1 CCR 201-4
Department of Revenue SALES AND USE TAX 1 CCR 201-4 [Editor's Notes follow the text of the rules at the end of this CCR Document.] Rule 39-26-102(1.3). Auctioneers.
(1) Auctioneer's Duty to Collect Tax.
(a) Definitions.
(i) Auction Sale. An auction sale is a sale conducted by an auctioneer who solicits offers to purchase tangible personal property or services until the highest offer is made.
(ii) Auctioneer. An auctioneer is a person who sells an interest in tangible personal property or taxable services owned by the auctioneer or another person at an auction sale. An auctioneer has the legal authority to accept on behalf of the seller an offer to buy. An interest in property or services includes a lease and license. A person selling goods on consignment for another is an auctioneer if the sale is made at an auction sale. An auctioneer includes a person who is a lienholder, such as storageman, pawnbroker, motor vehicle mechanic, or artisan, and is selling the property at an auction sale to foreclose such lien.
(b) General Rule. An auctioneer is a retailer and, therefore, must collect, report, and remit Colorado sales tax and state-administered local sales taxes to the Department, even if the auctioneer is a disclosed agent of the owner.
(c) Calculation of Tax. Sales tax is calculated on the gross price paid by the buyer for the purchase of taxable tangible personal property or a taxable service, including any non-optional fee that only successful bidders must pay in order to purchase taxable goods or services, even if the non- optional fee is separately stated from the bid price paid for the auctioned item.
(i) Examples.
(d) Local Sales Taxes. Auctioneers must collect any applicable state- administered local sales taxes. For motor vehicles sold at auction, an auctioneer, who is required to collect sales tax (see paragraph (2)(b), below), must collect any applicable state-administered local sales taxes, unless the motor vehicle is exempted from such local sales tax by § 29-2- 105(1)(e), C.R.S.
(2) Exceptions to Auctioneer's Duty to Collect.
(a) Licensed Owners. An auctioneer is not required to collect sales tax if the auctioneer sells taxable tangible personal property or services on behalf of a seller who, at the time of the sale, holds a current Colorado sales tax license issued by the Department. The licensed owner is responsible for collecting, remitting, and filing a sales tax return, even if the auctioneer was contractually obligated to the owner to collect the sales tax from the purchaser(s) and report and remit the tax to the Department, or if the auctioneer was contractually required to remit such collected tax to the licensed owner. An auctioneer, who is not legally required to collect tax because the owner is a licensed retailer but is collecting such tax on behalf of the owner, must disclose to the successful bidder the owner's name and owner's retail license number. An auctioneer who is not legally responsible to collect sales tax because the owner is a licensed retailer, but who nevertheless collects sales tax from a purchaser must hold the same in trust on behalf of the State of Colorado, and is liable for such tax if the tax is not remitted to the licensed seller or the Department.
(b) Sales of Motor Vehicles. An auctioneer is not required to collect sales taxes due on the sale of a motor vehicle, unless the auctioneer is licensed by Colorado as an automotive dealer pursuant to § 44-20-101, et seq., C.R.S and the sale or use of the vehicle is subject to tax. §§ 39-26- 113(7)(a) and (b), C.R.S.
(c) Property Exempt from Sales Tax. An auctioneer does not collect sales tax if the property is exempt from sales tax, such as an exempt farm close-out sale.
(d) Burden of Proof. An auctioneer has the burden of establishing with objective, verifiable documentation an exception or exemption from collecting, reporting, and remitting sales tax. An auctioneer selling on behalf of a licensed seller or to a purchaser with a sales tax exemption certificate must obtain a copy of the owner's sales tax license or, in the case of an exempt sale, the sales tax license number or the purchaser's sales tax exemption certificate, and verify that such license or certificate is valid at the time of the sale.
Cross References 1. See 1 CCR 201-4, Rule 39-26-716.4(a) regarding an auctioneer's duties for an exempt farm close-out sale.
2. See 1 CCR 201-4, Rule 39-26-718 for information on charitable entities conducting fundraising by auction sales.
Rule 39-26-102(3). Doing Business in This State.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify when a retailer is doing business in this state.
(1) General Rule. A person is doing business in this state if that person:
(a) maintains directly, indirectly, or by a subsidiary any place of business in Colorado listed in section 39-26-102(3)(a), C.R.S., regardless of the amount of that person’s retail sales in Colorado; or (b) solicits business in Colorado in the manner described in section 39-26- 102(3)(b), C.R.S., and makes retail sales in Colorado at or exceeding the thresholds prescribed by section 39-26-102(3)(c), C.R.S.
(2) Place of Business in Colorado.
(a) A person who maintains a place of business in Colorado as described in paragraph (1)(a) of this rule is doing business in this state at all times the person maintains such place of business. Retailers that make sales or take orders at special events located in Colorado maintain a place of business in Colorado as described in paragraph (1)(a) of this rule at the location of the special event for the duration of the special event.
(b) When a person ceases to maintain a place of business in Colorado as described in paragraph (1)(a) of this rule, that person is no longer doing business in this state unless the person satisfies the requirements of other provisions in section 39-26-102(3), C.R.S., and this rule.
(3) Economic Nexus.
(a) A person who solicits business in Colorado in the manner described in section 39-26-102(3)(b), C.R.S., is doing business in this state:
(i) for the entire calendar year if the person made more than one hundred thousand dollars of retail sales in Colorado in the preceding calendar year; or (ii) for the remainder of the calendar year commencing on the first day of the month following the ninetieth day after the retailer’s aggregate retail sales in Colorado for that calendar year exceed one hundred thousand dollars.
(b) Application of Economic Nexus Rules. The following rules apply to paragraph (3)(a) of this rule.
(i) All retail sales, as defined in section 39-26-102(9), C.R.S., must be used to determine if a person has satisfied the thresholds prescribed by section 39-26-102(3)(c), C.R.S., regardless of whether such retail sales are subject to Colorado sales tax.
(ii) The location of a sale, within or without Colorado, shall be determined in accordance with section 39-26-104(3), C.R.S.
(iii) Every person soliciting business in Colorado shall maintain records sufficient to determine whether such person is doing business in this state pursuant to paragraph (3)(a) of this rule.
(iv) The retail sales of a marketplace facilitator shall include:
For purposes of this rule food includes food and drink. Any food, as specified in 7 U.S.C. section 2012(g), as such section exists on October 1, 1987, or is thereafter amended, which is purchased with food stamps pursuant to the federal food stamp program is exempt from the state sales tax and from all local sales taxes, including those of home rule municipalities.
Any food, as specified in 42 U.S.C. section 1786, as such section exists on October 1, 1987, or is thereafter amended, which is purchased with WIC vouchers or checks pursuant to the federal special supplemental program for women, infants, and children is exempt from the state sales tax and from all local sales taxes, including those of home rule municipalities.
If a purchase is exempt from the state sales tax as a qualified purchase with food stamps or WIC vouchers or checks, it is also exempt for Regional Transportation District (RTD) sales tax purposes and for tourism tax purposes.
