(a) In General. "Automatic data processing
services" are those rendered in performing all or part of a series of data
processing operations through an interacting assembly of procedures, processes,
methods, personnel, and computers.
Automatic data processing services may be provided by
manufacturers of computers, data processing centers, systems designers,
consultants, software companies, etc. In addition, there are banks and other
businesses which own or lease computers and use them primarily for their own
purposes but occasionally provide services to others. Businesses rendering
automatic data processing services will be referred to herein as "data
processing firms."
(b)
Definition of Terms.
(1) Application. The
specific job performance by an automatic data processing installation. For
example, data processing for a payroll may be referred to as a payroll
application.
(2) Coding. The list,
in computer code, of the successive computer instructions representing
successive computer operations for solving a specific problem.
(3) Computer. A computer is an electronic
device (including word processing equipment and testing equipment) or
combination of components, which is programmable and which includes a processor
(central processing unit or microprocessor), internal memory, and input and
output connections. Manufacturing equipment which incorporates a computer is a
computer for purposes of this regulation. However, the term does not include
manufacturing equipment which operates under the control of mechanical or
electronic accessories, the attachment to the equipment of which is required
for the machine to operate. An electronic device otherwise qualifying as a
computer remains a computer even though it may be used for information
processing, data acquisition, process control or for the control of
manufacturing machinery or equipment.
(4) Custom Computer Program and Programming.
A computer program prepared to the special order of the customer. A program
prepared to the special order of the customer qualifies as a custom program
even though it may incorporate preexisting routines, utilities or similar
program components. It includes those services represented by separately stated
charges for modifications to an existing prewritten program which are prepared
to the special order of the customer.
(5) Data Entry (including Encoding).
Recording information in or on storage media by punching the holes or inserting
magnetic bits to represent letters, digits, and special characters.
(6) Digital Pre-Press Instruction. The
creation of original information in electronic form by combining more than one
computer program into specific instructions or information necessary to prepare
and link files for electronic transmission for output, within the printing
industry, to film, plate, or direct to press, which is then transferred on
electronic media such as tape or compact disc.
(7) Input. The information or data
transferred, or to be transferred, from storage media into the internal storage
of the computer.
(8) Output. The
information transferred from the internal storage of the computer to storage
media or tabulated listing.
(9)
Prewritten Program. A program held or existing for general or repeated sale or
lease. The term also includes a program developed for in-house use which is
subsequently offered for sale or lease as a product.
(10) Program. "Program" is the complete plan
for the solution of a problem, i.e., the complete sequence of automatic data
processing equipment instructions necessary to solve a problem, and includes
both systems and application programs and subdivisions thereof. "Subdivision"
includes, without limitation, assemblers, compilers, generators, procedures,
functions, routines, and utility programs. "Problem" means and includes any
problem that may be addressed or resolved by a program or subdivision; and the
"problem" addressed need not constitute the full array of a purchaser's or
user's problems, requirements, and desired features. "Problem" further
includes, without limitation, any problem associated with: information
processing; the manipulation or storage of data; the input or output of data;
the transfer of data or programs, including subdivisions; the translation of
programs, including subdivisions, into machine code; defining procedures,
functions, or routines; executing programs or subdivisions that may be invoked
within a program; and the control of equipment, mechanisms, or special purpose
hardware.
(11) Proof Listing. A
tabulated listing of input.
(12)
Source Documents. A document supplied by a customer of a data processing firm
from which basic data are extracted (e.g., sales invoice).
(13) Storage Media. Includes hard disks,
floppy disks, diskettes, magnetic tape, cards, paper tape, drums and other
devices upon which information is recorded.
(c) Basic Applications of Tax.
(1) The transfer of title, for a
consideration, of tangible personal property, including property on which or
into which information has been recorded or incorporated, is a sale subject to
tax.
(2) Charges for producing,
fabricating, processing, printing, imprinting or otherwise physically altering,
modifying or treating consumer-furnished tangible personal property (cards,
tapes, disks, etc.), including charges for recording or otherwise incorporating
information on or into such tangible personal property, are generally subject
to tax.
