Skip to main content

Do local governments receive a share of sales taxes?

Yes. Twenty percent of the state’s 6.25 percent sales tax rate on general merchandise and 100 percent of the state’s 1.00 percent sales tax rate on qualifying food, drugs, and medical appliances is returned to local governments. For more information about sales tax distributions, please refer to the PIO-114, How Sales and Use Taxes are Distributed.

Units of local government receive at least two warrants each month. Local governments with locally-imposed taxes will receive an additional warrant each month for each tax imposed.     

One warrant is for the local share of State sales tax on general merchandise and qualifying food, drugs, and medical appliances sold in that unit of local government and the local share of State use tax collected on items of tangible personal property that are purchased outside Illinois from a retailer, and are required to be titled or registered at an address in that unit of local government.      

A second warrant is for the local share of State use tax on general merchandise (excluding items that must be titled or registered) and qualifying food, drugs, and medical appliances. This second warrant is the unit of local government’s population-based disbursement from the State and Local Sales Tax Reform Fund. The distribution is based on the county or municipality’s population in proportion to the total state population. The population figures used are from the latest census conducted by the United States Bureau of the Census and certified by the Office of the Secretary of State. This portion is commonly referred to as the “local use tax.”     

In most instances, the monthly distribution represents that local government’s share of the tax paid on current returns. By that, we mean returns that are filed and paid on time and in full. For a sales tax return to be paid on time, it must be filed on or before the twentieth of the month following the end of the reporting period. For titled and registered property, returns are due no later than 20 days after the buyer takes possession of the item. In addition to the current returns, distributions will include taxes paid on late-filed returns, payments made for assessed liability (including penalty and interest charges or additional tax due resulting from a reporting error), and amended returns filed by taxpayers who are paying additional tax due.

Answers others found helpful

For additional information about allocations to local governments, see Local Tax Allocation.

If you have additional inquiries, you may submit them on the Questions, Comments, or Requests form.