Any food not purchased with federal food stamps or WIC vouchers or checks is subject to taxation or exemption as provided in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 below:
(1) (a) (1) Food for domestic home consumption as defined by the federal food stamps program in 7 U.S.C. sec. 2012(g) is exempt from taxation as provided below, except for those items specified in 1.c. (This list of food and nonfood items under the federal food stamp program is intended as a guide and not a complete listing.) The federal food stamp program definition of food includes, among other items, meat, poultry, fish, bread and breadstuffs, cereals, vegetables, fruits, fruit and vegetable juices, dairy products, coffee, tea, cocoa, candy, breath mints, condiments, spices, soft drinks, cakes, cookies, potato chips, special dietary foods (e.g., diabetic and dietetic), enriched or fortified foods, health food items (e.g., Metrecal, Enfamil, Sustegen, wheat germ, brewer's yeast, sunflower seeds which are packaged for human consumption, rose hips powder which is used for preparing tea, and other food products which are substituted for more commonly used food items in the diet), infant formulas, and items incorporated into foods with other ingredients (e.g., pectin, lard, and vegetable oils).
(2) Seeds and plants which produce food for human consumption are exempt from sales taxes only when they are purchased with food stamps. However, for state sales tax purposes see § 39-26- 716(4)(b), C.R.S.
(3) Water marketed in containers and ice for human consumption are exempt from taxation, except for carbonated water as specified in (1)(c)(1) of this rule.
(b) Items which are considered nonfood items under the federal food stamp program and thus are subject to sales tax include:
(1) Nonfood items even if sold in grocery or similar type stores (e.g., hardware, clothing, common household items such as cooking utensils, cleaning and paper products, soaps, toiletry articles, grooming items and cosmetics);
(2) Alcoholic beverages but excluding cooking wine, wine vinegar, and non-alcoholic cocktail mixes;
(3) Tobacco and tobacco products;
(4) Foods which are hot at the point of sale and which are kept above room temperature to make them palatable and suitable for immediate consumption, food marketed to be heated on the premises whether or not hot at the point of sale, and other food sold for consumption on the premises;
(5) Items not intended for human consumption (e.g., laundry starch, pet foods, other animal foods, and seeds marketed or packaged as bird seed);
(6) Items specifically labeled as being for use other than human consumption (e.g., decorative dye for hard cooked eggs);
(7) Food preservation equipment and items (e.g., pressure cookers, canning jars and lids, paraffin, freezer containers, and wrapping paper);
(8) Medicines (except that prescription drugs are exempt from the state sales tax by virtue of § 39-26-717(1)(a), C.R.S.;
(9) Therapeutic products and deficiency correctors (e.g., vitamins and minerals which are marketed in various form such as tablets, capsules, powders and liquids; products such as cod liver oil which is used primarily as a source of vitamins A and D; and other such items which are primarily used for medicinal purposes or as health aids). (These products serve as supplements to food or food products rather than as food and, therefore, are not eligible. Because essential vitamins and minerals occur naturally in foods, a good diet will include a variety of foods that together will supply all nutrients needed. Since these products serve as deficiency correctors or therapeutic agents to supplement diets deficient in essential nutrition rather than as foods, they are not eligible.);
(10) Health aids (e.g., patent medicines and other products used primarily as health aids and therapeutic agents, including aspirin, cough drops or syrups, cold remedies, and antacids); and (11) Coffee and related food products sold to offices and commercial establishments as part of a “coffee” service.
(c) Items which may qualify as food under the federal food stamp program but do not qualify as food for purposes of the sales tax exemption (unless purchased with federal food stamps or WIC vouchers or checks) include:
(1) Carbonated water marketed in containers (e.g., sparkling or seltzer water; however, tonic water, pop and other sugar or sugar substitute carbonated beverages do qualify for the sales tax exemption);
(2) Chewing gum;
(3) Seeds and plants to grow food (e.g., tomato or other fruit or vegetable plants or seeds, however; for state sales tax purposes see § 39-26-716(4)(b), C.R.S.;
(4) Prepared salads, other than frozen salads, requiring refrigeration sold in any size or type of container (e.g., egg salad, potato salad, fruit salad, pasta salad, gelatin salad, bean salad, fish salad, poultry salad, meat salad, etc.,) whether prepared by the retailer on site or at a warehouse, or by a manufacturer for sale to and by a retailer;
(5) Salad bars (i.e., cut up fruits and vegetables sold in various sized servings, usually by the pound or plate, along with accessory foods and condiments, such as soup, rolls, crackers, and salad dressings);
(6) Cold sandwiches other than frozen sandwiches;
(7) Deli trays (e.g., meats, fish, cheeses, fruits or vegetables, etc., sold on trays prepared by or for the retailer);
(8) Food sold by or through vending machines; and (9) Prepared food or food marketed for immediate consumption as specified in paragraphs 2 or 3 below.
(d) It is not the obligation of a retailer to collect the sales tax on food marketed for domestic home consumption which after purchase is converted to or used for other purposes which are taxable. Such conversion or use is subject to any applicable sales or use tax (e.g., edible oil used to lubricate machines and food and coffee purchased for office or commercial uses).
(2) While food marketed for domestic home consumption, with exceptions noted above, generally qualifies for the sales tax exemption, prepared food or food marketed for immediate consumption generally does not qualify. The following guidelines apply in determining whether food is considered food for home consumption contrasted with prepared food or food for immediate consumption:
(a) Prepared food or food marketed for immediate consumption includes all food furnished or served for consumption at tables, chairs, or counters, or from trays, glasses, dishes, or other tableware provided by the retailer.
(b) All hot foods and food marketed to be heated on the premises are considered to be prepared for immediate consumption and are therefore subject to tax regardless of the nature of the business making such sale and regardless of whether immediately consumed.
(c) Prepared food or food marketed for immediate consumption also includes food served or furnished in or by restaurants, cafes, lunch counters, hotels, drugstores, social clubs, nightclubs, cabarets, resorts, snack bars, caterers, carryout shops, and other like places of business at which prepared food is regularly sold, including sales from pushcarts, motor vehicles, and other mobile facilities. (See § 39-26-104(1)(e), C.R.S.) (d) The following types of establishments typically do not sell food marketed for domestic home consumption: newsstands; gift shops; shops located in public transportation centers; offices or other public or commercial buildings; entertainment facilities (e.g., theaters); and recreation facilities (e.g., sports arenas and stadiums).
(e) The following types of establishments typically do sell food marketed for domestic home consumption: grocery stores, convenience stores, bakeries, butcher shops, fruit and vegetable stores, and department stores.
(3) In determining whether food is considered for domestic home consumption or prepared food or food for immediate consumption, the following guidelines apply to the specialized establishments enumerated below:
(a) Bakery and Pastry Shops.
(1) Sales by bakeries or pastry shops which do not have eating facilities are not subject to tax;
(2) Sales by bakeries or pastry shops which have eating facilities are taxable except for items sold on a take-out or to-go basis not to be consumed at the eating facilities provided by the retailer.
(b) Ice Cream Shops.
(1) Sales of ice cream cones, cups, sundaes, and the like, marketed for immediate consumption are subject to tax.
(2) Items marketed in containers or packages for domestic home consumption, such as ice cream, ice cream bars, popsicles and fudgsicles, toppings sold in cans or jars, and cakes or pies, are not taxable.
(c) Caterers. Normally all food sold by a caterer is subject to tax. However, if such caterer operates a retail store selling food items marketed for domestic home consumption, the rules governing taxability of food as set forth in paragraphs 1 and 2 apply. Sales by caterers of food from motor vehicles and other mobile facilities are taxable.
(d) Restaurants, Snack Bars, Carry Outs, Etc. All food sold by restaurants and similar establishments is subject to tax. (See § 39-26-104(1)(e), C.R.S.) However, when such restaurants also operate a pastry, ice cream, or grocery type sales operation, the rules applicable to such establishments apply to sales made from such operations.
