Building Your Future at Holland & Knight: Jennifer Karpchuk's Move to Grow the State and Local Tax Practice
The Impact of One Big Beautiful Bill on Estate Planning
State AG Pulse | An Early Peek At the 2026 State AG Elections
Nonprofit Quick Tips: State Filings in Alabama and Arkansas
4 Key Takeaways | NY Sales Tax on Cloud-Based Document Management Services
5 Key Takeaways | SALT and Multinational Businesses: Analyzing State and Local Taxation of Foreign Company Transactions
3 Key Takeaways | Update on Chicagoland Local Taxes
4 Key Takeaways | New York Tax Developments
5 Key Takeaways | Income Tax Jeopardy! A Potpourri of Hot Topics
5 Key Takeaways | State Tax Litigation
5 Key Takeaways | National State Tax Cases, Issues, and Policy Matters to Watch
5 Key Takeaways | State Sales Tax in 2024: What Every Retailer Needs to Know
The Buzz, An Economic Development Podcast | Episode 82: Burnie and Kara
Tribal Tax Exemption Under McGirt Gains Preliminary Victory
4 Key Takeaways | Mid-Year Tax Update
Maryland's Controversial Tax on Digital Advertising Explained
#WorkforceWednesday: OSHA Issues COVID-19 Citations, Michigan Enacts Liability Shield, and States Battle for Telecommuter Taxes - Employment Law This Week®
Williams Mullen's Comeback Plan: Part I – State & Local Tax (SALT) Compliance During COVID-19: What to Do When You’re Behind
Videocast: SALT Scoreboard – 2019 year in review
Videocast: 2020 – The year of digital taxation
On July 4, 2025 the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) was signed into law.[1] The OBBBA made several provisions permanent from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). It also made significant changes aimed to expand deductions,...more
The proposal includes a shift to a single-sales-factor apportionment formula for financial institutions, aiming to increase tax revenue starting in tax year 2025. Update: On May 14, 2025, Governor Newsom released the May...more
Senate Bill 711 (S.B. 711) would update California’s conformity date to the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) from January 1, 2015, to January 1, 2025. If enacted, this change would apply to taxable years beginning on or after...more
In November 2024, voters approved Proposition M which provided for an overhaul of San Francisco’s gross receipts tax. Proposition M changed the allocation and apportionment rules for most industries, generally requiring that...more
The proposal includes a shift to a single-sales-factor apportionment for financial institutions, aiming to increase tax revenue starting in tax year 2025....more
Many large California employers have been granted significant state and local tax incentives to establish the physical locations of their businesses in California, or within certain municipalities in California. These can...more
In June 2020, California lawmakers passed legislation that limited use of net operating losses (NOLs) for California taxpayers with net business income of $1 million or more for the tax years 2020, 2021, and 2022. In...more