(1)
(a) For
the purpose of this rule, the term "lease" includes any rental or license to
use tangible personal property, unless a different meaning is clearly indicated
by the context in which it is used. The term refers to all transactions that
are not bailments in which there is a transfer of possession of tangible
personal property, without regard to limitations upon the use, for a
consideration, without a transfer of title to the property. It is not essential
for a transfer of possession of tangible personal property to include the right
to move the tangible personal property. It includes a transaction under which a
person secures for a consideration the temporary use of tangible personal
property which, although not on his premises, is operated by or under the
direction or control of the person or his employees. All leases of tangible
personal property other than conditional-sale type leases as described in
paragraph (1)(d) of this rule, are operating leases. Whether a transaction is a
"sale" or a "rental, lease, or license to use" shall be determined in
accordance with the provisions of the agreement.
(b) Transfer of possession with respect to an
operating lease means that one of the following attributes of tangible personal
property ownership has been transferred:
1.
Custody or possession of the property, actual or constructive;
2. The right to custody or possession of the
property; or
3. The right to use
and control or direct the use of the property.
(c) For an operating lease, tax applies to
the gross proceeds derived from the lease of tangible personal property for the
entire term of the lease when the lessor of such property is an established
business, part of an established business, or leasing tangible personal
property is incidental or germane to the lessor's business.
1. The "gross proceeds derived" means the
total consideration agreed by the parties for the lease of the tangible
personal property. Sales tax is due and payable by the lessee to the lessor
when the lessee's obligation arises to pay to the lessor each agreed payment,
irrespective of whether the lessee has complied with the obligation to pay the
agreed payment(s) to the lessor.
2.
Gross proceeds for purposes of this rule include, in addition to the amount
attributable to the rental of tangible personal property:
a. Any interest charges whether or not
separately stated, unless the interest charges are clearly imposed for late
payment or other defaults under the lease.
b. Ad valorem taxes due by the lessee or
other person actually using, or entitled to use the tangible personal property
to the lessor or any other person on behalf of the lessor, including
transactions between affiliated entities.
c. Any portion of an insurance premium due by
the lessee or other person actually using, or entitled to use the tangible
personal property to the lessor or any other person on behalf of the lessor
which names the lessor or his assigns as the beneficiary thereof and which is
separately stated or itemized. However, when a lessee or other person pays
insurance for his own protection, the premium is not regarded as gross proceeds
subject to tax, even though the lessor or other person granting the right to
use the tangible personal property is also protected by the coverage.
d. Freight charges incurred as part of the
lease transaction. See Rule
12A-1.045,
F.A.C.
(d)
Where a contract designated as a lease transfers substantially all the
benefits, including depreciation, and risks inherent in the ownership of
tangible personal property to the lessee, and ownership of the property
transfers to the lessee at the end of the lease term, or the contract contains
a purchase option for a nominal amount, the contract shall be regarded as a
sale of tangible personal property under a security agreement commonly referred
to as a conditional-sale type lease, from its inception. The purchase option
shall be regarded as a nominal amount if it does not exceed $100 or 1 percent
of the total contract price, whichever is the lesser amount.
(e) Whether a lease is a conditional-sale
type lease or an operating lease shall be determined in accordance with the
provisions of the agreement, read in light of the facts and circumstances
existing at the time the agreement was executed. Taxpayers who calculated and
paid taxes on leases, entered into after January 2, 1989, pursuant to any
amendments to paragraph (1)(d) of this rule adopted after January 2, 1989,
shall be deemed to be in compliance with the requirements of this
rule.
(f) In the case of a
conditional-sale type lease executed on or after the effective date of this
rule, the Executive Director or the Executive Director's designee in the
responsible program will consider these to be sales and purchases from their
inception with tax due and payable at the moment the contractual agreement is
entered into or when the property comes to rest in this state if at a later
date. Charges for interest or financing are taxable unless the rate of interest
or the actual amount of interest charged is separately stated on the customer's
contract.
