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Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program for Businesses

If you’ve been doing business in Georgia without filing the right tax returns, your unpaid liabilities can add up quickly, and penalties can make the situation worse. The Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program (VDP) is your opportunity to come forward, limit your look-back period, and reduce or even e

Sam Suechting
Sam SuechtingHead of Product, Commenda
Fact Checked August 25, 2025|5 min read
Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program for Businesses

If you’ve been doing business in Georgia without filing the right tax returns, your unpaid liabilities can add up quickly, and penalties can make the situation worse. The Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program (VDP) is your opportunity to come forward, limit your look-back period, and reduce or even eliminate certain penalties.

Whether you’re a multistate e-commerce seller, a SaaS platform with Georgia customers, or a manufacturer with inventory in the state, understanding the VDP can mean the difference between a manageable cleanup and an expensive audit.

This guide covers:

  • What the Georgia VDP includes.
  • Eligibility requirements and who qualifies.
  • Look-back periods and penalty relief.
  • Step-by-step filing process.
  • How the program compares to other states’ VDPs.
  • How automation and professional guidance can make the process smoother.

Why the Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program Matters

Georgia is an economic hub for the Southeast, home to major logistics, tech, and manufacturing industries. That means state tax authorities have sophisticated systems to detect unregistered businesses.

If you’ve created nexus, the legal connection that obligates you to collect or pay Georgia taxes, but haven’t registered, you may owe:

  • Sales and use tax on transactions.
  • Corporate income tax or franchise tax.
  • Withholding tax if you employ Georgia-based staff.

The VDP offers a way to resolve these issues before the Georgia Department of Revenue (DOR) contacts you, which is key, because once they initiate contact, you lose VDP eligibility.

What Taxes Does Georgia’s VDP Cover?

The Georgia VDP generally applies to:

  • Sales and use tax (retailers, remote sellers, marketplace sellers).
  • Corporate income tax (C-Corps, S-Corps, LLCs taxed as corporations).
  • Withholding tax (employers with Georgia-based employees).

Pro tip: You can disclose multiple liabilities at once to avoid multiple audits later.

Georgia VDP at a Glance

FeatureGeorgia Voluntary Disclosure Program
Administered ByGeorgia Department of Revenue (DOR)
Eligible TaxesSales & use, corporate income, withholding
Typical Look-Back3 years for sales tax; 3–4 years for income tax
Penalty Relief100% waiver of penalties
Interest ReliefGenerally not waived
AnonymityAllowed through a tax representative
Deadline After Agreement60–90 days to file and pay

Eligibility Requirements

You qualify for Georgia’s VDP if you:

  1. Have never been registered for the tax type you’re disclosing.
  2. Have not been contacted by the DOR regarding your liability.
  3. Are willing to comply by filing and paying within the agreed timeframe.

If you previously held a sales tax permit or corporate registration, you may need to pursue an alternative negotiated settlement instead.

Common Nexus Triggers in Georgia

Understanding how nexus is created is critical before you approach the DOR.

Economic Nexus – Sales & Use Tax

Since Georgia’s adoption of economic nexus rules, remote sellers must register once they exceed:

  • $100,000 in annual gross revenue from Georgia sales or
  • 200 separate transactions delivered into Georgia.

Physical Presence Nexus

  • Office or facility in Georgia.
  • Inventory stored in a Georgia warehouse or 3PL.
  • Employees or contractors working in Georgia.

Corporate Income Tax Nexus

  • Same economic and physical presence triggers apply.
  • Soliciting sales through agents in Georgia can also create a nexus.

Benefits of the Georgia Voluntary Disclosure Program

  • Reduced look-back period: Typically three years instead of the standard seven-plus for sales tax.
  • Penalty abatement: Full waiver of late-file and failure-to-register penalties.
  • No criminal prosecution: For non-fraudulent failures to file.
  • Predictability: Terms are agreed upon in advance.

Example: A remote seller with Georgia sales since 2017 who qualifies for the VDP might only need to file returns back to 2021, potentially cutting their tax bill in half compared to an audit scenario.

Georgia VDP Process: Step-by-Step

StepActionsTimelineWho Handles
1. Initial AssessmentConfirm nexus, estimate liabilityDays 1–5Internal team / SALT counsel
2. Anonymous ApplicationSubmit through representativeDays 6–10SALT counsel
3. DOR ReviewDetermine eligibility, issue agreementDays 11–25Georgia DOR
4. RegistrationObtain Georgia tax ID(s)Days 26–30Operations
5. Filing & PaymentFile all required returns, remit tax & interestDays 31–60Accounting / Commenda
6. ClosingReceive formal clearance letterDays 61–90SALT counsel

Note: Missing the filing/payment deadline can void penalty relief.

Georgia vs. Other States’ Voluntary Disclosure Programs

StateSales Tax Look-BackIncome Tax Look-BackInterest ReliefAnonymity Allowed?
Georgia3 years3–4 yearsNoYes
California3 years6 yearsNoYes
Texas4 years4 yearsNoYes
New York3 years3 yearsNoYes

Georgia’s program is competitive for both sales and income tax, particularly for remote sellers and businesses entering the state market for the first time.

Practical Considerations Before Applying

  • Bundle liabilities: If you owe multiple tax types, disclose them together.
  • Data readiness: Collect sales, payroll, and property data for the look-back period.
  • Representation: Consider a SALT attorney to keep your identity anonymous until eligibility is confirmed.
  • Technology: Automation platforms (like Commenda) can pull transactional data from Shopify, Amazon, NetSuite, and Stripe to speed up return preparation.

Long-Term Compliance After VDP

Completing the VDP is only the start. To stay compliant:

  • Monitor nexus thresholds annually.
  • Update registration if business activities expand.
  • Implement automated tax calculation and filing systems.
  • Keep complete records for at least seven years.

Decision-Making Framework

You should strongly consider the Georgia VDP if:

  • You have unregistered Georgia sales or employees.
  • You recently discovered nexus and want to limit liability.
  • You plan to raise capital or sell your business, clearing past tax risk is essential for due diligence.

How Commenda Helps with Georgia Voluntary Disclosure

Commenda simplifies multistate compliance, including Georgia’s VDP, by:

  • Assessing nexus across all 50 states.
  • Preparing anonymous VDP applications through legal partners.
  • Automating sales tax data aggregation from all channels.
  • Generating Georgia-compliant returns in minutes.
  • Tracking all deadlines with a built-in compliance calendar.

If you need to clean up Georgia liabilities while keeping your growth on track, Commenda can get you from application to clearance letter in weeks, not months.

Book a Demo to see how we can help.


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About the author

Sam Suechting

Sam Suechting

Head of Product, Commenda

Sam is a seasoned expert in sales tax, leading Commenda's effort to build the worlds most comprehensive database of global tax rules and business regulations. At Silverhaze Partners, he worked in early-stage venture capital, where he saw firsthand how tax complexity and regulatory friction hold back startups from scaling internationally. That experience now powers his work at Commenda-bringing clarity, precision, and real-world insight to one of the most frustrating parts of doing business globally.

Disclaimer: Commenda and its affiliates do not provide tax, accounting, or legal advice. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide or be relied on for tax, accounting, or legal advice. You should consult your own tax, accounting, and legal advisors before engaging in any related activities or transactions.