Ala. Admin. Code r. 810-6-5-.09 - Leasing and Rental of Tangible Personal Property
(1) The term "rental tax" as used in this
rule shall mean the privilege or license tax levied in Section
40-12-222,
Code of
Ala. 1975
.
(2) Unless
otherwise defined in this rule, the definitions of terms contained in Section
40-12-220 are incorporated by
reference herein.
(3) Rental tax is
levied on each person, firm, or corporation engaged in the business of leasing
or renting tangible personal property in an amount equal to 4 percent of the
gross proceeds of the business except the rate of 2 percent shall apply to the
gross proceeds from the leasing or rental of linens and garments, and the rate
of 1 1/2 percent shall apply to the gross proceeds from the leasing or rental
of automotive vehicles, truck trailers, semitrailers, and house trailers.
(Section 40-12-222)
(4) Persons leasing or renting tangible
personal property in Alabama shall apply for and obtain a rental tax license
from the department on forms furnished by the department. (Section
40-12-221)
(5) Unless the taxpayer qualifies to file and
pay rental tax on a calendar quarter or calendar year basis, rental tax is due
and payable in monthly installments on or before the twentieth day of the month
next succeeding the month in which the tax accrues. See Rule
810-6-5-.30.01 Filing and Paying
State Rental Tax and State-Administered County and Municipal Rental Taxes on a
Quarterly or Annual Basis. Every lessor on whom the tax is levied shall prepare
and forward to the department within the time prescribed by law, on forms
prepared and furnished by the department, a rental tax return for each calendar
tax reporting period and shall compute the tax due and shall pay to the
department the amount of tax shown to be due. Rental tax returns shall require
the following information:
(a) Taxpayer's tax
account number, legal name, and complete address,
(b) Period covered by the return and due date
of the return,
(c) A breakdown, by
applicable tax rate, of the gross proceeds from the rental or leasing of
automotive vehicles, truck trailers, semi-trailers, and house trailers; the
gross proceeds from the rental or leasing of linens and garments; and the gross
proceeds from the rental or leasing of all other tangible personal
property,
(d) A breakdown, by
otherwise applicable tax rates, of total deductions claimed,
(e) Measure of tax by applicable tax
rate,
(f) Gross tax due by
applicable tax rate,
(g) Total
gross amount of tax due,
(h)
Penalties and interest due, if applicable,
(i) Credits claimed, if any,
(j) Total amount due,
(k) Total amount remitted
(l) An indication if payment of tax is made
through electronic funds transfer (EFT), and
(m) Taxpayer's signature, title, and date
signed.
(6) The gross
proceeds from the following transactions are exempted or excluded from the
computation of rental tax:
(a) The
transactions enumerated in Section
40-12-223.
(b) The detention by the user of freight
cars, oxygen and acetylene tanks, and similar property for which detention a
demurrage or per diem charge is made against the user of the property. (Section
40-12-220(5))
(c) The leasing or rental of oxygen or
durable medical equipment by a provider to a recipient of benefits under the
Medicare or Medicaid program under orders from a duly licensed physician. The
term "durable medical equipment" means equipment which can stand repeated use,
is used to serve a purpose for medical reasons, and is appropriate and suitable
for use in the home. (Section
40-9-30,
Code of Ala.
1975
)
(d) Effective
August 1, 2014, in addition to any other exemptions provided herein, any item
used for the treatment of illness or injury or to replace all or part of a limb
or internal body part rented or leased by or on behalf of an individual
pursuant to a valid prescription and covered by and billed to Medicare,
Medicaid, or a health benefit plan shall be exempt from state, county, and
municipal rental and leasing taxes. This exemption includes, but is not limited
to, any of the following:
1. Durable medical
equipment, including repair parts and the disposable or single patient use
supplies required for the use of the equipment,
2. Prosthetic and orthotic devices,
and
3. Medical supplies as defined
and covered under the Medicare program, including, but not limited to, items
such as catheters, catheter supplies, ostomy bags and supplies related to
ostomy care, specialized wound care products, and similar items that are
covered by and billed to Medicare, Medicaid, or a health benefit plan. (Section
40-9-30,
Code of Ala.