(2)
(a) Tangible personal property purchased
exclusively for leasing purposes by a dealer registered with the Department at
the time of purchase may be purchased tax-exempt. The purchasing dealer is
required to issue a copy of the dealer's Annual Resale Certificate to the
selling dealer at the time of purchase in lieu of paying tax, as provided in
Rule
12A-1.039, F.A.C.
(b)
1. Any
person who purchases tangible personal property for the dual purpose of leasing
it to others and also for his own use, or who purchases tangible personal
property with the intention only of leasing it but in fact also uses the
property itself, shall pay the tax on the cost price of such property and shall
also collect and remit the tax on all leases of such property.
2. The subsequent conversion to one's own
use, of tangible personal property which has been purchased tax exempt for
exclusive lease, will be subject to use tax at the time of conversion. The
basis of the use tax will be "fair market value" at the time of conversion. If
the fair market value of the tangible personal property cannot be determined,
then the use tax due at the time of conversion should be based on the
acquisition cost of the tangible personal property. Under no circumstances will
the aggregate amount of sales tax, from leasing and the use tax at the time of
conversion, be less than the total sales tax that would have been due on the
original acquisition cost paid by the lessor.
(3) An out-of-state owner or lessor of
equipment is doing business in Florida when his tangible personal property is
located in Florida in the possession of a lessee, and the owner or lessor shall
register and comply with the provision of Chapter 212, F.S. The lease of
tangible personal property which is used or stored in this state shall be
taxable without regard to its prior use or tax paid on purchase outside this
state.
(4) If the lessee of
tangible personal property removes the property from the State of Florida, the
consideration contracted to be paid subsequent to such removal is not taxable,
provided the lessee furnishes the lessor with a signed certificate identifying
the property, and the date the property was or will be removed from this state.
If the lessee has obtained self-accrual authority from the Department of
Revenue, as provided in Rule
12A-1.0911, F.A.C., then the
lessee's records must substantiate when the property was removed from this
state. Rental amounts charged or paid while the property is in Florida are
taxable, even though the property is moved from the state immediately after the
lessee takes possession of it. This does not apply to motor vehicles. See Rule
12A-1.007, F.A.C., for
application of tax to rental of motor vehicles.
(5)
(a)
Rental receipts from motion picture films, when an admission is charged for
viewing such films, are exempt.
(b)
Tax applies to leases of video cassettes, videotapes, and videodiscs for
private use when the lessee does not obtain or acquire the right to license,
broadcast, exhibit, or reproduce the video cassettes, videotapes, or
videodiscs.
(c) Film and license
fees and direct charges for films, videotapes, transcriptions, program
syndication, and network syndication used by television stations, radio
stations, or networks are exempt.
(6) The lease payments on tangible personal
property which is leased solely for the purpose of leasing it to a third party
are exempt. The prime lessee is required to register with the Department as a
dealer and issue the prime lessor a resale certificate in lieu of
tax.
(7) Each operating lease
payment due under a lease purchase or similar agreement which also grants the
lessee an option to purchase the tangible personal property is taxable. When
the option is exercised and title to the property passes to the
lessee-purchaser, no tax is due on that part of the purchase price upon which
lease tax has been paid. Only the balance of the purchase price required to be
paid by the purchaser upon the exercise of the option is taxable.
(8) Repair parts purchased for use in the
maintenance of tangible personal property used exclusively for leasing purposes
are exempt when purchased by the lessor. When purchased by the lessee, they are
taxable. Charges by the lessor to a lessee for repairing property which is not
a part of the lease contract are taxable. Charges to the lessee by a third
party for repairing the leased property are taxable.
(9)
(a) A
transaction involving the use of equipment with an operator supplied by the
owner of the equipment is a lease if control or direction over the use of the
equipment passes to the customer.
(b) When the operator of the equipment is on
the payroll of the lessee, the contract constitutes a rental of tangible
personal property and is subject to the tax.
(c) A transaction is not a lease if it is for
the performance of a specific job in a manner to be determined by the owner or
his operator.
