Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 12A-1.0092 - Detective, Burglar Protection, and Other Protection Services
(1)
(a)
Persons who provide any of the services enumerated in NAICS National Numbers
561611, 561612, 561613 and 561621 of the North American Industry Classification
System, published 2007, except as provided in paragraph (b), are dealers in a
taxable service and are required to charge sales tax on the total taxable sales
price of the service.
(b) The sale
of private investigation services by a small private investigative agency to a
client is exempt. The exemption does not apply during the first calendar year a
small private investigative agency makes sales of private investigative
services.
1. "Private investigation services"
has the same meaning as "private investigation, " as defined in s.
493.6101(17),
F.S.
2. "Small private
investigative agency" means a private investigator licensed with the Department
of Agriculture and Consumer Services under s.
493.6201, F.S., which:
a. Employs three or fewer full-time or
part-time employees, including those performing services pursuant to an
employee leasing arrangement as defined in s.
468.520(4),
F.S., in total; and
b. During the
prevous calendar year, performed private investigation services otherwise
taxable in which the charges for the services performed were less than $150,
000 for all its businesses related through common
ownership.
(2)
(a)
Detective, burglar protection, and other protection services are those services
which are rendered to minimize or prevent loss or damage to life, limb, or
property and are of a kind typically performed by security or alarm system
companies, or are those investigative services which are rendered to obtain
evidence or other information for legal, business, employment, or personal
purposes of a kind typically performed by detective or investigative agencies.
Illustrative examples of taxable services are:
1. Armored car service;
2. Bodyguard (personal protection)
services;
3. Burglar or fire alarm
or other security system devices monitoring and maintenance;
a. The installation of alarm or security
systems that remain tangible personal property is governed by the provisions of
Rule 12A-1.016, F.A.C.
b. The installation of alarm or security
systems that become a part of real property is governed by the provisions of
Rule 12A-1.051, F.A.C.
c. The monitoring or maintenance of alarm or
security systems is a taxable service whether such systems are considered to be
tangible personal property or a part of real property. The term maintenance
includes any inspection of an alarm or security system to confirm its proper
working order. The term maintenance does not include the expansion or upgrade
of an existing system, but it does include the replacement of defective
components.
4. Detective
agency services;
5. Fingerprint
service;
6. Guard dogs, detection
dogs, and other dogs for protection or investigative services (not including
training), with or without a handler;
7. Guard, patrol, and parking or other
facility security services;
8.
Investigation services (except credit);
9. Lie detector or polygraph
services;
10. Missing person
tracing services;
11. Passenger
screening services; and,
12. Skip
tracing services.
(b) The
services in paragraph (a) above are taxable for all persons, businesses,
residences, or nonresidential properties.
(c) The following services, when performed by
detectives, private investigators, or others are not subject to tax when
freestanding, or when separately stated on an invoice given to a purchaser
which includes taxable services:
1. Credit
reporting services.
2. Any report
of public information or compiled social, business, or medical information,
where the information has not been independently verified or confirmed by the
investigator, by such methods as surveillance, interviews, or physical
contact.
3. Insurance services as
classified under NAICS National Number 524298, such as insurance investigation
services, insurance loss prevention services, or insurance reporting services.
The name of the insurance carrier must be included in the billing for the
investigative services.
4. Process
serving services.
5. Courthouse
records retrieval.
6. Repossession
services.
(d) Security
Services Provided to Housing Facilities.
1.
Security services, such as vehicle or foot patrols; gate, lobby, or entrance
guard service; or personnel which may be dispatched from any other site upon
request, are taxable. The following businesses or persons who charge for these
services must also charge, collect, and remit tax on those services.
a. Developers, owners, or lessors of
residential developments who charge property owners or residents of such
developments.
b. Homeowner's,
condominium, cooperative, or community associations who charge their
members.
c. Operators of
apartments, roominghouses, hotels, motels, and mobile home parks who charge the
residents or guests of such facilities.
2. A charge for the transactions enumerated
in subparagraph 1. is considered to be made when:
a. A charge for security services is
expressly noted on an invoice given to the purchaser; or
b. A charge is made for a package of services
which, by agreement, includes security services. See paragraph
12A-1.0161(6)(a),
F.A.C.
(e) The
services in this rule are not taxable when provided by employees to their
employers. See subsection
12A-1.0161(3),
F.A.C.
