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Food and Food Ingredients

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Food and food ingredients are exempt from sales tax. Food and food ingredients are substances that are:

  • In liquid, concentrated, solid, frozen, dried, or dehydrated form  
  • Sold for ingestion or chewing by humans  
  • Consumed for its taste or nutritional value

Nontaxable Food and Food Ingredients

The following items are generally exempt. However, if any of these items are prepared by the seller or sold with eating utensils provided by the seller, they are taxable. See Prepared Food.

Baking powder Flour Poultry 
Baking soda Food coloring Pumpkins 
Beverage powders (unless dietary supplement) Frozen meals Raisins 
Bread Fruit juices (more than 50% juice) Relishes 
Cakes and cake icing Fruits Saccharin 
Cereals Gelatin Salad dressing 
Cereal bars with flour Granola Salt 
Chip dip Gravies Sauces 
Chips (potato, corn, etc.) Herbs (seasoning) Seasonings 
Cocoa Ice cream, sherbet, and frozen yogurt (including prepackaged novelties) Shortening 
Coffee Ice cubes or blocks Spices 
Condiments Malted milk powder Spray candy 
Cookies Margarine Sugar (including colored) 
Cooking oil Meat Sunflower seeds 
Dairy products Nuts Sweeteners 
Dried fruit (without sweeteners) Peanuts Tea (bags, leaves, or powdered) 
Eggs Pies Trail mix (prepackaged with candy) 
Fish Popcorn Vegetables 
Flavoring Popsicles Water 

 

Taxable Sales

Candy, soft drinks, alcoholic beverages, prepared food, dietary supplements, and food sold through vending machines are taxable. These items do not qualify for the food and food ingredients exemption.  

Following is a list of items that are taxable.

ItemTaxable Subcategory 
Baking chips Candy 
Beer Alcoholic beverages 
Beer nuts Candy 
Breath mints Candy 
Cake decorations Candy 
Candy-coated items Candy 
Dried fruit with sweeteners Candy 
Fruit drinks with 50% or less fruit juice Soft drinks 
Gum Candy 
Herbal supplements Dietary supplements 
Honey roasted and honey coated nuts Candy 
Marshmallows Candy 
Party trays Prepared food 
Soda pop Soft drinks 
Sweetened baking bars or chips Candy 
Sweetened bottled water Soft drinks 
Tea with “supplement facts” label Dietary supplements 
Vitamins and minerals Dietary supplements 

 

Tobacco Products

Tobacco products are taxable, except cigarettes, which are not taxed at retail.

 

Cannabinoid Products

Edible cannabinoid products are taxable. See our Cannabis Tax page.

 

Gift Baskets and Other Combination Packages

When a gift basket or other combination package (bundled transaction) includes food and food ingredients special rules apply and they determine if the sale is taxable. The sale is taxable if either:

  • The seller’s purchase price of the taxable items in the transaction is more than 50% of the total purchase price of all of the items in the transaction
  • The seller’s sales price of the taxable items in the transaction is more than 50% of the total sales price of the transaction.

Sellers cannot use a combination of the purchase price and sales price when making the 50% determination for a transaction.

Use tax is due on the seller’s cost of taxable items included in the bundle if both:

  • The retail sale of the bundled transaction is not taxable
  • The seller’s purchase price of all taxable items in the bundled transaction is more than $100

Example – Nontaxable sale and no use tax is due

A grocery store assembles and sells fruit baskets:  

  • The store purchases each basket for $5 and puts a variety of fruit into each basket that cost the store $7  
  • Each fruit basket is sold for $20  

The fruit baskets are not taxable because the taxable item (the basket) costs less than 50% of the total purchase price of all the items in the transaction. The store does not owe use tax because the store’s purchase price of the basket is less than $100.  

Example – Taxable sale

A children’s store makes gift packages for new parents:  

  • The gift package sells for $300 and includes baby formula, nontaxable baby items, a baby monitor, and a car seat  
  • The transaction qualifies for the 50% test because baby formula is a food or food ingredient  
  • The store’s purchase price of the nontaxable items in the gift package is less than 50% of the total purchase price of all the items in the package  

The sale of the gift package is taxable. Since the retail sale is taxable, the store does not owe use tax on the taxable items included in the gift package.

Example – Nontaxable sale and use tax is due

A children’s store makes gift packages for new parents:  

  • The gift package sells for $300 and includes baby formula, nontaxable baby items, a baby monitor, and a car seat  
  • The transaction qualifies for the 50% test because baby formula is a food or food ingredient  
  • The store’s purchase price of the taxable items in the gift package is less than 50% of the total purchase price of all the items in the package
  • The cost of the taxable items in the package is more than $100  

The sale of the gift package is not taxable, but the store owes use tax on their cost of all taxable items included in the gift package.

 

Legal References and Resources

Minnesota Statutes

Minnesota Rules

Publications