(3) A transfer for a
consideration of the title or possession of tangible personal property which
has been produced, fabricated, or printed to the special order of the customer,
including property on which or into which information has been recorded or
incorporated, is generally a sale subject to tax. However, if the contract is
for the service of researching and developing original information for a
customer, tax does not apply to the charges for the service. The tangible
personal property used to transmit the original information is merely
incidental to the service.
(4)
Charges for the transfer of computer-generated output are subject to tax where
the true object of the contract is the output and not the services rendered in
producing the output. Examples include artwork, graphics, and designs. However,
the transfer by the seller of the original information created by digital
pre-press instruction is not subject to tax if the original information is a
custom computer program as explained in subdivision (f)(2)(F).
(5) Charges for processing customer-furnished
information (sales data, payroll data, etc.) are generally not subject to tax.
(For explanation and specific application of tax, see subdivision
(d).)
(6) Leases of tangible
personal property may be subject to tax under certain conditions. (See
Regulation 1660 for application of tax to leases.)
(7) Charges made for the use of a computer,
on a time-sharing basis, where access to the computer is by means of remote
telecommunication, are not subject to tax (See subdivision (i).)
(8) Generally, data processing firms are
consumers of all tangible personal property, including cards and forms, which
they use in providing nontaxable services unless a separate charge is made to
customers for the materials, in which case tax applies to the charge made for
the materials.
(d)
Manipulation of Customer-Furnished Information as Sale or Service.
(1) General. Generally tax applies to the
conversion of customer-furnished data from one physical form of recordation to
another physical form of recordation. However, if the contract is for the
service of developing original information from customer-furnished data, tax
does not apply to the charges for the service. The tangible personal property
used to transmit the original information is merely incidental to the
service.
(2) Data Entry and
Verification. This covers situations where a data processing firm's agreement
provides only for data entry, data verification, and proof listing of data, or
any combination of these operations. It does not include contracts under which
these services are performed as steps in processing of customer-furnished
information as discussed under subdivision (d)(5).
Agreements providing solely for date entry and
verification, or data entry providing a proof list and/or verifying of data are
regarded as contracts for the fabrication of storage media and sale of proof
lists. Charges therefor are taxable, whether the storage media are furnished by
the customer or by the data processing firm. Tax also applies to charges for
the imprinting of characters on a document to be used as the input medium in an
optical character recognition system. The tax application is the same
regardless of which type of storage media is used in the
operation.
(3) Addressing
(Including Labels) for Mailing. Where the data processing firm addresses,
through the use of its computer or otherwise, material to be mailed, with names
and addresses furnished by the customer or maintained by the data processing
firm for the customer, tax does not apply to the charge for addressing.
Similarly, where the data processing firm prepares, through the use of its
computer or otherwise, labels to be affixed to material to be mailed, with
names and addresses furnished by the customer or maintained by the data
processing firm for the customer, tax does not apply to the charge for
producing the labels, whether or not the data processing firm itself affixes
the labels to the material to be mailed. (For the sale of mailing list by the
proprietor or such list as a sale of tangible personal property or as a
nontaxable addressing, see Regulation 1504 "Mailing-Services.")
(4) Microfilming and Photorecording. Tax
applies to charges for microfilming or photorecording except, as provided in
subdivision (d)(5), where the microfilming or photorecording is done under a
contract for the processing of customer-furnished information. Tax applies to a
contract where data on magnetic tape are converted into combinations of
alphanumeric printing, curve plotting and/or line drawings, and put on
microfilm or photorecording paper.
(5) Processing of Customer-Furnished
Information.
(A) "Processing of
customer-furnished information" means the developing of original information
from data furnished by the customer. Examples of automatic data processing
processes which result in original information are summarizing, computing,
extracting, sorting and sequencing. Such processes also include the updating of
a continuous file of information maintained by the customer with the data
processing firm.