(e) Liquor Stores. Food marketed for domestic home consumption by a liquor store is exempt. Alcoholic beverages, including spirituous, malt or vinous liquors, are taxable. However, cocktail mixes which do not contain alcohol, cooking wines, and wine vinegars are exempt.
(f) Street Vendors. Street vendors (e.g., push carts, mobile food stands, and the like) will generally be subject to tax on all their sales. Sales of vegetables, fruit, and other groceries marketed for domestic home consumption by mobile markets or door-to-door vendors are exempt.
(g) Vending Machines. All sales of food vended by or through machines are taxable except that all vending machine sales of 15 cents or less are exempt from the state sales tax.
(h) See also the exemption for certain vending machine sales in § 39-26- 714(2), C.R.S., which is effective on January 1, 2000, for state sales tax. For municipal and county sales taxes, the vending machine food exemption is effective only if the local government adopts the exemption by ordinance or resolution.
Rule 39-26-102(5).
“Gross taxable sales” means the gross sales of a person during any given reporting period, (a) Excluding:
(1) The sales price of any property returned during the period after the sales price has been included in taxable sales, but only after the full sales price including the tax has been refunded by cash or credit;
(2) Sales exempt from the sales tax;
(3) The fair market value of property taken in exchange by a retailer for resale in the usual course of his business;
(4) Any worthless account actually charged off for income tax purposes during the reporting period, to the extent such account has been included in taxable sales, except that a loss from a worthless check in excess of the taxable sale is not allowed as a bad debt deduction for the excess; and (b) Including any recovery of a bad debt previously deducted from gross sales to determine taxable sales.
See Rule 39-26-111 for credit sales.
Adjustments in a sales price, such as allowable discounts, rebates and credits, cannot be anticipated; i.e., the tax must be based upon the original price unless the adjustments actually have been made prior to the filing of the return wherein such sale is reported. However, if the price upon which the tax was computed and paid to the state by the vendor is subsequently adjusted prior to payment of the tax by the purchaser, a proper credit may be taken by the vendor against the tax due on the next return.
No credit for discount will be allowed to a vendor unless the related decrease in sales tax actually is passed on to the purchaser.
A cash discount allowed for payment on or before a given date is not an allowable adjustment to the selling price in determining taxable sales. If any vendor makes overpayment of the tax or is entitled to a credit on his tax payments because of mistake, errors or canceled sales, credit for the amount of overpayment may be taken by the vendor on a subsequent return; but if the vendor is no longer engaged in business, he should apply for a refund. (See Rule 39-26-703–2.) If any sold article is returned to the vendor for adjustment, replacement, or exchange under a guarantee as to quality or service, and if another article is substituted pursuant to the guarantee free or at a reduced price, the tax shall be recomputed on the actual amount paid to the vendor for the substituted article, taking into consideration any other adjustments made at the time of the replacement.
Rule 39-26-102(7)(a).
“Purchase price” includes:
(1) The amount of money received or due in cash and credits.
(2) Property at fair market value taken in exchange but not for resale in the usual course of the retailer's business.
(3) Any consideration valued in money, such as trading stamps or coupons whereby the manufacturer or someone else reimburses the retailer for part of the purchase price and other media of exchange.
(4) The total price charged on credit sales including finance charges which are not separately stated.
An amount charged as interest on the unpaid balance of the purchase price is not part of the purchase price unless the amount added to the purchase price is included in the principal amount of a promissory note; except the interest or carrying charge set out separately from the unpaid balance of the purchase price on the face of the note is not part of the purchase price. An amount charged for insurance on the property sold and separately stated is not part of the purchase price.
(5) Installation, delivery and wheeling-in charges included in the purchase price and not separately stated.
(6) Repealed.
(7) Indirect federal manufacturers' excise taxes, such as taxes on automobiles, tires and floor stock.
(8) The gross purchase price of articles sold after manufacturing or after having been made to order, including the gross value of all the materials used, labor and service performed and the profit thereon. (See Rule 39-26-102(12).) “Purchase price” does not include the fair market value of property exchanged if such property is to be sold thereafter in the retailer’s usual course of business. This is not limited to exchanges in Colorado. Out of state trade-ins are an allowable adjustment to the purchase price. Matthews v. State of Colo., Dept. of Revenue, 193 Colo 44, 562 P.2d 415. (1977).
Rule 39-26-102(9). Retail Sale.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this regulation are §§ 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102(9), and 39-26-102(10), C.R.S. The purpose of this regulation is to clarify that retail sales can be between private parties.
A retail sale is a sale to the user or consumer of tangible personal property, commodities, or services whether the sale is made by a retailer or is between private parties.
Rule 39-26-102(10).
“Sale” or “sale and purchase” shall mean any transaction, except as provided in 26- 102.7(b), whereby a person, in exchange for any consideration, such as money or its equivalent, property, the rendering of a service, or the promise of any of these things:
(a) transfers or agrees to transfer all or part of his interest, or the interest of any other for whom he is acting as an agent, in any tangible personal property to any other person; or (b) performs or furnishes, or agrees to perform or furnish, or contracts to have another perform or furnish, any service taxable under this Act for any other person. Whether the transaction is absolute or conditional, it shall be considered a sale if it transfers from a seller to a buyer the ownership or possession of tangible personal property or specified services.
A bona fide gift of tangible personal property is not a “sale”. Rule 39-26-102(11). Rooms and Accommodations.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102(11), and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to define the terms “room” and “accommodation” as those terms are used in section 39-26-102(11), C.R.S., and elsewhere in article 26 of title 39, C.R.S. The rule also defines “auto camp.” (1) A “room” is a regular sleeping room or unit which is a part of a hotel, apartment hotel, inn, lodging house, guest house, motor hotel, motel, mobile home, trailer coach, dude ranch or guest ranch, for which a charge is made for its use.
(2) “Accommodation” includes the furnishing of space in any auto camp, or trailer court and park, under any concession, permit, right to access, license to use, or any other agreement by or through which any such space may be used or occupied.
(3)
(a) An “auto camp” is a temporary, overnight lodging accommodation that specifically caters to persons traveling by motor vehicle, and that offers one or more of the following amenities:
(i) vehicle electricity supply;
(ii) vehicle water supply;
(iii) a vehicle sewage and waste water dump station; or (iv) a temporary or permanent overnight shelter (such as a tent, yurt, teepee, or other shelter) provided by the owner or operator of the auto camp.
(b) A temporary, overnight lodging accommodation whose only amenity is stations for charging the engine of an electric vehicle is not an “auto camp.”
Rule 39-26-102(12).
Sales and use tax applies to charges for manufacturing, producing, fabricating, and processing tangible personal property which has been made-to-order or tailor-made for the customer. Manufacturing, producing, fabricating or processing is usually deemed to have occurred when tangible personal property is created, transformed or reduced to a different state, quality, form, property or thing. Transformation may occur by hand, machine, art, chemical action or natural means.
An operation which restores a used or worn item of tangible personal property to its essentially original form and use is not considered manufacturing, producing, fabricating or processing within the meaning of this rule.
The amount charged the purchaser for labor or services rendered in installing and applying purchased tangible personal property is not subject to tax; provided, that such amount is separately stated and such separate statement is not to avoid the tax upon the actual sales price of tangible personal property.
Any person making a sale subject to this rule must be licensed and may purchase tax free all articles of tangible personal property which enter into and become a component part of the article sold. Purchases of all other articles of tangible personal property not becoming an ingredient or component part of the finished product are taxable. Rule 39-26-102(15). Tangible Personal Property.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102(15), and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to provide clarification on the definition of tangible personal property.
