U.S. finance support for luxury brands built on precision
Luxury finance starts with knowing what each product really costs
High-value inventory, landed costs, samples, returns, repairs, wholesale terms, and retail margins need to be tracked carefully. We help luxury brands keep the books aligned with the way products actually move.
Showroom, wholesale, retail, and online channels all create different obligations
Luxury brands rarely enter the U.S. through one channel only. We help connect sales tax, accounting, inventory, and reporting across boutiques, wholesale partners, e-commerce, pop-ups, and private client sales.
High-value sales make tax errors more expensive
U.S. sales tax depends on location, customer type, product category, channel, exemptions, and delivery terms. We help luxury brands understand where to register, collect, file, and document.
U.S. performance needs to connect back to the global brand
We help align U.S. books, inventory, payroll, retail activity, and reporting with the foreign parent company’s finance process.
The finance functions luxury brands need before U.S. growth accelerates
Luxury finance leaves less room for messy records.
Luxury brands sell high-value products through high-touch channels. A single sale can involve inventory, delivery, sales tax, clienteling, returns, repairs, commissions, wholesale terms, and parent-company reporting.
For international luxury brands entering the U.S., financial accuracy supports more than compliance. It protects margin visibility, brand control, retail decision-making, and confidence in the U.S. market. Orbiss helps build the finance structure behind that experience.
Frequently asked questions
Luxury brands expanding into the U.S. need finance systems that protect margin, inventory visibility, tax compliance, and global reporting.
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Luxury brands should prioritize inventory accounting, landed cost tracking, sales tax, channel reporting, payroll, store or showroom expenses, returns, samples, repairs, and parent-company reporting.
Because products are high value, small reporting gaps can distort margins quickly.
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Inventory should be tracked by product category, location, channel, cost, movement, and status. Brands should distinguish sellable inventory, samples, returns, damaged goods, repairs, and goods held by partners where relevant.
Accurate inventory tracking supports cost of goods sold, gross margin, sales tax, reporting, and parent-company visibility.
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They may. Sales tax exposure depends on where the brand has physical presence, employees, inventory, stores, showrooms, or economic nexus through sales.
Because luxury goods often have high transaction values, revenue thresholds can be crossed faster than expected.
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Wholesale and direct-to-consumer channels should be tracked separately because they often have different margins, payment terms, tax treatment, return patterns, and reporting needs.
Clear channel reporting helps leadership understand which U.S. growth path is actually profitable.
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The brand should prepare entity setup, state registrations, payroll, benefits, workers’ compensation, sales tax registration, accounting workflows, inventory tracking, point-of-sale reporting, expense management, and monthly reporting.
The financial setup should be ready before the brand starts hiring or transacting locally.
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Yes. We can help structure U.S. reporting so it supports parent-company visibility into sales, gross margin, inventory, payroll, expenses, intercompany activity, and cash.
The goal is to give the global team a reliable view of U.S. performance without manual cleanup every month.
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