(B) "Processing of
customer-furnished information" does not include:
(1) an agreement providing solely for the
reformatting of data or for the preparation of a proof listing or the
performance of an edit routine or other pre-processing,
(2) the using of a computer as a mere
printing instrument, as in the preparation of personalized computer-printed
letters,
(3) the mere converting of
data from one medium to another, or
(4) an agreement under which a person
undertakes to prepare artwork, drawings illustrations, or other graphic
material unless the provisions of subdivision (f)(2)(F) apply regarding digital
pre-press instruction and custom computer programs. Additionally, graphic
material furnished incidentally to the performance of a service is not subject
to tax. For example, graphics furnished in connection with the performance of
architectural, engineering, accounting, or similar professional services are
not subject to tax. With respect to typography, clip art combined with text on
the same page is considered composed type as explained in Regulation
1541.
(C) Contracts for
the processing of customer-furnished information usually provide that the data
processing firm will receive the customer's source documents, record data on
storage media, make necessary corrections, process the information, and then
record and transfer the output to the customer.
Where a data processing firm enters into a contract for the
processing of customer-furnished information, the transfer of the original
information to the customer is considered to be the rendering of a service.
Except as described in subdivisions (c)(8) and (d)(5)(E), tax does not apply to
the charges made under contracts providing for the transfer of the original
information whether the original information is transferred on storage media,
microfilm, microfiche, photorecording paper, input media for an optical
character recognition system, punched cards, preprinted forms, or tabulated
listing. The breakdown of the total charge into separate charges for each
operation involved in processing the customer-furnished information will not
change the application of tax.
(D) The furnishing of computer programs and
data by the customer for processing under direction and control of the data
processing firm will not alter the application of tax, notwithstanding that
charges are based on computer time.
(E) Taxable Items. Where a data processing
firm has entered into a contract which is regarded as a service contract under
subdivision (d)(5)(C) and the data processing firm, pursuant to the contract,
transfers to its customer tangible property other than property containing the
original information, such as duplicate copies of storage media: inventory
control cards for use by the customer; membership cards for distribution by the
customer; labels (other than address labels); microfiche duplicates; or similar
items for use, tax applies to the charges made for such items. If no separate
charge is made, tax applies to that portion of the charge made by the data
processing firm which the cost of the additional computer time (if and), cost
of materials, and labor cost to produce the items bear to the total job
cost.
(F) Additional Copies. When
additional copies of records, reports, tabulation, etc., are provided, tax
applies to the charges made for the additional copies. "Additional copies" are
all copies (other than carbon copies), whether the copies are prepared by
rerunning the same program, by using multiple simultaneous printers, by looping
a program such that the program is run continuously, by using different
programs to produce the same output product, or by other means. Where
additional copies are prepared, the tax will be measured by the charge made by
the data processing firm to the customer. If no separate charge is made for the
additional copies, tax applies to that portion of the gross receipts which the
cost of the additional computer time (if any), the cost of materials and labor
cost to produce the additional copies bear to the total job cost. Charges for
copies produced by means of photocopying, multilithing, or by other means are
subject to tax.
(e) Training Services and Materials. Data
processing firms provide a number of training services, such as data entry and
verification, programming, and specialized training in systems design.
(1) Charges for training services are
nontaxable, except as provided in subdivision (g) where the training services
are provided as part of the sale of tangible personal property. The data
processing firm is the consumer of tangible personal property which is used in
training others, or provided to trainees without a separate charge as a part of
the training services.
(2) Tax
applies to charges for training materials, including books, furnished to
trainees for a charge separate from the charge for training services.
(3) Where a person sells tangible personal
property, such as computers or programs, and provides training materials to the
customer without making an additional charge for the training materials, this
is a sale of the training materials. The selling price of the training
materials is considered to be included in the sales price of the tangible
personal property.
(f)
Computer Programs.
(1) Prewritten (Canned)
Programs. Prewritten programs may be transferred to the customer in the form of
storage media, or by listing the program instructions on coding sheets. In some
cases they are usable as written; however, in other cases it is necessary that
the program be modified, adapted, and tested to meet the customer's particular
needs. Tax applies to the sale or lease of the storage media or coding sheets
on which or into which such prewritten (canned) programs have been recorded,
coded, or punched.
