Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Robert
 
Posts: n/a
Default Complex Sales Tax

I have created a spreadsheet for aiding me in an automobile purchase.
It computes the invoice, fees, taxes, and monthly payments. Generally,
sales taxes are straight-forward, yet sales tax in my county remains
complex. My County charges 7% on first $5,000 and 6% on the rest. My
spreadsheet has a cell with the sales tax rate, but the sales tax
calculation formula assumes a constant rate. I need some advice on the
best approach on calculating the sales tax and the related formula.
Should I use the MOD function or compute a fixed rate? Please explain
the formula since I am fuzzy on it.
  #2   Report Post  
Tim C
 
Posts: n/a
Default

One way:

=A1*0.06+MAX(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C

"Robert" wrote in message
...
I have created a spreadsheet for aiding me in an automobile purchase.
It computes the invoice, fees, taxes, and monthly payments. Generally,
sales taxes are straight-forward, yet sales tax in my county remains
complex. My County charges 7% on first $5,000 and 6% on the rest. My
spreadsheet has a cell with the sales tax rate, but the sales tax
calculation formula assumes a constant rate. I need some advice on the
best approach on calculating the sales tax and the related formula.
Should I use the MOD function or compute a fixed rate? Please explain
the formula since I am fuzzy on it.



  #3   Report Post  
Dave R.
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Tim..that doesn't seem to work, as it computes a tax of $50 on an item with
a price of 0.

On the good side, maybe Robert will either have the salesman compute it for
him, or ask his instructor for assistance with this series of "real world"
problems.



"Tim C" wrote in message
...
One way:

=A1*0.06+MAX(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C

"Robert" wrote in message
...
I have created a spreadsheet for aiding me in an automobile purchase.
It computes the invoice, fees, taxes, and monthly payments. Generally,
sales taxes are straight-forward, yet sales tax in my county remains
complex. My County charges 7% on first $5,000 and 6% on the rest. My
spreadsheet has a cell with the sales tax rate, but the sales tax
calculation formula assumes a constant rate. I need some advice on the
best approach on calculating the sales tax and the related formula.
Should I use the MOD function or compute a fixed rate? Please explain
the formula since I am fuzzy on it.





  #4   Report Post  
Tim C
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Oops.

=A1*0.06+MIN(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C

"Dave R." wrote in message
...
Tim..that doesn't seem to work, as it computes a tax of $50 on an item
with
a price of 0.

On the good side, maybe Robert will either have the salesman compute it
for
him, or ask his instructor for assistance with this series of "real world"
problems.



"Tim C" wrote in message
...
One way:

=A1*0.06+MAX(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C

"Robert" wrote in message
...
I have created a spreadsheet for aiding me in an automobile purchase.
It computes the invoice, fees, taxes, and monthly payments. Generally,
sales taxes are straight-forward, yet sales tax in my county remains
complex. My County charges 7% on first $5,000 and 6% on the rest. My
spreadsheet has a cell with the sales tax rate, but the sales tax
calculation formula assumes a constant rate. I need some advice on the
best approach on calculating the sales tax and the related formula.
Should I use the MOD function or compute a fixed rate? Please explain
the formula since I am fuzzy on it.







  #5   Report Post  
NewsMan
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Robert wrote:
I have created a spreadsheet for aiding me in an automobile purchase.
It computes the invoice, fees, taxes, and monthly payments. Generally,
sales taxes are straight-forward, yet sales tax in my county remains
complex. My County charges 7% on first $5,000 and 6% on the rest. My
spreadsheet has a cell with the sales tax rate, but the sales tax
calculation formula assumes a constant rate. I need some advice on the
best approach on calculating the sales tax and the related formula.
Should I use the MOD function or compute a fixed rate? Please explain
the formula since I am fuzzy on it.



The easy way:

Assume Cell A1 = cost of car

sales tax: = (5000*.07)+((A1-5000)*.06)


  #6   Report Post  
Robert
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On the good side, maybe Robert will either have the salesman compute it for
him


When I bought my last car, the dealer over-charged for the sales tax
for additional profit. The dealer presented me with a formally
spreadsheet showing me the fees and taxes. The dealer could not get me
on the financial part since I purchase the vehicle for cash. Luckily,
I caught the inconsistency and other ones as well. So now I learned
that one must calculate everything yourself.

ask his instructor for assistance with this series of "real world"
problems.


No instructor! I graduate from the University ten years in Finance;
yet forgot most of the specifics formulas. Besides I learned it all on
Lotus 123 back in the day. I still retain the theories though. My
career has taken a more creative path. Ask me about color, lighting,
or force perspective photography; then I am your man.



On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 14:25:56 -0800, "Dave R."
wrote:

Tim..that doesn't seem to work, as it computes a tax of $50 on an item with
a price of 0.

On the good side, maybe Robert will either have the salesman compute it for
him, or ask his instructor for assistance with this series of "real world"
problems.


  #7   Report Post  
Robert
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 23:12:25 GMT, NewsMan wrote:


The easy way:

Assume Cell A1 = cost of car

sales tax: = (5000*.07)+((A1-5000)*.06)


Thanks Newsman,

I figured this approach would be the easiest.

(5000*.07)+((Total-5000)*.06)

But I had a feeling that other approaches existed. Tim C demonstrated
another method. Recalling the university day, another method existed
for computing the effective rate; yet I do not have notion of the
formula or how to accomplish it in Excel. This approach would allow me
to place a cell with the sales tax rate. I just thought about putting
it out to the newsgroup. But I may just go with the simple route.




  #8   Report Post  
Robert
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 14:56:22 -0800, "Tim C"
wrote:

Oops.

=A1*0.06+MIN(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C


Thanks Tim,

The formula works without a doubt, yet the internal mathematics have
me perplexed. According to Excel's Help files, the MIN Returns the
minimum value in a list of arguments. The optional argument, 50,
returns 50. Please clarify your approach.


  #9   Report Post  
NewsMan
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Robert wrote:
On Tue, 11 Jan 2005 14:56:22 -0800, "Tim C"
wrote:


Oops.

=A1*0.06+MIN(A1*0.01,50)

Tim C



Thanks Tim,

The formula works without a doubt, yet the internal mathematics have
me perplexed. According to Excel's Help files, the MIN Returns the
minimum value in a list of arguments. The optional argument, 50,
returns 50. Please clarify your approach.



The MIN portion of the formula returns the smallest of the numbers
between A1*.01 and 50 (which is 5000 *.01, in this way you are only
calculating 7% tax up to $5000).
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
formula to calculate sales tax from total sales Deanna Excel Worksheet Functions 7 October 5th 05 08:57 PM
Sales per dealer code Tray Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 5 January 21st 05 03:05 AM
Help with sales chart kim Charts and Charting in Excel 1 January 20th 05 02:38 PM
calcuate sales by date and segments Pete Petersen Excel Worksheet Functions 2 January 3rd 05 09:09 PM
Help with Commission forumlas asdfasdf Excel Worksheet Functions 6 November 15th 04 05:28 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:41 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 ExcelBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Microsoft Excel"