1975
)
(7) When a lessor in Alabama (i) leases
tangible personal property to a lessee in another state, (ii) the property is
to be used in the other state, and (iii) the lessor's records in this state
show that the property is leased in the other state; the gross proceeds derived
from the property leased in the other state are not taxable in this
state.
(8) When a lessor (i) is
located outside Alabama, (ii) leases tangible personal property to a lessee
within Alabama and (iii) the leased property is used in Alabama; the total
gross proceeds from the lease of tangible personal property in this state are
subject to rental tax.
(9) Any
person in this state leasing or renting any automotive vehicle, truck trailer,
semitrailer, or house trailer is liable for rental tax on the gross proceeds
derived from the leases or rentals, although the automotive vehicle, truck
trailer, semitrailer, or house trailer may be turned into the lessor in another
state. Where any automotive vehicle, truck trailer, semitrailer, or house
trailer is leased in another state and turned in to the lessor in this state,
the rental receipts therefrom would not be subject to the tax.
(10) Where a lessor leases or rents a truck,
truck trailer, or semitrailer to a motor carrier in this state, the total gross
receipts from the rental of the truck, truck trailer, or semitrailer would be
subject to the tax, although the truck, truck trailer, or semitrailer may
occasionally travel in interstate commerce in other states. Where the lessor
leases a truck, truck trailer, or semitrailer to a motor carrier outside this
state, the receipts therefrom would not be subject to the tax although the
truck, truck trailer, or semitrailer may occasionally travel in this state in
interstate commerce.
(11) The gross
receipts derived from leases or rentals of tangible personal property are not
subject to rental tax when the 4 percent amusement tax levied in Section
40-23-2(2),
Code of Ala. 1975
, applies to the same gross receipts.
Items, the gross receipts from which are taxable under the amusement tax levy,
include, but are not limited to, the rental of skates or shoes at skating rinks
and bowling alleys, the rental of golf carts and clubs rented by places open to
the public, coin-operated music machines located in public places, and
coin-operated rides in shopping centers.
(12) The sale of tangible personal property
to any person engaged in the business of leasing or renting the same tangible
personal property to others in transactions subject to the rental tax is a
wholesale sale and not subject to sales or use tax. This exclusion from sales
and use tax also applies to replacement and repair parts purchased by the
lessor for use in repairing tangible personal property leased or rented by the
lessor. Where the lessor sells tangible personal property previously purchased
at wholesale for the purpose of renting or leasing the property, regardless of
whether the sale is to the person to whom the property had been leased or
rented or to some other person, sales tax is due on the gross receipts derived
from the sale.
(13) Where the
lessor purchases tangible personal property for leasing or rental to others, at
wholesale, tax exempt, and thereafter diverts the property to his or her own
use, sales tax is due on the fair and reasonable market value of the property
at the time of withdrawal.
(14) Any
person, who claims the rental tax exemption in Section
40-12-223(4) and
thereafter diverts the property to his or her own use, is liable for rental tax
on the amount of rental payments he or she pays to the lessor for the period
during which the property is diverted and used.
(15) The Rental Tax Law permits lessors of
tangible personal property to pass on to lessees such licenses or privilege
taxes by adding such taxes to the leasing price or other enumerated charges
with all such amounts constituting the gross proceeds subject to the privilege
or license tax. The amendment further clarifies that any license or privilege
tax passed on to the lessee by adding such tax to the leasing price or
otherwise passed on to the lessee, shall be included in the monthly taxable
gross proceeds, subject to the rental tax. This amendment to the law did not
change the fact that Alabama rental tax is levied against the lessor and is not
a consumer tax. If rental tax is billed or passed on to the lessee or added as
an additional cost of the lease, the additional amount is to be included as a
part of the taxable gross proceeds from the lease. A lessor may not pass on
such amounts to the lessee on leases of tangible personal property to the State
of Alabama, or a municipality or county of the State, unless the flat amount
includes both the tax and the leasing fee.
(16) The rental tax shall be administered and
collected in accordance with the uniform procedures set forth in Title 40 and
the provisions of Section
40-12-224. These sections do not
provide for a discount for prompt payment of rental tax.
Notes
Author: Ginger Buchanan
Statutory Authority: Code of Ala. 1975 , ยงยง 40-2A-7(a)(5), 40-12-220 et seq., 40-12-224.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.