(A) Tax applies whether
title to the storage media on which the program is recorded, coded, or punched,
passes to the customer, or the program is recorded, coded, or punched on
storage media furnished by the customer. The temporary transfer of possession
of a program, for a consideration, for the purpose of direct use or to be
recorded or punched by the customer, or by the lessor on the customer's
premises, is a lease of tangible personal property. The tax applies unless the
property is leased in substantially the same form as acquired by the lessor and
the lessor has paid sales tax reimbursement or use tax with respect to the
property.
(B) Tax applies to the
entire amount charged to the customer. Where the consideration consists of
license fees, all license fees, including site licensing and other end users
fees, are includable in the measure of tax. Tax does not apply, however, to
license fees or royalty payments that are made for the right to reproduce or
copy a program to which a federal copyright attaches in order for the program
to be published and distributed for a consideration to third parties, even if a
tangible copy of the program is transferred concurrently with the granting of
such right. Any storage media used to transmit the program is merely
incidental.
(C) Maintenance
contracts sold in connection with the sale or lease of a prewritten computer
program generally provide that the purchaser will be entitled to receive,
during the contract period, storage media on which prewritten program
improvements or error corrections have been recorded. The maintenance contracts
may provide that the purchaser is entitled to receive storage media on which a
backup copy of the same or similar prewritten program is recorded, so that the
purchaser may use the backup copy to restore the prewritten program. The
maintenance contract also may provide that the purchaser will be entitled to
receive, during the contract period, telephone or on-site consultation
services.
If the purchase of the maintenance contract is not optional
with the purchaser, that is, if the purchaser must purchase the maintenance
contract in order to purchase or lease a prewritten computer program, then the
charges for the maintenance contract are taxable as part of the sale or lease
of the prewritten program. Tax applies to any charge for consultation services
provided in connection with a maintenance contract except as provided
below.
For reporting periods commencing on or after January 1,
2003, if the purchase of the maintenance contract is optional with the
purchaser, that is, if the purchaser may purchase the prewritten software
without also purchasing the maintenance contract, and there is a single lump
sum charge for the maintenance contract, 50 percent of the lump sum charge for
the maintenance contract is for the sale of tangible personal property and tax
applies to that amount; the remaining 50 percent of the lump sum charge is
nontaxable charges for repair.
If no tangible personal property whatsoever is transferred
to the customer during the period of the maintenance contract, tax does not
apply to any portion of the charge. Tax does not apply to a separately stated
charge for consultation services if the purchaser is not required to purchase
those services in order to purchase or lease any tangible personal property,
such as a prewritten computer program or a maintenance
contract.
(D) The sale or
lease of a prewritten program is not a taxable transaction if the program is
transferred by remote telecommunications from the seller's place of business,
to or through the purchaser's computer, and the purchaser does not obtain
possession of any tangible personal property, such as storage media, in the
transaction. Likewise, the sale of a prewritten program is not a taxable
transaction if the program is installed by the seller on the customer's
computer except when the seller transfers title to or possession of storage
media or the installation of the program is a part of the sale of the computer.
Paragraph (C) applies to optional software maintenance contracts sold in
connection with nontaxable transactions described in this paragraph.
If the transfer of a prewritten program is a nontaxable
transaction, then the seller is the consumer of tangible personal property used
to produce written documentation or manuals (including documentation or manuals
in machine-readable form) designed to facilitate the use of the program and
transferred to the purchaser for no additional charge. If a separate charge is
made for the documentation or manuals, then tax applies to the separate
charge.
(E) The transfer of
a prewritten program on storage media is not a sale for resale when the storage
media, or an exact copy, will be used to produce additional copies of the
program.
Charges for testing a prewritten program on the purchaser's
computer to insure that such a program operates as required are installation
charges and are nontaxable
(2) Custom Programs.