(d) When the owner of
equipment furnishes the operator and all operating supplies, and contracts for
their use to perform certain work under his direction and according to his
customer's specifications, and the customer does not take possession or have
any direction or control over the physical operation, the contract constitutes
a service transaction and not the rental of tangible personal property, and no
tax is due on the transaction.
(10) The tax on leases of machinery, such as
cigar machinery, etc., must include not only the basic rental charge for each
machine, but also the rentals or royalties assessed on the gross output of each
machine.
(11) If equipment is
purchased primarily for use by a contractor and is subsequently leased, it is
taxable at the time of purchase and also upon its subsequent lease, unless the
lease qualifies as an occasional lease. See subsection
12A-1.037(6),
F.A.C., for occasional rental of tangible personal property.
(12) The charges under contracts between
separate legal entities, such as two corporations, or between a corporation and
an individual or between a corporation and a partnership covering the lease of
tangible personal property are taxable, even though the stock of the
corporation is owned by the same stockholders or by the other contracting
parties. Charges under a lease between a partnership and one or more of the
individual partners are taxable.
(13) A corporation must charge tax on the
gross proceeds derived, from leases of equipment to an individual or to
individuals owning 100 percent of its stock.
(14)
(a)
Tax is due and payable on the charge by a dealer to a customer for the
retention of tangible personal property beyond a stipulated time. Such
"charges" shall constitute part of the total consideration for the continued
possession of tangible personal property when the lessor records such charges
as rental income in its books and records. However, if such charges are
specifically designated and itemized in the contract, charge ticket, sales
slip, invoice, or other tangible evidence of the lease as a penalty or late
fee, then such charges or fees are only incidental to the sale, and do not
constitute part of the sales price; therefore, such charges are not subject to
tax.
(b)
1. The amount charged by a lessor to a lessee
to cancel or terminate a lease agreement is subject to tax if the lessor
records such charge as rental income in its books and records. If such charge
is not recorded as rental income by the lessor, then such charge is not
considered a payment for the lease of the tangible personal property but as a
payment to cancel or terminate the lease agreement.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of
subparagraph (b)1. above, if the amount paid by a lessee to a lessor to cancel
or terminate a lease agreement is recorded as a rental expense in the lessee's
books and records, then such payment is subject to tax. However, if the lessee
does not record that payment as a rental expense, then such payment is not
considered a payment for the lease of the tangible personal property but as a
payment to cancel or terminate the agreement, and is not subject to tax. If the
lessee records the payment as a rental expense but does not remit tax to the
lessor on such payment, then the lessee is required to remit the tax on such
charge directly to the Department. The lessee is required to remit the tax on
Form DR-15, Sales and Use Tax Return, if a registered dealer, or if
unregistered, the lessee is required to remit the tax on Form DR-15MO,
Out-of-State Purchase. Forms DR-15 and DR-15MO are incorporated by reference in
Rule
12A-1.097, F.A.C.
3. Should the lessee record the payment as a
rental expense but provide documentation, such as a lease or other tangible
evidence, to establish that the payment is for other than the use of tangible
personal property, then such payment is not subject to tax.
4. Should the lessor or lessee record the
payment as other than rental income or rental expense, but documentation
exists, such as a lease or other tangible evidence, to establish that the
payment was additional payment for the use of tangible personal property, then
such payment is subject to tax.
(15) When a boat or vessel is chartered with
crew furnished, for the carriage or transportation of persons or property from
one point to another and the charterer does not have any direction or control
over its operation, the contract constitutes a service transaction and not the
rental of tangible personal property and is exempt. See paragraph (17)(c) for
charter fishing vessels.
(16) When
a boat or vessel is leased or rented on a "bare boat" basis, the sales tax
applies to the gross proceeds derived from the lease or rental. The lease or
rental is considered to be on a "bare boat" basis when:
(a) The lessor does not provide a
crew;
(b) The lessor does provide a
crew but it is hired by the lessee under a separate employment contract. (Under
such circumstances the employment contract cost is not a part of the gross
proceeds derived from the lease or rental and is not
taxable.)
