JULY 1 BALLOT DEADLINE: 27 DAYS LEFT · MIN PACE (~413,488 goal): 4,137/day · SAFE PACE (~620,000 goal): 12,012/day

Official (AxOhTax, 2026-04-23): 305,000 · ohtaxreform.com pledges: 0 · Add your name →

Campaign update (Apr 23, 2026): 44/88 counties meet signature distribution floor — geographic requirement largely set; every new signature pushes toward ~413,488 (min) and ~620,000 (safe). Sign the digital pledge

Signing access check-in

Paper petition only — tell us your status

Ohio ballot petition signatures must be gathered on paper at a physical location — online signing is not valid under current Ohio law. This check-in helps us count supporters and learn how to make signing easier.

Ohio ballot petition signatures must be gathered on paper at a physical location — online signing is not valid under current Ohio law. This check-in helps us count supporters and learn how to make signing easier.

At a physical location (paper petition)

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Choose one of the two options above to continue.

Fiscal pulse

Loading live rates…

Map: blue counties meet the modeled 5% distribution floor; orange/red are priority. Click a county to sync the live pulse. Pinch or scroll to zoom.

Tax swap simulator

Explore how to balance the $21,400,000,000 property-tax hole (modeled).

This is a policy modeling tool — not a real receipt from the state. Move the three sliders to explore how Medicaid savings, TIF reform, and sales-tax changes could offset Ohio's roughly $21.4 billion property tax burden. Every number here is an illustrative estimate for discussion, not an official forecast.

Remaining: $21,400,000,000

Balance progress: 0% ($0 modeled offset)

Medicaid audit efficiency

0–10% (each 1% ≈ $510M spending reduction)

0% → $0

Commercial TIF reform

0–100% (each 10% reclaimed ≈ $400M revenue)

0% → $0

Sales tax base modernization

Tax luxury services, scaling $0 → $2.5B

0% → $0

Shareable plan summary

Your plan will appear here

Move the sliders above to build a modeled plan. When you reach 100%, you can generate an image to share.

Questions? Hover the ? icons on the sliders above.

Illustrative only — not an official state document. Sign the pledge at ohtaxreform.com/sign

Modeled values — slider constants reflect published campaign estimates. All figures are illustrative.

M01

Module 1 — Framework, Scope, and Methodology

M1_Methodology.md · 3.9 KB

Module 1 — Framework, Scope, and Methodology

Blueprint for solving the revenue gap exposed by statutory vs. operational treatment of Ohio sales tax (ORC 5739).

Purpose

Establish how every module classifies transactions, compares law to audit reality, and flags system failures.

This project produces a clear, verifiable, and practical breakdown of Ohio sales and use tax for:

It is not a general tax guide. It is a structured analysis system: law → practice → gap → fix.

Core objectives

Objective Standard
Accuracy Every conclusion traces to ORC or official Ohio Department of Taxation guidance
Clarity Legal language becomes operational decision logic (what happens at the point of sale)
Consistency Same transaction class yields the same outcome across businesses and systems

Core principles

The binary rule

Every transaction must resolve to either TAXABLE or NOT TAXABLE. No subjective middle layer at the classification stage.

Law vs. practice vs. problem

Separate three layers in every module:

  1. Law — what ORC and OAC say
  2. Practice — how POS systems, retailers, and auditors actually apply it
  3. Problem — where ambiguity, inconsistency, or enforcement gaps create leakage or unfairness

System failure flag

If a rule is too complex for a standard POS system or a consumer to verify at transaction time, it is flagged as a System Failure (see Module 11).

Standard module structure

Modules 2–20 follow this pattern unless noted:

  1. Governing law — ORC citations, definitions
  2. Exact rule definitions — plain-language operational rules
  3. Real-world application — receipts, scenarios, POS behavior
  4. Points of confusion / misapplication — where operators disagree
  5. Transparency & enforcement gaps — what receipts and audits cannot show
  6. Policy problems — fairness and base-integrity impact
  7. Proposed fixes — concrete reforms tied to Modules 12–14

Primary problem statement

Ohio sales tax (primarily ORC 5739) is:

Result: identical transactions taxed differently, compliance risk for honest businesses, and revenue leakage where classification is gamed or skipped.

Data sources

Authoritative:

Operational (contrast with law):

Scope alignment

Module 1 sets the repeatable framework used by Modules 2–20. Later modules inherit these definitions unless explicitly overridden.

Deliverables this framework supports

Module checklist (framework complete)

Live build 9aa50e3 · 2026-05-29 12:56:01 AM ET