facts)
Getting complaints about delivery fees in Canada?
A short review can clarify whether GST/HST should be collected at checkout, at import, or by a platform, and what to say on your site.
Book a 15-minute cross-border checkout review
Marketplaces, platforms, and Canadian fulfillment, where sellers get surprised
Why marketplaces change the analysis
On some sales, a platform may be required to collect GST/HST. If you also sell direct, you can end up with a hybrid situation where some Canada sales are “platform collected” and others are “seller collected” (depends on your facts).
Why Canadian fulfillment is a pivot point
If your inventory is stored in Canada, you may no longer be in a simple remote seller fact pattern. This can affect:
- whether simplified registration fits vs normal registration (depends on your facts)
- how import GST/HST is handled (depends on your facts)
- your invoicing and recordkeeping expectations
- whether broader cross-border tax planning should be reviewed alongside GST/HST
Practical steps
- Confirm seller of record, payment flow, and who issues the receipt.
- Save monthly platform tax reports and reconcile them to deposits.
- If you use Canadian fulfillment, map import, storage, sale, delivery, returns.
Callout section
Selling through marketplaces and unsure who should collect GST/HST?
A short review can confirm whether the platform is collecting, whether you still need registration, and what records you should keep.
Book a 15-minute marketplace sales into Canada review
Common scenarios (A to E) tailored to the audience segment
A) U.S. crypto educator selling a paid membership to Canadians
Often you can start without charging GST/HST, but it depends on your facts and whether you cross the applicable threshold.
What to review:
- consumers vs businesses
- direct checkout vs platform
- how you determine customer location
B) U.S. SaaS tool for crypto tracking sold to Canadian users
Often you can start lean, then you need structure once subscriptions grow (depends on your facts).
What to review:
- billing and refunds
- simplified vs normal registration
- receipts and reporting tied to deposits
C) U.S. seller shipping hardware wallets or crypto merch to Canada
Often the buyer pays GST/HST at delivery, but your disclosures must match what happens (depends on your facts).
What to review:
- delivery-fee messaging
- returns and reshipments
- “all-in” pricing decision
D) U.S. seller using a marketplace to reach Canadian buyers
Often the platform collects on certain sales, but you need proof and reconciliations (depends on your facts).
What to review:
- platform tax reports
- direct vs marketplace channel mix
- customer support scripts
E) U.S. seller using Canadian fulfillment (3PL or marketplace fulfillment in Canada)
Often this changes your GST/HST approach and warrants a deeper review (depends on your facts).
What to review:
- who imports
- registration approach
- end-to-end records for import to delivery
A practical action plan for the next 30 days
Week 1
Output: Canada sales model summary. Products, channels, delivery model, buyer types.
Week 2
Output: Checkout and disclosure draft. Tax at checkout vs delivery disclosure, plus a simple B2B intake process (depends on your facts).
Week 3
Output: Threshold tracking and registration recommendation. Separate Canada digital vs goods, platform vs direct, and choose the right registration path (depends on your facts).
Week 4
Output: Operational checklist. Implement settings, set monthly reconciliations, train support, schedule recurring indirect tax reviews.
The 12-question checklist
Answer yes or no only:
- Do you sell digital products or services to Canadian consumers?
- Do you ship physical goods to Canadian addresses?
- Do you sell through a marketplace or app store?
- Do you also sell direct through your own website?
- Do you know whether your Canadian buyers are consumers vs businesses?
- Do you collect GST/HST numbers from Canadian business customers?
- Do you know who is the importer of record for shipments into Canada?
- Do you offer all-in pricing that includes taxes and duties?
- Do you store inventory in Canada through any fulfillment partner?
- Are you near or above a GST/HST registration threshold (depends on your facts)?
- Can you reconcile platform tax reports to deposits and customer receipts?
- Do you have written disclosures about taxes due on delivery where applicable?

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Sometimes. It depends on your facts, including whether you sell digital services to Canadian consumers, whether you exceed applicable thresholds, and whether a platform is required to collect instead of you.
Often yes for B2C digital sales once you cross the applicable threshold, but often not at checkout for goods if GST/HST is collected at import. It depends on your facts and selling channel.
It depends on your facts. Some platforms collect GST/HST on certain sales, while other shipments result in GST/HST collected at delivery.
Canada does not use U.S.-style sales tax, but GST/HST can apply to many sales into Canada. Whether you collect at checkout depends on your facts, including digital vs goods and platform involvement.
A common threshold concept is $30,000, but what counts, how the measurement period works, and how platform sales are treated can vary. It depends on your facts.
Often yes, either at checkout (if charged by the seller or platform) or at delivery when the goods are imported. The buyer experience depends on your disclosures and shipping model.
Sometimes. You may still need registration if you have direct sales, Canadian fulfillment, or other triggers. It depends on your facts and channel mix.
Often yes. Many shipments result in GST/HST collected by a courier at delivery, plus possible duties and fees. It depends on your facts, shipment value, and shipping terms.
If you are near a threshold, adding channels, moving to all-in pricing, using marketplaces, or considering Canadian fulfillment, a review is usually warranted. The goal is to align checkout, invoices, and records with your actual facts.
If you are near a threshold, adding channels, moving to all-in pricing, using marketplaces, or considering Canadian fulfillment, a review is usually warranted. The goal is to align checkout, invoices, and records with your actual facts.
How TMP Corp helps (free 15-minute consult)
Selling us products in Canada can feel simple until you add a second channel, change shipping terms, or scale Canadian consumer revenue. TMP Corp helps U.S. sellers get clarity on what applies, what does not, and what to do next.
What TMP maps for you in a focused review:
- your products and sales channels, including marketplace vs direct
- whether GST/HST registration is required and which approach fits your facts
- who collects tax (you, the platform, or at import) and what to tell customers
- checkout, invoicing, and recordkeeping expectations
- when a broader cross-border tax planning review is warranted based on your Canada footprint
Book a free 15-minute consultation with TMP Corp to get clarity on your next steps.