(A) Tax does not apply to the sale or lease
of a custom computer program, other than a basic operational program,
regardless of the form in which the program is transferred. Nor does the tax
apply to the transfer of a custom program, or custom programming services
performed, in connection with the sale or lease of computer equipment, whether
or not the charges for the custom program or programming are separately
stated.
(B) However, charges for
custom modifications to prewritten program are nontaxable only if the charges
for the modifications are separately stated. Otherwise, the charges are taxable
as part of the sale of the prewritten program.
When the charges for modification of a prewritten program
are not separately stated, tax applies to the entire charge made to the
customer for the modified program unless the modification is so significant
that the new program qualifies as a custom program. If the prewritten program
was previously marketed, the new program will qualify as a custom program, if
the price of the prewritten program was 50 percent or less of the price of the
new program. If the prewritten program was not previously marketed, the new
program will qualify as a custom program if the charge made to the customer for
custom programming services, as evidenced in the records of the seller, is more
than 50 percent of the contract price to the customer.
(C) Charges for any written documentation or
manuals designed to facilitate the use of a custom computer program by the
customer are nontaxable, whether separately stated or not. The vendor of the
custom computer program is the consumer of the written documentation or
manuals, or of any tangible personal property used by the vendor in producing
the written documentation or manuals.
(D) A custom computer program includes a
program prepared to the special order of a customer who will use the program to
produce and sell or lease copies of the program, and the charge for such custom
computer program is not subject to tax. Sales or leases of the copies, however,
are taxable as sales of prewritten computer programs.
(E) A computer program prepared to the
special order of a customer to operate for the first time in connection with a
particular basic operating system is a custom computer program even though a
different version currently operates in connection with an incompatible basic
operating system.
(F) Digital
pre-press instruction is a custom computer program under section
6010.9
of the Revenue and Taxation Code, the sale of which is not subject to tax,
provided the digital pre-press instruction is prepared to the special order of
the purchaser. Digital pre-press instruction shall not, however, be regarded as
a custom computer program if it is a "canned" or prewritten computer program
which is held or existing for general or repeated sale or lease, even if the
digital pre-press instruction was initially developed on a custom basis or for
in-house use. The sale of such canned or prewritten digital pre-press
instruction in tangible form is a sale of tangible personal property, the
retail sale of which is subject to tax.
(g) Service Charges. The following activities
are service activities. Charges for the performance of such services are
nontaxable unless the services are performed as a part of the sale of tangible
personal property.
(1) Designing and
implementing computer systems (e.g., determining equipment and personnel
required and how they will be utilized).
(2) Designing storage and data retrieval
systems (e.g., determining what data communications and high-speed input-output
terminals are required).
(3)
Consulting services (e.g., study of all or part of a data processing
system).
(4) Feasibility studies
(e.g., studies to determine what benefits would be derived if procedures were
automated).
(5) Evaluation of bids
(e.g., studies to determine which manufacturer's proposal for computer
equipment would be most beneficial).
(6) Providing technical help, analysts, and
programmers, usually on an hourly basis.
(7) Training Services.
(8) Maintenance of equipment. (See Regulation
1546 for application of tax to maintenance contracts.)
(9) Consultation as to use of
equipment.
(h) Pick-up
and Delivery Charges. If the data processing firm's billing is for nontaxable
processing of customer-furnished information, the tax will not apply to pick-up
and delivery charges. If pick-up and delivery charges are made in conjunction
with the sale of tangible personal property or the processing of
customer-furnished tangible personal property, the tax will apply to the
pick-up charges. Tax will apply to the delivery charges to the extent specified
in regulation 1628, "Transportation Charges."
(i) Rental of Computers. A lease includes a
contract by which a person secures for a consideration the use of a computer
which is not on his or her premises, if the person or his or her employees,
while on the premises where the computer is located operate the computer, or
direct and control its operation. A lease does not include a contract whereby a
person secures access by means of remote telecommunication to a computer which
is not on his or her premises, if the person or his or her employees operate
the computer or direct and control its operation by means of remote
telecommunication. (See Regulation 1660 for application of tax to
leases.)