(1) Tangible personal property embraces all goods, wares, merchandise, products and commodities, and all tangible or corporeal things and substances which are dealt in, capable of being possessed and exchanged, except newspapers excluded by the law.
(2) Tangible personal property does not include:
(a) real property, such as land and buildings, nor tangible personal property that loses its identity when it becomes an integral and inseparable part of the realty, and is removable only with substantial damage to the premises. Property severed from real estate becomes tangible personal property.
(b) intangible personal property constituting mere rights of action and having no intrinsic value, such as contracts, deeds, mortgages, stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit or membership, or uncancelled United States postage or revenue stamps sold for postage or revenue purposes.
(c) water in pipes, conduits, ditches or reservoirs, but does include water in bottles, wagons, tanks or other containers.
(d) computer software that does not meet the criteria enumerated in section 39-26-102(15)(c), C.R.S.
(3) An advertising supplement included in a newspaper is considered part of the newspaper and is exempt. See Special Rule 32, Newspapers, Magazines and Other Publications.
(4) The method of delivery does not impact the taxability of a sale of tangible personal property. Examples of methods used to deliver tangible personal property under current technology include, but are not limited to, the following: compact disc, electronic download, and internet streaming.
(a) Example 1: Purchaser buys a movie on a VHS tape. Sales tax is due on the purchase price of the movie.
(b) Example 2: Purchaser buys a movie on a compact disc. Sales tax is due on the purchase price of the movie.
(c) Example 3: Purchaser buys a movie through the internet, and then downloads the movie to the purchaser’s computer. Sales tax is due on the purchase price of the movie.
(d) Example 4: Purchaser buys a movie, which purchaser accesses through an internet browser. Purchaser does not save a copy of the movie to purchaser’s computer. Sales tax is due on the purchase price of the movie.
(e) Example 5: Purchaser pays a monthly subscription fee, which allows purchaser to select and stream movies and television shows from a library of available titles. Sales tax is due on the monthly fee.
(5) Whether a purchase that includes tangible personal property and services, and/or other types of property, is subject to tax is determined by application of the true object test. If the true object of the purchase is the tangible personal property, then sales tax is due on the purchase price.
Rule 39-26-102(17). Definition of Taxpayer.
In the statutory definition of “taxpayer”, the term “person obligated to account to the executive director” means any person obligated to make a return and to pay over to the Department any tax collected or to be paid under Article 26 of Title 39, C.R.S., and includes licensed or unlicensed retailers, sellers, consumers, and purchasers. Rule 39-26-102(19).
“Wholesale sale” means all sales of tangible personal property or specified services to a licensed retail merchant, jobber, dealer, or wholesaler that purchases the property for resale, and all sales of tangible personal property or services specified in C.R.S. 1973, 39-26-104 to manufacturers and compounders that incorporate such tangible personal property or service into a substance, commodity or product for resale. All sales to the user or consumer of tangible personal property or services specified in C.R.S. 1973, 39-26-104 are taxable retail sales, regardless of the purchaser's trade or business. A reporting form will be furnished annually to wholesalers to report such retail sales.
It is the duty of the vendor to collect the tax unless he is furnished with satisfactory proof that the sale is exempt by statute. Also it is the duty of the vendor to obtain the sales or store license number or other satisfactory proof if the purchase is for resale. In case of doubt, the department should be contacted or the tax collected. It shall be presumed that any purchaser not having a valid sales tax license or store license is the ultimate user or consumer of any property that is purchased. Any sale to such a person will be a taxable retail sale regardless of the disposition of the property sold, unless the vendor can establish that the purchase was for resale in the ordinary course of the vendee's business.
Rule 39-26-102(20).
The sale of tangible personal property to a person engaged in the manufacture or compounding of a product or service, where such tangible personal property becomes a physical part of such product or service, is a wholesale sale and exempt from sales tax. Any container, label or shipping case used to encase or enclose such product may be purchased tax free by the manufacturer or compounder.
Tax applies to the sale of tangible personal property to the manufacturer or compounder that purchases it for use as an aid in manufacturing, producing or processing tangible personal property and not for the purpose of physically incorporating it into the manufactured article to be sold. Examples of such property are machinery, tools, furniture, office equipment, and chemicals used as catalysts or otherwise to produce a chemical or physical reaction such as the production of heat or the removal of impurities.
“For all the reasons we have heretofore mentioned we must conclude that to be exempt from the operation of the acts, tangible personal property purchased by a manufacturer and which enters into the processing of the manufactured product, must be a constituent part thereof, wholly or partially, by either chemical or mechanical means.” “Applying these definitions to the words under consideration, it would seem certain they mean that to enter into the processing of an article, substance or commodity, tangible personal property must of necessity become a constituent part of such final product in the series of continuous operations and treatment leading to this result.” Bedford v. C.F. and I., 102 Colo. 538, 81 F.2d 752 (1938); position reaffirmed in Western Electric v. Weed, Jr., 185 Colo. 340, 524 P2d 1369 (1974).
Examples of manufacturing aids include but are not limited to the following:
(1) Sales of CO gas for use in the sale of draft beer are taxable to the vendor of the beer, since the vendor buys the gas for use in forcing the draft beer through the pipes rather than for the purpose of reselling the gas. If the gas is purchased for the sole purpose of incorporating it into a product to be sold and is so incorporated into a product to be sold as in soda water or other beverages, the sale of the gas is exempt as a sale for resale.
(2) Phosphoric and sulphuric acid used in a process known as anodizing aluminum are primarily used as electrolytes, acting as a catalyst, and do not become a component part of the aluminum objects that are processed. The processor is accordingly the consumer of such acids and is taxable at the time of purchase of such items.
(3) Flux if used as a cleaning agent or as a means of reducing oxidation, is taxable to the manufacturer at the time of purchase. It may also be used for transmitting desirable alloys to the deposited metal. To the extent it is used for the latter purpose, it is not subject to sales tax to the manufacturer at the time of purchase. Since the different functions are not mutually exclusive, exempt and nonexempt purposes may be served simultaneously and in such cases the tax will have to be apportioned between the various uses.
(4) Sulphur used in drying and curing fruit is regarded as used by the manufacturer, not as incorporated and resold and the tax is to be paid by the manufacturer when he purchases the sulphur.
(5) Forged steel balls are used in a ball mill to grind silica sand to a desired fineness. In the course of the grinding, the balls wear cut, and they become incorporated into the finished product which is sold. The steel balls are purchased for the purpose of using them in the manufacturing processes and not primarily for the purpose of incorporating steel into a finished product. Accordingly, the manufacturer must pay sales tax on the steel balls at the time of purchase.
(6) If ice is in fact used for the sole purpose of becoming an ingredient of the finished product, as where it used solely to supply all or a part of the water content of the sausage and luncheon meats, the sale of the ice may be regarded as a sale for resale and the processor is not required to pay tax at the time of purchase of the ice.
If the ice or dry ice is used for any purpose other than to become an ingredient or component part of the finished product, it is purchased for a purpose other than for resale and is subject to tax to be paid at the time of purchase by the processor.
(7) A rubber chemical used as a lubricant to facilitate mold release of rubber products, such as tires, and which may remain as a film on the finished rubber product is a manufacturing aid used as a lubricant by the manufacturer who is required to pay the sales tax at the time of purchase.
(8) Cleaners purchased for use in preparing metal part surfaces prior to rust proofing do not become incorporated in the product and therefore the manufacturer is the user and must pay sales tax at the time of purchase.