(f) The services which are
subject to tax in this rule are taxable when performed within or outside this
state and used within this state by the purchaser or when the purchaser's
primary benefit of the services is within this state. The services which are
subject to tax in this rule are exempt when performed within this state but
used outside this state by the purchaser or when the purchaser's primary
benefit of the services is outside this state. The seller must maintain a log
pursuant to paragraph
12A-1.0161(2)(c),
F.A.C., documenting any transaction where services are performed in this state
but used by a purchaser outside this state.
1.
Example: Company E is located in Georgia and Florida. Company E suspects that
its Georgia warehouse manager is stealing merchandise from the company and
hires a Florida detective agency to investigate. Irrespective of where the
investigative services are performed, since the services do not directly relate
to real or tangible personal property located in Florida, nor do they directly
relate to the Florida activities of Company E, it is presumed that the primary
benefit or use of the detective services is enjoyed in Georgia. Therefore, the
investigative services are not taxable.
2. Example: Company N is a manufacturer
located only in Florida. Company N has suffered losses of tangible personal
property that it consigned to a location in Illinois. Company N hires a local
Illinois detective agency to investigate. All field work is performed in
Illinois and a report is directly submitted to Company N in Florida. Although
the services were performed outside of Florida, the detective services directly
relate to tangible personal property that is still owned by a Florida company
and directly related to the Florida company's activities. Therefore, the
primary benefit or use of the services is in Florida, and the services are
subject to tax. If the Illinois detective agency is not registered with the
State of Florida for sales and use tax purposes, it cannot charge Florida sales
tax to Company N, thereby requiring Company N to report and remit use tax on
the cost of the investigative services to the State of Florida.
3. Example: A California art gallery has
loaned an important work of art to a Florida art gallery. Security services
must be hired to protect this work of art. If the California art gallery is
invoiced for the security services, it will be presumed that the primary
benefit of the services is to protect the California art gallery's tangible
personal property. Since the services are used by a purchaser who is located
outside this state, the security services will not be taxable. If the Florida
art gallery is invoiced for the security services, it will be presumed that the
primary benefit of the services is to protect the activities of the Florida art
gallery, and the charges will be subject to tax.
(3)
(a) If
a transaction involves both the sale or use of a service which is taxable and
the sale or use of a service which is not taxable, the charges for the taxable
portion of the transaction must be separately stated from the charges for the
nontaxable portion or the entire transaction will be presumed taxable.
1. Example: An armored car company makes
daily pick-ups of currency and coins from a discount store for transport to a
local bank. For an increased single monthly fee, the armored car company will
count and wrap the currency and coins prior to transporting the cash to the
bank. Since the currency and coin wrapping service is included in the taxable
armored car service, the entire charge made by the armored car company to the
discount store is subject to tax.
2. Example: Company A is a defense industry
contractor. Company A hires an investigative firm to perform a full background
check, including psychological and drug testing, on employment applicants. The
investigative firm engages the services of a psychologist and a medical lab to
perform the necessary testing procedures. The professional services of the
psychologist and the medical lab do not fall within the taxable services
enumerated in subsection (1). However, the charge that the investigative firm
makes to Company A for the psychological and drug testing must be separately
stated or the entire transaction will be subject to tax.
3. Example: A security company has a contract
to provide monthly security services for Company C's physical facility. Company
C has requested the security company to provide personal security classes to
Company C's employees. The personal security classes are separate from and not
included in the security services for the physical facility. The personal
security instruction classes will not be subject to tax, provided the security
company separately states or itemizes the instruction charges on the monthly
service billing to Company C.
(b) Investigative services provided to
private attorneys are not exempt, unless such services are those which are
enumerated in paragraph (2)(c) above.
(c) Investigative or security services
provided directly to a governmental entity that is exempt from sales and use
taxes under Section 212.08(6),
F.S., are exempt if payment is made directly by the governmental entity. Such
services are not exempt when provided to a contractor for a governmental
entity.
(d) There can be no
deduction from the taxable sales price of a service for expenses incurred in
activities necessary for the performance of the service or for any taxes paid
on those expenses.
1. Example: A security
company provides security to a client for $125, 000 a year. That contract
incurs $85, 500 in direct wages for several security guards. The security
service pays $6, 541 in Social Security (FICA) taxes on the wages paid to the
security guards. Neither the $85, 500 in wages nor the $6, 541 in FICA tax can
be deducted from the $125, 000 charge for this taxable service when computing
the sales tax.
