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 Spend $100 at a Chicago store and the bill is $110.25, thanks 
to the sales taxes, but exactly what happens to that $10.25 is an open question. 
A bill in the Illinois House intends to solve that consumer mystery. 
 Illinoisans face an average combined sales tax rate of 8.74 percent – the 
highest in the Midwest and seventh in the nation. House Bill 3095, introduced by 
state Rep. Fred Crespo, D-Hoffman Estates, would require retailers to include an 
itemized list of sales taxes by unit of government on customer receipts, similar 
to how property taxes are itemized on a resident’s bill.
 
 “This is a commonsense measure to make sure that when people see the sales tax 
on their receipts, they know what unit of government is collecting that tax,” 
Crespo said in a statement.
 
 The average combined sales tax rate of 8.74 percent, as calculated by the Tax 
Foundation, uses population to weight the many rates found across the state, so 
a customer is unlikely to pay that exact rate anywhere. Sales taxes are set by 
the state at 6.25 percent everywhere in Illinois. Then counties and other local 
governments set and add their own rates.[to top of second column]
 For example, shoppers in Chicago face a combined sales tax rate of 10.25 percent 
– a combination of the state rate, Cook County (1.75 percent), city (1.25 
percent), and a special tax for the Regional Transportation Authority (1 
percent). The maximum sales tax rate Illinois allows local governments to 
collect is 4.75 percent.
 
 
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 Receipts list sales taxes as a lump sum, but 
			consumers don’t know which unit of government is collecting what 
			portion of the revenue. An itemized list would bring greater 
			awareness to consumers, and help residents more clearly assess pleas 
			for sales tax increases – such as voters in Sangamon and Lake 
			counties had to on Election Day 2018.
 “If taxpayers don’t know where the taxes they pay are going, then 
			they can’t effectively hold elected officials accountable,” Crespo 
			said.
 
 Adding to an already high tax burden, Illinoisans’ were recently hit 
			with a sales tax expansion after the U.S. Supreme Court decision in 
			South Dakota v. Wayfair opened the door to applying the sales tax to 
			all online purchases, regardless of geography. On Oct. 1, 2018, 
			Illinoisans saw the state’s 6.25 percent sales tax rate applied to 
			all online purchases.
 
 An itemized list of sales taxes on customers’ receipts would 
			increase transparency and allow Illinoisans to hold their local 
			leaders accountable. Lawmakers in Springfield should send HB 3095 to 
			the governor’s desk, and continue reforms that increase taxpayer 
			transparency.
 
			
            
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