Posts Tagged ‘Massachusetts Department of Revenue’

Massachusetts DOR Issues Guidelines on 2010 Sales Tax Holiday

Monday, August 9th, 2010 by Moore McLaughlin

The Massachusetts Department of Revenue provided guidelines on the 2010 sales tax holiday for August 14 and 15, 2010, during which most purchases made by individuals for personal use will not be subject to Massachusetts sales or use taxes. During these two days, nonbusiness retail sales of tangible personal property costing $2,500 or less are exempt from sales and use taxes subject to certain exclusions. All motor vehicles, motorboats, meals, telecommunications services, gas, steam, tobacco products, and any single item costing over $2,500 do not qualify for the sales tax holiday exemption and remain subject to tax. ( Massachusetts Technical Information Release 10-10, 08/05/2010 .)

Qualifying purchases. The sales tax exemption applies to sales of tangible personal property for personal use only. Purchases exempt from sales tax are also exempt from use tax. Therefore, eligible items of tangible personal property purchased on the Massachusetts sales tax holiday from out-of-state retailers for use in Massachusetts are exempt from Massachusetts use tax. Alcoholic beverages sold for off-premises consumption by liquor or package stores qualify for the 2010 sales tax holiday.

Nonexempt sales. The sales tax holiday does not apply to sales of motorboats, meals, telecommunications services, gas, steam, electricity, tobacco products, any single item costing in excess of $2,500, and all sales of motor vehicles. Layaway sales do not qualify for the exemption even if the last required payment or payments necessary to complete the transaction are made on August 14 or 15, 2010. Sales of the excluded items remain taxable.

Specific rules. The Department provided specific rules to be applied by retailers in administering the Massachusetts sales tax holiday exemption.

Threshold: Generally, sales or use tax is due on the entire sales price of a single item worth more than $2,500. The sales price is not reduced by the threshold amount. However, since there is no sales tax on any article of clothing worth less than $175, only the increment of the sales price of the article of clothing over $175 is subject to tax.

Multiple items on one invoice: Separate invoices do not have to be prepared when a customer purchases multiple items during the sales tax holiday. As long as each item is priced $2,500 or less, there is no upper limit on the tax-free amount each customer may purchase.

Bundled transactions: When several items are offered for sale at a single price, the entire package is exempt if the sales price of the package is $2,500 or less. Items that are priced separately and are to be sold separately qualify for the sales tax holiday exemption if the price of each item is $2,500 or less.

Coupons and discounts: If a store coupon or discount reduces the sales price of an article, the discounted sales price determines whether the sales price is within the sales tax holiday threshold. If the purchaser bought both an eligible property and a taxable property and the coupon or discount applies to the total amount paid by the purchaser, the seller allocates the discount on a pro rata basis to each article sold.

Exchanges: In case of an even exchange, no tax is due even if the exchange is made after the sales tax holiday.

Special orders: Special order items are eligible for the sales tax holiday exemption provided they are ordered and paid in full on the sales tax holiday weekend and the cost of each item is $2,500 or less even if the items are delivered at a later date. A prior special order purchase with a deposit made before August 14, 2010 will not qualify for the sales tax holiday exemption even if the customer pays the entire remaining balance due on August 14 or 15, 2010.

Rain checks: Eligible property bought with the use of a rain check during the sales tax holiday weekend qualifies for the exemption regardless of when the rain check was issued. Issuance of a rain check during the sales tax holiday weekend will not qualify otherwise eligible property for the sales tax holiday exemption if the property is actually purchased after the sales tax holiday.

Rentals: Generally, rentals for 30 days or less of eligible tangible personal property are eligible for the sales tax holiday even if the rental period covers days before or after the holiday provided payment in full is made during the sales tax holiday weekend.