(9) When paint thinner, abrasives, cleaning compounds, masking tape and similar items are used by a person in painting tangible personal property, that person is the user of such items and must pay sales tax at the time of purchase.
(10) Talc used as an anti-adhesive or lubricant in the manufacture of rubber products is a manufacturing aid and a sales tax is imposed on the manufacturer at the time of purchase.
Rule 39-26-102(21).
(1) Sales of Energy.
(a) Energy Sale or Use Prior to March 1, 2010 and After June 30, 2012. The sale, use, storage, or consumption of electricity, coal, gas, fuel oil, steam, nuclear fuel, and coke occurring before March 1, 2010 or after June 30, 2012 are exempt from sales and use tax when used for any of the following purposes: processing, manufacturing, mining (including oil and gas exploration and production), refining, irrigation, construction, telegraph, telephone and radio communication, street and railroad transportation services, and all industrial uses. See Special Rule 19 “Gas and Electric Services” for acceptable methods of determining the credit allowed for gas and electricity used in restaurant operations.
(b) Energy Sale and Use Between March 1, 2010 and June 30, 2012. The exemption from state sales and use tax set forth in subsection (1)(a), above, is suspended for such sale, use, storage, or consumption occurring on or after March 1, 2010 and before July 1, 2012, and sales and use tax are due thereon, unless otherwise exempt pursuant to other statutes (e.g., sale to, or use of energy by, charitable entities, schools, and governmental entities). An energy utility whose billing cycle includes exempt sales before and taxable sales after March 1 shall prorate the tax for such periods.
(i) Exceptions. The suspension of the tax exemption described in subsection 1(a), above, shall not apply to purchases of:
(ii) Application of Exception to Suspension of Exemption. HB 10-1190, which suspended the exemption described in (1)(a), above, excluded from the suspension the applications described in (1)(b)(i)(1)-(4). In these areas, the exemption continues to exist as described in (1)(a). Thus, HB 10-1190 neither expanded nor limited the exemption in these specific areas. Off-road, agricultural, electricity generation, and railroad uses must still qualify for the exemption as described in 39-26-102(21)(a) C.R.S. and as further described in (1)(a) of this rule.
(iii) State-Administered Cities, Counties, and Special Districts. Energy sales described in subsection 102(21) made on or after March 1, 2010 remain exempt from state-administered city, county, and special district sales and use taxes.
(c) Energy Sale and Use for Residential Use. The sale, use, storage, or consumption of electricity, coal, wood, gas, fuel oil, or coke sold for residential use is exempt from tax regardless of whether such sale, use, storage, or consumption occurs before or after March 1, 2010.
(2) Newspaper Publishers and Commercial Printers. Vendors must collect the tax on all sales of equipment and materials to publishers of newspapers and commercial printers, except on sales of newsprint and printer's ink, which are expressly exempt as wholesale sales. “Newsprint” is defined as cheap, machine- finished paper, chiefly from wood pulp, and used mostly for newspapers.
(3) Definitions.
(a) “Agricultural purposes” means the production of agricultural commodities as defined in 39-26-102(1) C.R.S.
(b) “Gas” means natural or manufactured gas used in the production of energy or used in industry to heat greenhouses, used by industrial plants engaged in manufacturing or used for melting metal in foundries, for firing brick kilns, or for other industrial uses.
(c) “Industrial uses” means the use of electricity, coal, gas, fuel oil, coke, or nuclear fuel in a continuing business activity of manufacturing or producing tangible personal property or services as set forth in C.R.S. 39- 26-104(1)(c) and (d.1).
Rule 39-26-102(23).
If a lease or rental period is for more than three years, the lessor must collect and remit sales tax upon the rentals received from the lessee. Where an operator of a vehicle leases himself and his vehicle to another, this is not considered a lease. For leases of machinery for manufacturing, see Rule 39-26-709. For leases or rentals for less than three years, see Rule 39-26-713–1.
Rule 39-26-103. Sales Tax Licensing.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102, 39-26-103, 39-26-105, 39-26-106, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify when a retailer shall obtain a sales tax license.
(1) General Rule. Every person who meets the definition of a “retailer” under section 39-26-102(8), C.R.S., shall obtain a Colorado sales tax license prior to making any retail sales in Colorado.
(2) A retailer who is required to obtain a Colorado sales tax license, but fails or refuses to do so, is not relieved of liability for any applicable state and state- administered local sales taxes for any sale made in Colorado.
(3) Economic Nexus.
(a) A person doing business in this state under section 39-26-102(3)(c)(I)(A), C.R.S., shall obtain a license on or before January 1 even if such person’s sales first exceed one hundred thousand dollars fewer than ninety days prior to January 1.
(b) A person doing business in this state under section 39-26-102(3)(c)(I)(B), C.R.S., shall obtain a license on or before the first day of the month following the ninetieth day after the retailer’s aggregate retail sales in Colorado for that calendar year exceed one hundred thousand dollars.
(4) Nothing in this rule shall prohibit a person who is making sales in Colorado, but whose business activities do not meet the definition of doing business in this state under section 39-26-102(3), C.R.S., from voluntarily obtaining a sales tax license and collecting all applicable state and state-administered local sales taxes in accordance with Colorado law. A person who maintains a Colorado sales tax license, but whose business activities do not meet the definition of doing business in this state under section 39-26-102(3), C.R.S., is responsible and liable for collecting all applicable state and state-administered sales taxes on all sales subject to tax in Colorado.
Rule 39-26-103.5. Direct Payment Permit.
(1) General Rule. A purchaser who holds a direct payment permit (“Qualified Purchaser”) shall remit sales and use taxes directly to the Colorado Department of Revenue (“Department”) and not to the retailer. Retailers who sell taxable goods or services to a Qualified Purchaser shall not collect sales tax from such purchasers.
(2) Qualified Purchaser Qualifications. An applicant, which can be an entity or individual, for a direct payment permit must meet the following conditions.
(a) Dollar Threshold. An applicant must have had a minimum of $7,000,000 in purchases on which Colorado state sales or use tax was owed during the twelve months preceding the application. The dollar threshold excludes purchases that are exempt from Colorado state sales and use tax, even if such purchases are subject to state-administered local sales or use taxes. See § 29-2-105, C.R.S. for a description of the local tax base. For example, the dollar threshold excludes exempt wholesale purchases of inventory. Additionally, commodities or tangible personal property that are to be erected upon or affixed to real property, such as building and construction materials and fixtures, are not included in the dollar threshold. See § 39-26-103.5(1)(a), C.R.S.
(b) Good Standing. If an applicant has been subject to any tax administered by the Department for at least three years prior to the date of the application, an applicant cannot have been delinquent in collecting, remitting, or reporting any sales, use, income, or other tax administered by the Department for the immediate three years prior to the date applicant submits its application. If an applicant has not been subject to any tax administered by the Department for at least three years, the applicant cannot have been delinquent in collecting, remitting, or reporting taxes for any period after the date the applicant was first obligated to collect, remit, and report such taxes. The Department can waive this requirement if an applicant demonstrates to the satisfaction of the director or their designee that the failure to comply with the collecting, remitting, and reporting requirements was due to reasonable cause. In determining whether reasonable cause exists, the Department will consider, among other relevant aggravating and mitigating factors, whether:
(i) the failure was due to willful or reckless disregard of applicant’s tax obligations;
(ii) the applicant failed to comply on more than one occasion;
(iii) the magnitude of the failure was significant in terms of dollars or time; and (iv) the applicant made subsequent efforts to avoid future failures.
