Rules & Licenses · New York City
Brooklyn Pop-Ups Should Check the Business Wizard Before Opening
A Brooklyn pop-up or storefront should check NYC's Business Wizard and New York's sales-tax certificate route before opening day.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
A Brooklyn market table, pop-up, or early storefront can feel low stakes until an early taxable sale. NYC’s Business Wizard asks questions and points business owners toward city, state, and federal steps. The New York State Tax Department separately explains the sales-tax vendor registration and certificate of authority route for businesses that make taxable sales.
Use both before signing a lease or announcing an opening date. The Wizard helps map permits and licenses. The tax page handles the authority to collect sales tax. A logo, Instagram page, and landlord handshake do not replace that official checklist.
Before a call or form, write down what you plan to sell, where you plan to sell it, and whether sales will begin before the permanent storefront is ready. A weekend table, online pickup, soft opening, holiday market, or shared kitchen pickup can still create tax and license questions.
Brooklyn makes this feel casual because so much starts small: a folding table, a borrowed counter, a neighborhood fair, a pop-up in someone else’s space. The paperwork can still be real. That little planning file can spare a messy opening week. Customers may just see the table or shop window, but the city and state paperwork sits underneath it.