(17)
(a) When the owner of a boat or vessel
operated as a "head-boat" or "party boat" supplies the crew, which remains
under the control and direction of the owner, and makes a charge measured on an
admission or entrance or length of stay aboard the vessel for the privilege of
participating in sightseeing, dinner cruises, sport, recreation, or similar
activities including fishing, the charge is taxable as an admission.
(b) Example: A vessel having a capacity for 6
persons operates as a "party" or "head-boat" with a charge of $50 per person
for a day fishing trip whether 1 or 6 persons are carried on the trip. The
charge made is considered a charge for admission and is subject to sales
tax.
(c) The charge made for
chartering any boat or vessel with a crew furnished, solely for the purpose of
fishing, is exempt from the tax on admissions and from the tax on leases or
rentals of tangible personal property.
(d) Example: A vessel similar to that in the
example in paragraph (b) above is available for a day fishing trip for a charge
of $300 per day, with crew furnished, without any reduction for the number of
persons participating in the trip. This transaction qualifies as a charter
fishing trip and the charge is not subject to sales tax.
(18) Unless a boat or vessel is purchased
exclusively for rental on a bare boat basis as described in subsection (16),
the purchase of the boat or vessel and parts thereof is taxable. See Rule
12A-1.0641, F.A.C., for vessels
engaged in interstate and foreign commerce.
(19) The rental charges on water recreation
or transportation devices, including but not limited to boats, sailboats,
sailboards, surfboards, pedal boats, skis, jet skis, and canoes are taxable as
rentals of tangible personal property.
(20) The rental of aircraft is
taxable.
(21) The charge made by an
air taxi (charter) to transport a passenger to a certain destination (the
passenger does not pilot or take possession of the aircraft) is a charge for
transportation service rather than a rental and is exempt from tax.
(22) A charge for flight instruction, which
includes supervised solo flights, is exempt. The purchase of an aircraft for
this use is taxable.
(23) The
charge for any solo flights made by the student after completing his flight
course, even though he may be logging hours for a rating or license, is a
rental and is taxable. For additional tax information on aircraft, see
subsection
12A-1.007(10),
F.A.C.
(24) Life preservers,
cushions, oars, oar locks, anchors, anchor ropes, and similar equipment
purchased for boats which are to be used exclusively for rental purposes are
exempt.
(25) The rentals of
batteries, life vests, and other survival equipment are taxable.
(26) The rentals of beach umbrellas, beach
chairs, dugouts, portable canvas cabanas, and similar equipment are
taxable.
(27) The rentals of riding
horses by riding stables are taxable.
(28) Rentals of golf carts, clubs, etc., by
private and public (municipal) golf courses and by golf professionals are
taxable.
(29) Skating rink charges
for admission to the premises are taxable. Charges for the privilege of skating
are taxable. If the customer rents skates from the rink, the rental charge is
taxable.
(30) When the owner of a
float contracts with a second party to furnish the driver and float in a parade
for the benefit of the second party, the charge made is considered a charge for
service and is exempt. The owner is liable for tax on the materials he uses in
the construction of the float. If the owner of a float leases it to a second
party and surrenders possession to such party, the rental charge is
taxable.
(31) The rental of stoves,
ice boxes, counter, etc., in connection with an established business is
taxable.
(32) Meat saws, chopper
knives, and replacement parts therefor furnished to meat markets for a charge
are exempt to the dealer at the time of acquisition, and the charges to the
meat market are taxable. Such equipment, when furnished to meat markets at no
charge, is taxable to the dealer at the time of acquisition.
(33) Caterers are required to pay tax on the
purchases or rentals of all dishes, tables, chairs, silver, linens, kitchen
utensils, artificial palms, and other items used by them in the conduct of
their business. The caterer should pay tax to his supplier and should not
furnish the supplier with a resale certificate, except in those instances where
he is purchasing or renting such items exclusively for rental and for which he
makes a separate charge to his customer.
