In New York sales tax audits, one of the most consequential documents is often not the Notice of Determination, the Statement of Proposed Audit Changes, or even the Audit Commencement Letter. It is the test period or sampling agreement signed much earlier in the audit. That document may appear administrative, routine, or even helpful. In fact, and quite often, the New York Department of Tax and Finance will make it feel routine or helpful. In reality, it can determine the framework of the entire case and limit your defense during administrative appeal.
When the New York Department of Taxation and Finance proposes a sampling method, the taxpayer is not simply agreeing to efficiency. The Taxpayer often agrees that a limited review period may be used to project liability across the full audit period. Once that happens, the fight becomes substantially more difficult. Instead of challenging whether the Department should have performed a broader review, the taxpayer may lose the ability to demand a full-period detailed audit and may be pushed into narrower challenges, such as whether the selected test period was representative, whether particular transactions were included properly, whether the taxability calls were correct, and whether the projection was applied correctly.
In our view, Taxpayers should be extremely cautious before signing these documents. In many cases, we recommend not signing a test period agreement unless the taxpayer has first vetted the sample period, understood the projection mechanics, and evaluated whether actual books and records provide a stronger defense than a projected audit.
Why the Sampling Agreement Matters So Much in a NY Sales Tax Audit
A sampling agreement usually does three things:
- It substitutes a projection methodology for a detailed transaction-by-transaction audit.
- It assumes that the selected months or quarters are representative of the entire audit period.
- It gives the Department a basis to extrapolate errors identified in the test period over years of returns.
Signing the consent to sample can be dangerous and costly. If the selected period includes unusual operations, seasonal swings, staffing disruptions, promotional activity, inventory problems, recording issues, or an abnormal sales mix, the projection can substantially overstate the estimated liability.
Once the agreement is signed, the Department will almost always argue that the taxpayer accepted the basic premise of representativeness. This is why the signing decision is strategic, not ministerial. It affects burden, leverage, and the types of arguments available later at Bureau of Conciliation and Mediation Services and before the Division of Tax Appeals.
New York Authority Shows the Consent Agreements Can Be Binding
A key New York authority on this point is Matter of Top Drawer, where the Tribunal held that a taxpayer who signed a test-period election form made a valid waiver of the right to a complete audit and could not later force the Division to redo the audit in detail after the test-period audit had been substantially completed
In the case, the record showed that the Division had substantially completed the audit by July 7, 2011, when it issued a Statement of Proposed Audit Changes reflecting the deficiency generated by the test period. The Taxpayer did not attempt to withdraw consent until a later meeting on October 14, 2011. On those facts, the Tribunal rejected the attempted revocation.
The Tribunal relied on settled New York waiver principles. The tribunal cited Nassau Trust Co., for the proposition that a waiver, to the extent executed, cannot be expunged or recalled. It also cited other case law, recognizing that a valid waiver cannot be withdrawn once the parties have performed in accordance with its terms.
That reasoning is significant in a New York sales tax audit context. Once the Department has materially relied on the consent and substantially performed the test period review, the taxpayer may be stuck with the agreement even if the taxpayer later realizes the sample was distorted, incomplete, or unfairly selected.
Why You Shouldn’t Sign New York Sales Tax Audit Documents Without Careful Review
In general, Sales Tax Helper recommends caution because signing a test period consent can create at least four practical and legal problems:
- It allows the Department to argue that the taxpayer knowingly chose efficiency over a full audit and accepted projection as the methodology.
- Signing the test period consent narrows the Taxpayer's appellate posture. Without an agreement, the Taxpayer can press broader arguments, such as that the books and records were adequate, that a detailed audit should have been performed, that the selected period was never representative, or that the Department chose convenience over accuracy.
- It raises questions about whether the taxpayer provided truly informed consent regarding the audit sample. The Taxpayer may not understand how the sample was selected, how the projection will work, which categories of transactions will be tested, or whether the Department has already identified a period producing a favorable error rate.
- Once the sales tax audit is substantially complete, revocation of a signed consent may fail.
New York Sales Tax Appeal Trap: Why it is Hard to Undo the Sampling Consent
A Taxpayer who did not sign may argue that the Department should have used actual books and records, that the sample was arbitrary, that the test period was not representative, or that the methodology was unreasonable from the start. A Taxpayer who did sign may instead be pushed into narrower arguments, such as computational mistakes, misclassification of transactions, or improper application of the projection formula.
Those narrower arguments still matter, but they are not the same as attacking the foundation of the assessment. The Department will argue that representativeness was already accepted, that sampling was already chosen, and that any later dissatisfaction is simply moot.
New York Sales Tax Audit: The Risk of Post-Fact Consent to Sampling Methods
Another issue is what may be called post-hoc or post-fact approval. Sometimes, a Taxpayer is not asked to sign at the true front end of methodology selection. Instead, preliminary sales tax testing may already have occurred. The Taxpayer is then asked to memorialize agreement after the process has effectively begun.
That raises a practical fairness concern, along with informed consent. A valid waiver should be knowing and intentional. However, the audit methodology may sometimes be questioned. For example, the Department has experience, internal methodology preferences, and access to preliminary results. The Taxpayer may simply be trying to cooperate. If the Taxpayer signs without understanding that the sample can later become nearly fixed, the agreement begins to look less like informed consent and more like retroactive ratification.
New York precedent, however, shows that once the waiver is treated as executed and relied upon, the Tribunal may focus less on how the taxpayer subjectively understood the document and more on the fact that the document was signed and performed.
Bottom Line for NY Sales Tax Audits and Consents
A test period agreement in a New York sales tax audit is not routine paperwork. It can operate like a waiver with real and costly consequences. Case law and precedent shows that once the Department has substantially performed under the agreement, the Taxpayer may be bound by the choice and unable to demand a full audit later.
That is why, as a practical matter, we generally recommend not signing a sampling agreement unless the Taxpayer has first analyzed the sample period, understood the projection method, and made a deliberate decision that the sample truly serves the Taxpayer's interests. If the document is signed too casually, the Taxpayer may find on appeal that the real fight is no longer whether the method should have been used at all, but only how much damage can be contained within a method that is already locked in.
Sales Tax Helper, a team comprised of attorneys, CPAs, and former auditors, focuses on sales tax audits, appeals, and controversy matters in New York and across the country. If you have received a consent to sampling period or a sampling agreement, reach out to Sales Tax Helper for an in-depth analysis of whether the consent is warranted.
Questions and Answers
Q: Why is a sampling agreement such a big deal in a New York sales tax audit?
A: Because it allows the Department to project liability across the entire audit period based on a limited sample. Once signed, it can define the entire framework of the case and limit your sales tax defenses.
Q: Can a Taxpayer undo or revoke a sampling agreement later?
A: Generally, no. This is especially true if the Department has relied on it and the Department has substantially completed its sales and use tax audit. New York authority shows that consent can be binding and difficult to withdraw after execution.
Q: What arguments are still available if the consent to sample period agreement was signed?
A: Calculation errors, misclassification of taxable and exempt sales, or improper application of the method, rather than attacking the methodology itself.
Q: What should taxpayers do before signing a sampling agreement?
A: Reach out to Sales Tax Helper for a detailed analysis and review of the sample period, understanding the projection mechanics, and comparison against actual records. Signing without this analysis can significantly weaken your New York sales tax audit defense.