3. Ignoring State & Local Tax Thresholds
Federal tax compliance is often top of mind. But state, local, and even city jurisdictions are where the real distributed work tax complexity lives.
Many jurisdictions trigger obligations based on:
- Number of days worked
- Revenue generating activities
- Repeated visits
- Project work happening on site
And the rules vary wildly, sometimes even between neighboring states.
This isn’t theoretical. Compliance thresholds can mean:
- Withholding requirements
- Corporate tax exposure
- Retroactive filings and penalties
Yet many companies only discover these “threshold triggers” after it’s too late.
A leadership tip: Understanding the journey of work location data is just as important as knowing the tax laws themselves.
4. Treating Business Travel as “Risk-Free”
Business travel used to be a footnote on expense reports. In a distributed world, it’s a tax compliance accelerant.
Employees might:
- Fly to client sites
- Visit teams across states or countries
- Attend conferences repeatedly in the same locations
None of that is remote work per se, but over time, the days add up.
What feels like “just a trip” can trigger:
- Nexus exposure for the company
- Personal income tax filing obligations
- Withholding risks
Real talk: Travel isn’t just a business cost. It’s a location data signal with compliance implications.
5. Waiting for an Audit to Reconstruct Work-Location Data
This might be the riskiest mindset of all.
Too often (in our humble opinion) teams look at location data only after they get a tax notice, and then scramble to piece things together with patchy records.
Here’s the problem:
- Employees move on
- Systems don’t sync
- Data is incomplete
In that scenario, you’re not proving squat. Tax authorities don’t care how well-meaning your team is. They care about defensible data.
Leadership insight: Audit readiness shouldn’t be a reactive sprint; it should be built into the geography of your working strategy.
So, What Should Leaders Do?
The data is clear: flexible work isn’t going away, and neither are the tax implications that come with it. As we move deeper into the distributed era, tax compliance isn’t just an HR or finance issue; it’s a strategic business box that organizations need to be prepared to check off every year.
Here’s a smarter approach:
- Automate work location tracking — with privacy in mind, so employees feel respected.
- Monitor thresholds proactively — not retroactively.
- Break down silos between HR, finance, and legal — tax risk lives at the intersection.
- Build audit-ready processes — don’t wait for the doorbell to ring.
Final Thoughts
The biggest mistake leaders make isn’t ignorance; it’s assuming that the old rules still apply.
Remote and hybrid work have reshaped the landscape of talent, collaboration, and mobility. We’ve all seen the tech adoption curve model. Leaders and their compliance strategies must evolve with change, even when it feels uncomfortable, to avoid falling behind and being labeled a ‘laggard’.
If you’d like help thinking through how to operationalize work-location compliance in your organization, from real-time alerts to audit-ready reporting, speak with a team member today!