Rebates: A rebate is generally treated as a cash discount and is excluded from the sales price. So, the discounted sales price determines whether the sales price is within the sales tax holiday threshold, and tax must be charged on the full purchase price if it is over $2,500. If the customer receives a rebate after the sale by mailing a coupon to the manufacturer, the full purchase price of the property determines whether the sales price is within the sales tax holiday price threshold and tax must be charged on the full purchase price if it is over $2,500. If the customer receives a cash discount from the vendor upon the purchase of tangible property and a manufacturer’s rebate after the sale, only the cash discount given by the vendor is excluded from the sales price for purposes of the sales tax holiday exemption.

Internet sales: An eligible property ordered over the Internet is exempt if it is ordered and paid for on August 14 or 15, 2010, Eastern Daylight Time, even if the property is delivered after the sales tax holiday period.

Splitting items normally sold together: Articles normally sold as a single unit cannot be priced separately and sold as individual items in order to qualify for the sales tax holiday exemption.

Returns: Under the law, sales tax may only be refunded if returns are made within 90 days of the sale. During the 90-day period after August 14 or 15, 2010, a retailer may not credit a retail customer who returns an item that could have qualified for the sales tax holiday exemption, unless the customer provides a receipt or invoice showing the tax was paid or the seller’s records show that tax was paid.

Erroneously collected taxes: Customers who were erroneously charged sales tax for an exempt purchase may obtain a tax refund from the vendor. The vendor that has remitted erroneously collected tax to the Department may file an abatement application within three years with satisfactory evidence that the vendor credited or refunded the tax to the purchaser.

Responsibilities of retailers. All Massachusetts businesses normally making taxable sales of tangible personal property on August 14 and 15, 2010 and out-of-state retailers registered to collect Massachusetts sales and use taxes must participate in the sales tax holiday. Any sales or use tax erroneously collected by a retailer during the sales tax holiday must be remitted to the Department. Retailers must keep normal business records showing the date of sale, items purchased and selling price. Purchasers paying for tangible personal property with business credit cards or checks must be charged tax on the items purchased. Normal business records showing the date of sale, items purchased, and selling price must be kept by the retailer/vendor. However, a separate certification of nonbusiness use from the purchaser will not be required for the 2010 Sales Tax Holiday regardless of the amount of the otherwise qualifying purchase.

Penalties. Retailers that back-date sales occurring after August 15, 2010 or that forward-date sales that occurred before August 14, 2010 in order to make them appear to qualify for the sales tax holiday may be subject to the tax evasion penalties of Mass. Gen. L. § 73 , including a felony conviction, a fine of not more than $100,000 or $500,000 in the case of a corporation, or by imprisonment for not more than five years, or both, and may also be required to pay the costs of prosecution.

Disaster victims in Massachusetts, Rhode Island qualify for tax relief

Friday, April 2nd, 2010 by Moore McLaughlin
Rhode Island Flood

Rhode Island Flooding

The IRS has announced on its website that victims of the recent severe storms and flooding in counties in Massachusetts and Rhode Island are designated as federal disaster areas qualifying for individual assistance have more time to make tax payments and file returns. Certain other time-sensitive acts also are postponed. The following is a summary of the relief that is available.

Who gets relief.  Only taxpayers considered to be affected taxpayers are eligible for the postponement of time to file returns, pay taxes and perform other time-sensitive acts. Affected taxpayers are those listed in Treas. Reg. § 301.7508A-1(d)(1) and thus include:

  • any individual whose principal residence, and any business entity whose principal place of business, is located in the counties designated as disaster areas;
  • any individual who is a relief worker assisting in a covered disaster area, regardless of whether he is affiliated with recognized government or philanthropic organizations;
  • any individual whose principal residence, and any business entity whose principal place of business, is not located in a covered disaster area, but whose records necessary to meet a filing or payment deadline are maintained in a covered disaster area;
  • any estate or trust that has tax records necessary to meet a filing or payment deadline in a covered disaster area; and
  • any spouse of an affected taxpayer, solely with regard to a joint return of the husband and wife.

What may be postponed. Under Internal Revenue Code §7508A, the IRS gives affected taxpayers until the extended date (specified by county, below) to file most tax returns (including individual, estate, trust, partnership, C corporation, and S corporation income tax returns; estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer tax returns; and employment and certain excise tax returns), or to make tax payments, including estimated tax payments, that have either an original or extended due date falling on or after the onset date of the disaster (specified by county, below), and on or before the extended date.