(34) The rental or lease of a United States
flag or the official flag of Florida is exempt. The rental or lease as a unit
of a kit that includes the United States flag or the official flag of Florida
and related accessories, such as a mounting bracket, a standard, a halyard, and
instructions for the display of the flag is also exempt. The lease or rental of
any accessory, when not leased or rented as a part of a kit containing the
United States flag or the official flag of Florida, is taxable. See Rule
12A-1.001, F.A.C., for the
exemption provided for sales of flags and flag kits.
(35) The charges made for rentals of air
conditioning equipment which remains tangible personal property are
taxable.
(36) The revenue derived
from coin operated lockers in hotels, depots, etc., is taxable.
(37) Tanks, drums, pipe, etc., sold or rented
by the dealer to persons using liquefied petroleum gas are taxable. The rental
charge shall be the fair market price and not a token monthly charge for the
use of the equipment. LP gas dealers should pay tax to their suppliers on such
items unless purchased for rental or resale.
(38) The rental of well point equipment is
taxable.
(39) The rental of small
roadside signs, warning lights, and barricades, which are not a part of real
property, is taxable.
(40) The
entire charge for the lease or license for use of chemical toilet units is
taxable, including the cleaning services, since the cleaning services are
required to be provided or performed by the lessor or licensor.
(41) Charges made by buses, taxicabs, etc.,
for advertising space thereon are exempt.
(42) The total amount charged for the rental
of a mobile home is taxable, unless rented as a permanent residence. See Rule
12A-1.061, F.A.C.
(43) The receipts from coin operated washing
machines provided to tenants by apartment building owners are exempt.
(44) The rental of books is taxable when the
total charge exceeds 9ยข, even when the lessor is a public or municipally
owned library.
(45) The charge made
for the use of a tanning device is not taxable as a license to use tangible
personal property but is a service which is exempt from tax. Purchases of
tanning devices and related supplies used in the performance of the exempt
service are subject to tax. See paragraph (2)(b) of this rule.
(46)
(a)
Assignment of leases. When an "operating lease" is assigned, whether or not
title to the leased or rented property is transferred, the rental or lease
payments are subject to tax. If title is transferred, tax applies based on the
sales price. The situations described below involve assignments of existing
"operating leases" subject to tax measured by rental payments:
(b) Assignment of a right and creation of a
security interest. This type of assignment is an assignment by the lessor of
the right to receive the lease payments together with the creation of a
security interest in the leased property which is designated as such. The
assignee has recourse against the assignor. The assignee does not have the
rights of a lessor and is not obligated to collect or remit tax on the rental
payments. The lessor is subject to the obligation of collecting and remitting
the tax even though the lessor does not receive the rental payments directly
from the lessee. The assignee, however, is required to remit any amounts paid
to him by the lessee as tax. If the assignee enforces the security agreement
and takes title to the property, the assignee as lessor becomes responsible for
collecting and remitting the tax.
(c) Assignment of contract with transfer of
right, title, and interst for security purposes. This type of assignment is an
assignment by the lessor of the lease contract together with the transfer of
the right, title, and interest in the leased property for security purposes.
The assignee has recourse against the assignor. After the termination of the
lease, the property usually reverts to the original lessor. The assignee, in
this situation, has assumed the position of a lessor. The assignee is required
to hold a Dealer's Certificate of Registration and is obligated to collect and
remit the tax. The assignor is required to obtain a resale certificate from the
assignee in lieu of tax.
(d)
Assignment of contract and all rights, title, and interest. This type of
assignment is an assignment by the lessor of the lease contract together with
the transfer of all rights, title, and interest in the leased property. The
assignee has no recourse against the assignor. The assignment is not for
security purposes, and the assignor does not retain any ownership rights in the
contract or the property. The assignee, in this situation, has assumed the
position of a lessor. The assignee is required to hold a Dealer's Certificate
of Registration and is obligated to collect and remit the tax. The assignor is
required to obtain a resale certificate from the assignee in lieu of
tax.