(c) Accounting Systems and Practices. An applicant must have in place an accounting system and set of practices that are acceptable to the Department. The accounting system and practices must fully and accurately report the amount of sales or use tax to be reported on the appropriate sales or use tax return(s), including state-administered local tax jurisdictions. The Department may revoke a direct payment permit and may make assessments of tax, penalties, or interest if such system or practices are not adequate to enable the Department to fully and accurately collect and allocate to cities, counties, and other local taxing entities all the sales and use taxes that the Department collects on behalf of such entities.
(d) A Qualified Purchaser is not required to be subject to the collection, remittance, and reporting requirements for sales taxes in order to obtain such a permit. Rather, a Qualified Purchaser can be subject to the collection, remittance, and reporting requirements for any tax administered by the Department.
(3) Effective Date. A direct payment permit is effective from the date of issuance until December 31 of the third year following the year in which it is issued unless sooner revoked.
(4) Purchaser’s Funds. When a Qualified Purchaser uses a direct payment permit, the Qualified Purchaser must use its own funds when paying a retailer for a transaction to which the direct payment permit applies. Retailers cannot accept payment from persons other than the Qualified Purchaser, including payment from the personal funds of an individual if the permit is held in the name of an entity. Retailers must collect tax if a Qualified Purchaser is making a purchase with funds other than the Qualified Purchaser’s funds and will be liable for unpaid taxes for transactions paid in contravention of this subsection (4).
(5) Revocation of Permits.
(a) The Department may revoke a direct payment permit if the Qualified Purchaser violates any statute or rule governing the administration of sales and use taxes, or if in the opinion of the Department the Qualified Purchaser becomes otherwise unable to meet any of the conditions for holding a direct payment permit. The Department shall provide written notice of the revocation by first-class mail to the last known address of the Qualified Purchaser thirty days prior to the effective date of such revocation. The notice of revocation shall set forth:
(i) the factual and legal basis for revocation, (ii) advise the Qualified Purchaser of its right to appeal, and (iii) the date the Department issued the notice.
The Department will issue a denial of a direct payment permit application in the same manner.
(b) An applicant who is denied a permit or a Qualified Purchaser whose permit was revoked, may appeal the decision by submitting to the Department’s executive director a written request for hearing. The notice of appeal must be received by the Department within thirty days of the date of issuance of the notice of revocation or denial and contain the permit holder’s name, address, permit account number (for revocations), and the legal and factual basis explaining why the permit should not be revoked or denied. Qualified Purchaser’s notice of appeal shall suspend the effective date of the revocation until a final order resolving the appeal is issued by the executive director or the director’s designee. The executive director or director’s designee shall conduct a hearing and issue a final ruling on such appeal within a reasonable time.
(6) Reporting Requirements.
(a) A Qualified Purchaser holding a direct payment permit must directly remit to the Department all state and state-administered city, county and special district sales taxes that would have been collected by the retailer had the Qualified Purchaser purchased such goods or services without a direct payment permit.
(i) Exceptions. A Qualified Purchaser holding a direct payment permit cannot pay county lodging taxes, county short-term rental taxes, and local marketing district taxes directly to the Department because such taxes are not sales taxes. Retailer must collect such taxes from the Qualified Purchaser and remit them to the Department. See § 30-11-107.5 and § 30-11-107.7, C.R.S.
(b) A Qualified Purchaser must report and remit state and state-administered local taxes on or before the 20th day of each month following the month the Qualified Purchaser purchases taxable goods or services with a direct payment permit.
(c) The vendor must retain a copy of Qualified Purchaser’s direct pay permit. Rule 39-26-104–1. Imposition of Tax.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 104, 39-26-105, 39-26-106, 39-26-109, 39-26-118, 39-26-122, and 39-26-704(2), C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify that the tax is imposed upon the purchaser.
(1) The tax is imposed upon the purchaser.
(a) Because the Department provides the means to confirm the validity of a license, a purchaser who pays tax to a retailer who does not hold a valid retail, wholesale, or retailer's use tax license issued by the department remains liable for such tax unless the unlicensed retailer pays such tax to the department.
(b) In the event that a licensed retailer fails to collect the appropriate sales tax, the department may assess the sales tax due against the retailer or assess the use tax due against the purchaser, in its discretion.
(c) A purchaser who pays all applicable sales taxes to a Colorado licensed retailer has no further tax liability regardless of whether the retailer remits the taxes to the department.
Rule 39-26-104–2. Sourcing Retail Sales.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 102, 39-26-104, 39-26-105, 39-26-107, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify the location to which a retail sale is sourced within Colorado.
(1) For the purpose of section 39-26-104(3)(d)(I), C.R.S., “donee” means the recipient of the tangible personal property, commodity, or service as a bona fide gift from the purchaser.
(2) A retailer that does not obtain a customer’s address in the ordinary course of its business need not obtain the customer’s address solely for the purpose of sourcing the sale pursuant to section 39-26-104(3)(a), C.R.S.
(a) A retailer that does not have a complete street address for the purchaser, but has information sufficient to determine the sale is sourced to Colorado, shall source the sale to the jurisdictions that can be conclusively determined from the information available.
(i) If based on the information used by the retailer to source a sale in accordance with section 39-26-104(3), C.R.S., and this rule, a sale would be sourced to two or more mutually exclusive jurisdictions, the sale shall not be sourced to any of the mutually exclusive jurisdictions.
(ii) If based on the information used by the retailer to source a sale in accordance with section 39-26-104(3), C.R.S., and this rule, no jurisdiction in Colorado can be conclusively determined, the sale shall not be sourced to Colorado.
(3) For the purpose of section 39-26-104(3)(a)(V), C.R.S., the address from which the tangible personal property, commodity, or service is shipped is the location from which the tangible personal property, commodity, or service was shipped with the intent to reach a specific customer.
(4) Leases.
(a) Section 39-26-104(3), C.R.S., does not apply to any payment made pursuant to a lease or rental agreement executed prior to June 1, 2019. Lease or rental payments described in this paragraph (4)(a) are subject to any state and state-administered local sales taxes applicable to the lease or rental agreement at the time of execution.
(i) Any extension or renewal of a lease or rental agreement is considered a new lease or rental agreement and the date the lessor and lessee agree to such extension or renewal shall be considered the date of execution for the purpose of this paragraph (4)(a).
(ii) For retailers that complied with the sourcing rules promulgated in Regulation 39-26-102(9) prior to June 1, 2019, the date the retailer complied with such rules shall be substituted for “June 1, 2019” in the application of paragraph (4)(a) of this rule.
(b) For leases involving periodic payments that are sourced to the primary property location, the Department will consider the reasonableness of a lessor’s efforts to maintain accurate information regarding the primary property location when determining whether to waive the interest and penalties assessed against the lessor for unpaid tax owed because of a lessee’s failure to provide accurate information to the lessor regarding the primary property location. If a lessee fails to notify the lessor of a change in the primary property location, the lessee may also be liable for the correct tax plus applicable penalties and interest.
Rule 39-26-104–3. Exchanged Tangible Personal Property.
(1) General Rule. When tangible personal property is received by a retailer as part or full payment for the sale of tangible personal property, sales tax shall be calculated upon the purchase price of the tangible personal property sold, minus the fair market value of the tangible personal property exchanged by the purchaser, provided the property taken by the retailer in the exchange is to be resold in the usual course of the retailer's trade or business.