The IRS also gives affected taxpayers until the extended date to perform other time-sensitive actions described in Treas. Reg. §301.7508A-1(c)(1) and Rev. Proc. 2007-56, 2007-34 IRB 388, that are due to be performed on or after the onset date of the disaster, and on or before the extended date.  This relief also includes the filing of Form 5500 series returns, in the way described in Rev. Proc. 2007-56, Sec. 8.  Additionally, the relief described in Rev. Proc. 2007-56, Sec. 17, relating to like-kind exchanges of property, also applies to certain taxpayers who are not otherwise affected taxpayers and may include acts required to be performed before or after the period above.

The postponement of time to file and pay does not apply to information returns in the W-2, 1098, 1099 or 5498 series, or to Forms 1042-S or 8027.  Penalties for failure to timely file information returns can be waived under existing procedures for reasonable cause. Likewise, the postponement does not apply to employment and excise tax deposits.  The IRS, however, will abate penalties for failure to make timely employment and excise deposits, due on or after the onset date of the disaster, and on or before the deposit delayed date (specified by county, below), provided the taxpayer made these deposits by the deposit delayed date.

Affected areas and dates for storms, floods and other disasters as published on the IRS’s website:

Massachusetts:  The following are federal disaster areas qualifying for individual assistance on account of severe storms and flooding beginning on March 12, 2010: Bristol, Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk, Plymouth, Suffolk and Worcester counties.  For these Massachusetts counties, the onset date of the disaster was March 12, 2010, the extended date is May 11, 2010, and the deposit delayed date was March 29, 2010. [Note:  In response to the IRS' tax deadline extension, the Massachusetts Department of Revenue has announced that the new filing deadline for state tax returns will be midnight May 11, 2010 for residents of the counties that were federally-declared disaster areas. (Release, Massachusetts Department of Revenue, 03/31/2010 ; Massachusetts Severe Storm and Flooding Victims Have Until May 11 to File Their Tax Returns, 03/31/2010).]

Rhode Island: The following are federal disaster areas qualifying for individual assistance on account of severe storms and flooding beginning on March 12, 2010: Kent, Newport, Providence and Washington counties. For these Rhode Island counties, the onset date of the disaster was Mar. 12, 2010, the extended date is May 11, 2010, and the deposit delayed date was Mar. 29, 2010.

For more information, please contact your CPA or our office.

Masssachusetts increases audits of small businesses

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009 by Moore McLaughlin

According to a recent report in the Boston Business Journal, the 87 new auditors and tax collectors hired by the Massachusetts Department of Revenue last year have paid tremendous dividends to the Commonwealth’s coffers.  According to this report by Lisa Van Der Pool, the Massachusetts Department of Revenue invested about $6 million last year and collected about $72 million in additional taxes.  Nice return on investment.  This article also reports that, according to the Department of Revenue, Gov. Deval Patrick has proposed that the DOR take on 14 more collectors.  Click here for the full article.boston_business_journal

As more states struggle with budgetary and other fiscal constraints, expect to see more efforts to audit and collect taxes under the current system.  Our attorneys at McLaughlin & Quinn, LLC have already felt this renewed effort in both Massachusetts and Rhode Island.  The numbers of new cases is at an all-time high.  These state efforts are focused not just on personal and corporate income taxes, but sales and use taxes, payroll taxes, and excise taxes, such as the cigarette tax, fuels taxes and others.

Ms. Van Der Pool’s article correctly points out that everyone should pay their taxes according to the law.  But, as a tax attorney I can attest that there can certainly be differing opinions as to the proper interpretation of the law.  However, merely not paying any taxes, or not filing tax returns, is not the appropriate method to challenge an interpretation of the tax law.

If you have been selected for audit, if you know you owe taxes, or if you have not filed all required tax returns, and if you want to get these matters settled and behind you, you need to seek competant tax advice immediately.