2. Example: A
private investigator, in performing a taxable service for a client, stays in a
hotel room, for which he pays $100 plus $6 tax. He bills the client $500 for
his service, plus reimbursement of the $106 expenses incurred in performing the
service. The tax on the investigator's service will be six percent of the $606
total charged, or $36.36.
(e)
1. A
deduction is not allowed from the taxable sales price of a service for the
service provider's overhead or administrative costs incurred to support the
services provided.
2. Example: A
security company provides security to a client under a contract that provides
for thirty percent of the total charge to be for services incurred in support
of providing security, but not in the actual provision of security, such as
administrative, personnel, training, and other support activities. In computing
the tax on the service there can be no deduction of such expenses from the
total charge for the service.
(f) In the event of an audit by the
Department of Revenue, pursuant to Section
212.13, F.S., a service provider
will not be required to divulge any information that it is prohibited from
divulging under Section
493.6119, F.S.
1. Example: A detective agency performs a
taxable service for a client and it discovers certain information. If the
agency is audited, the agency is required to provide access to its records
indicating that it provided the service and the amount charged for the service,
but the agency cannot be required to provide access to records divulging any
information it is prohibited from divulging under Section
493.6119, F.S.
2. Example: During an audit of a detective
agency, a Department of Revenue auditor asks for records on transactions for
the audit period. A number of pages of the agency's records contain both
information pertinent to the taxability of services and information that cannot
be divulged without violating Section
493.6119, F.S. The agency is
required to provide the auditor with photocopies of those pages on which the
confidential information has been blocked out.
(4) A shopping mall providing security
services for its tenants is required to charge and collect tax on the security
service.
(5)
(a)
1. Any
law enforcement officer, as defined in Section
943.10, F.S., who is performing
approved duties as determined by his law enforcement agency, in his capacity as
a law enforcement officer subject to the direct and immediate command of his
law enforcement officer subject to the direct and immediate command of his law
enforcement agency, and in the uniform of his law enforcement agency, is
performing law enforcement and public safety services and is not performing
detective, burglar protection, or other protective services, if the law
enforcement officer is performing his approved duties in a geographical area in
which the law enforcement officer has arrest jurisdiction. Such law enforcement
and public safety services are not subject to tax irrespective of whether the
duty is characterized as "extra duty, " "off-duty, " or "secondary employment,
" and irrespective of whether the officer is paid directly or through his
agency by an outside source. The term "law enforcement officer" includes
full-time or part-time law enforcement officers, and any auxiliary law
enforcement officer, when such auxiliary law enforcement officer is working
under the direct supervision of a full-time or part-time law enforcement
officer.
2. Example: A deputy
sheriff is a full-time employee of county "A". During his off-duty hours, he is
employed on a contract basis as a security guard by a department store in
county "B". The deputy sheriff is not an employee of the department store.
Since the sheriff's department in county "A" does not have law enforcement
jurisdiction in county "B", the charge the deputy makes to the department store
for providing security guard service is subject to tax.
(b)
1. The
consideration paid solely for directing the control of vehicular traffic not
associated with protection services provided to particular persons or
properties is not taxable. However, the consideration paid for protection
services provided to particular persons or properties, which may include some
traffic control, is fully taxable.
2. Example: A major celebrity will be
appearing at the grand opening of a department store. The department store
engages a security company to provide security officers for the protection of
the celebrity. Since the celebrity will be appearing outside the main entrance
to the department store, some of the security officers will be used to direct
the extra anticipated vehicle traffic in the parking lot in front of the
department store's main entrance. The total charge made by the security company
to the department store for the protection services is taxable.
3. Example: A shopping mall engages a
security company to provide security officers solely to assist in directing an
anticipated heavy amount of vehicle traffic during the holiday shopping season,
while the mall's own security force provides protection to the stores against
shoplifters. The charge that the security company makes to the shopping mall is
not subject to tax.
(6) Detective, burglar protection, and other
protection service providers are considered the ultimate users or consumers of
the tangible personal property sold to them and used in connection with their
service and are required to pay the tax imposed upon such sales of tangible
personal property to their dealers.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 212.18(2), 213.06(1) FS. Law Implemented 212.05(1)(b), (i), 212.06(1)(a), (2)(k), 212.08(7)(uuu), 212.085 FS.
New 5-13-93, Amended 10-17-94, 3-20-96, 7-29-98, 1-12-11, 1-1-24.
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.