(2) Exceptions. The general rule does not apply if:
(a) The property transferred from purchaser, or by a third party on behalf of the purchaser, to seller is not tangible personal property.
(i) Examples.
(b) Retailer does not resell, in the usual course of its business, the property transferred from purchaser.
(i) Examples.
(ii) Exception to the Resale Requirement - Vehicles. The resale requirement does not apply if the property transferred (exchanged) by the seller to buyer is a vehicle and the property transferred (exchanged) by the buyer to the seller is a vehicle. Both vehicles must be subject to licensing, registration, or certification by the laws of Colorado. “Vehicles” include:
Purchaser, on whom the obligation to pay sales tax is levied, is the person who pays money or other consideration in addition to the exchanged vehicle. If the seller is a licensed retailer, then the retailer must collect sales tax from the purchaser. Persons who engage in three or more such exchanges may be required to obtain a motor vehicle dealer’s license
(c) Exchanges that do not occur at the same time and place. See § 39-26- 104(1)(b).
(i) Examples.
(a) Prior to August 1, 2002, intrastate telephone and telegraph service is subject to the tax imposed by C.R.S. 39-26-106, whether furnished by public, private, mutual, cooperative, or governmental corporations or agencies. The term “service” includes but is not limited to additional listings, joint-user service, non- talking circuits, leased circuits and facilities, local exchange service (whether on a flat or measured basis), information charges, service connection charges, and any other charges assessed or passed on to the consumer with the exception of charges for installation or repair which are taxed according to the Special Rule on Contractors. Telephone service is taxable whether either local or toll calls are made or telegrams are sent from telephone pay stations.
(b) On or after August 1, 2002, all telephone and telegraph services except those services defined as mobile telecommunications services under 4 United States Code section 124(7) which are intrastate telephone or telegraph service are subject to the tax imposed by C.R.S. 39-26-106, whether furnished by public, private, mutual, cooperative, or governmental corporations or agencies. The term “service” includes but is not limited to additional listings, joint-user service, non- talking circuits, leased circuits and facilities, local exchange service (whether on a flat or measured basis), information charges, service connection charges, and any other charges assessed or passed on to the consumer with the exception of charges for installation or repair which are taxed according to the Special Rule on Contractors. Telephone service is taxable whether either local or toll calls are made or telegrams are sent from telephone pay stations.
(c) On or after August 1, 2002 all charges made for mobile telecommunications services as defined under 4 United States Code section 124(7), including “cellular” communications services shall be subject to the tax imposed by this section only if the service is provided to a customer whose place of primary use is within Colorado, or for local taxes, where a customer whose place of primary use is within the local jurisdiction imposing a local sales tax administered by the Department. Intrastate charges for service which originates and terminates within the same state of the United States are taxable, regardless of whether that state is Colorado. Charges for end-to-end interstate mobile telecommunication service of a customer whose place of primary use is within Colorado are not subject to state or state collected sales tax regardless of whether the call originates in Colorado or another state.
Determination of place of primary use is controlled by 4 United States Code (USC)section 122, as amended. On August 1, 2002 this section read: §122. Determination of place of primary use (a) PLACE OF PRIMARY USE. - A home service provider shall be responsible for obtaining and maintaining the customer's place of primary use (as defined in section 124). Subject to section 121, and if the home service provider's reliance on information provided by its customer is in good faith, a taxing jurisdiction shall - (1) allow a home service provider to rely on the applicable residential or business street address supplied by the home service provider's customer; and (2) not hold a home service provider liable for any additional taxes, charges, or fees based on a different determination of the place of primary use for taxes, charges, or fees that are customarily passed on to the customer as a separate itemized charge.
(b) ADDRESS UNDER EXISTING AGREEMENTS. — Except as provided in section 121, a taxing jurisdiction shall allow a home service provider to treat the address used by the home service provider for tax purposes for any customer under a service contract or agreement in effect 2 years after the date of the enactment of the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act as that customer's place of primary use for the remaining term of such service contract or agreement, excluding any extension or renewal of such service contract or agreement, for purposes of determining the taxing jurisdictions to which taxes, charges, or fees on charges for mobile telecommunications services are remitted.
Terms used in this rule are as defined under 4 USC section 124, as amended. On August 1, 2002 the applicable subsections read: CHARGES FOR MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES. — The term `charges for mobile telecommunications services means any charge for, or associated with, the provision of commercial mobile radio service, as defined in section 20.3 of title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations as in effect on June 1, 1999, or any charge for, or associated with, a service provided as an adjunct to a commercial mobile radio service, that is billed to the customer by or for the customer's home service provider regardless of whether individual transmissions originate or terminate within the licensed service area of the home service provider.
(7) MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICE. — The term `mobile telecommunications service' means commercial mobile radio service, as defined in section 20.3 of title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations as in effect on June 1, 1999.
(8) PLACE OF PRIMARY USE. - The term `place of primary use' means the street address representative of where the customer's use of the mobile telecommunications service primary occurs, which must be - “(A) the residential street address or the primary business street address of the customer; and “(B) within the licensed service area of the home service provider. Rule 39-26-104–5.
Gas or electric service furnished within the state of Colorado is subject to the tax imposed by § 39-26-106, C.R.S. whether furnished by public, private, mutual, cooperative, or governmental corporations or enterprises for commercial use. The tax attaches to all amounts paid by the user or consumer for gas or electric service, whether or not there is actual consumption, and regardless of the manner in which the payment is made.
Steam whether furnished for commercial or industrial uses, by public, private, mutual, cooperative, or governmental corporations or enterprises, is subject to the tax imposed by § 29-26-106, C.R.S. unless purchased for resale in its original form. (See Rule 39-26-102(21) for certain limited exemptions.) (See also § 39-26-715(1)(a)(II), C.R.S. for exemptions on domestic consumption) Rule 39-26-104–6.
Nontaxable gratuities include cash tips (money left by the patrons for use of those providing the service), charge tips (amounts added to the sales check by the patron for use of those providing the service), banquet tips and tips separately stated and added to the sales check by the vendor at a flat rate, and the amount is distributed by the vendor to the persons who actually render the service.
“Cover charges” for food, services, and entertainment are taxable unless the charges for services and entertainment are separately stated.
Rule 39-26-104–7.
Amounts paid for the use of furnished rooms or accommodations, as defined under, § 39-26-102(11), C.R.S.,1973, are subject to the tax imposed under this section unless the rental period is for a term of thirty consecutive days or more, in which case the rental paid is exempt. (See also § 39-26-704(3), C.R.S. and Rule 39-26-704–4). Deposits paid for rooms or accommodations are not taxable when paid in advance. When rooms or accommodations are furnished, any deposits previously paid are taxable.
Rule 39-26-105–1. Remittance of Sales Tax.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-21- 119, 39-26-105, 39-26-107, 39-26-109, 39-26-112, 39-26-118, 39-26-122, and 39-26- 704(2), C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify sales tax remittance requirements and conditions under which a retailer is eligible to deduct a retailer’s service fee from the sales tax remitted.
(1) Retailer Requirements.
(a) A retailer is liable and responsible for sales tax on the retailer’s taxable sales made during the retailer’s tax period. The sales tax must be calculated using the tax rate in effect at the time of the sale and applied to all taxable sales, including all taxable sales made for less than the minimum amount subject to tax pursuant to section 39-26-106, C.R.S. A retailer is also liable and responsible, pursuant to section 39-26-112, C.R.S., for the payment of any tax collected in excess of the tax rate in effect at the time of the sale and must remit such excess amount to the Department.
(b) A retailer shall file with the Department a return reporting its sales, including any sales exempt from taxation under article 26 of title 39, C.R.S., made during the preceding tax period. If a retailer makes no retail sales during its preceding tax period, the retailer shall file a return reporting zero sales. Returns and any required supplemental forms must be completed in full.
(c) A retailer must file returns and remit any sales tax due to the Department in accordance with the retailer’s assigned filing schedule.
(2) Due Date of Returns. Sales tax returns and payments of tax reported thereon are due on or before the twentieth day of the month following the close of the tax period. If the twentieth day of the month following the close of the tax period is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the due date shall be the next business day.
(3) Retailer’s Service Fee. Except as provided in this paragraph (3), a retailer may, in the remittance of collected sales tax, deduct and retain a retailer’s service fee in the amount prescribed by sections 39-26-105(1)(c) and (d), C.R.S.
(a) If the retailer is delinquent in remitting any portion of the tax due, other than in unusual circumstances shown to the satisfaction of the executive director, the retailer shall not retain a retailer’s service fee for any portion of the tax for which the retailer is delinquent.
(b) If a retailer has retained a retailer’s service fee pursuant to paragraph (3) of this regulation and, subsequent to the applicable due date, owes additional tax for the filing period as the result of an amended return or an adjustment made by the Department, the retailer shall not be permitted to retain a retailer’s service fee with respect to the additional tax, but the retailer may retain the retailer’s service fee associated with the original return, so long as the retailer filed the original return in good faith. Rule 39-26-105–2. Extensions of Sales and Use Tax Returns.
(1) General Rule. The Department may grant an extension of time to file a sales or use tax return upon a showing of good cause.
(a) Taxpayer has the burden of demonstrating the factual and legal basis for granting the extension.
(b) The Department will consider a number of factors, including whether:
(i) filing on the deadline will create an undue hardship for the taxpayer;
(ii) taxpayer previously made requests for extensions of time;
(iii) the circumstances giving rise to the request for extension are not under taxpayer’s control; and, (iv) if the extension is based on taxpayer’s neglect, the neglect was not willful or a reckless disregard of taxpayer’s filing obligation.
(2) Extension Request. Taxpayer must generally file a request for an extension of time in writing in order to document that a request has been made. However, the Department may grant an extension without a written request if it is satisfied that good cause exists for an extension.
(a) The request must provide the name of the taxpayer, Department tax account number, and the date to which taxpayer is requesting an extension (3) Granting an extension of time does not relieve taxpayer from interest charges, but granting an extension relieves taxpayer from penalty and penalty interest that would otherwise apply for filing a return after the due date.
(4) An extension of time applies only to the return described in the Department’s approval.
(5) Bulk Close-Out Sale. The deadline for a taxpayer to file a tax return for and to pay such sales or use taxes that arise from the sale of all or substantially all of a commercial entity or charitable organization's taxable property or services as part of a liquidation, merger, or reorganization of such entity or organization is automatically extended for four months. This automatic extension does not apply when the purchase prices for such taxable property or services are known at the time of sale, such as auction sales, inventory reduction or asset liquidation sales by retailers to the general public, and sales from an entity or organization to another entity or organization as part of a liquidation, merger, or reorganization who have agreed to the price(s) of such taxable property or services at the time of sale. The extension does not toll the accrual of interest after the original filing deadline. A taxpayer whose deadline for filing a tax return is automatically extended by this rule may request an additional extension of time pursuant to subparagraph (1), above.
Rule 39-26-105–3. Documenting Exempt Sales.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases of this rule are §§ 39-21-112(1), 39-21-113, 39-26-102(19), 39-26-102(22), 39-26-105(3), 39-26-106, 39-26-107, 39-26-204(2), 39- 26-209, 39-26-703(1), 39-26-704(1), 39-26-708, 39-26-713(2)(d) and 39-26-718, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to establish the requirements a retailer must meet to be relieved of liability for the collection of sales and use tax.
(1) General Rule. A seller must exercise due diligence with respect to any sale for which the purchaser claims exemption from sales tax. If evidence readily discernible to the seller at the time of the sale provides reason to doubt the purchaser’s eligibility for the exemption claimed, the seller must obtain and retain sufficient information and documentation from the purchaser to resolve the doubt or must collect the applicable tax. If the Department subsequently finds a transaction was not exempt at the time of sale, a seller who has complied with this rule will be considered to have met its burden of proof and will be relieved of liability for the collection of tax with respect to that transaction. For purposes of this rule, sellers include both retailers and wholesalers.
(2) Seller’s Due Diligence Requirements at Time of Sale.
(a) A seller must verify that the purchaser’s sales tax license or exemption certificate is current and valid at the time of the sale.
(i) Verifying a Colorado License or Certificate. Except as provided in this rule, a seller must verify that the license or certificate is valid using the Department’s online verification system. To verify that a license or certificate is current and valid, a seller can go online to www.colorado.gov/revenueonline and follow the link to “Verify a License or Certificate.” In lieu of verifying a purchaser’s license or certificate through the Department’s online verification system, the seller may inspect a physical copy of the license or certificate for completeness and ensure the license or certificate has not expired. If the seller relies on a physical copy of the license or certificate for verification, the seller must maintain a copy of the document for their records.
(ii) Out-Of-State Purchasers. A seller may accept from an out-of-state purchaser a resale license, exemption certificate, or other authorized documentation from the issuing state. The seller must maintain a copy of the document for their records. A seller may also have the out-of-state purchaser complete a Department-issued Exemption Certificate or Affidavit of Exempt Sale, or the Multistate Tax Commission’s Exemption/Resale Certificate, and maintain the fully-completed document for their records.
(iii) Recurring Business Transactions. A seller who has verified that a purchaser has a current and valid license or certificate is not required to continue verifying the same license or certificate for subsequent purchases made prior to the expiration of the license or certificate, unless the seller has reason to believe that the purchaser no longer has a current and valid license or certificate. A seller that believes a purchaser no longer has a current or valid license or certificate must follow the procedures in paragraph (2)(c) of this rule. A seller must re-verify a purchaser’s license or certificate during the first transaction following the expiration of the license or certificate.
(b) Sales to Exempt Organizations. Sellers must consider whether the nature of goods or services sold is consistent with the purchaser’s claim that the sale is exempt from sales or retailer’s use taxes. Sellers must also verify that the purchase is made directly from the funds of the entity claiming the exemption from sales or use tax. However, a seller exercising due diligence is not required to verify the source of the funds if a charitable organizations purchases total less than $250.
(i) Sales to Charitable Organizations. Goods or services that are reasonably used exclusively in the conduct of the organization’s ordinary exempt functions and activities are eligible for exemption, pursuant to § 39-26-718(1)(a), C.R.S. For example, the sale of a diamond ring purchased on behalf of a tax-exempt church would not appear to be the purchase of a good used in the ordinary exempt functions of a church.
(ii) Sales to Governmental Entities. Goods or services that are reasonably used in a governmental capacity are eligible for exemption, pursuant to § 39-26-704(1), C.R.S. For example, the sale of a single set or multiple sets of golf clubs to an employee of the Department of Revenue would not appear to be the purchase of goods used in the Department’s governmental capacity.
(c) If evidence readily discernible to the seller at the time of the sale provides reason to doubt the purchaser’s eligibility for the exemption being claimed, the seller must obtain and retain sufficient information and documentation from the purchaser to resolve the doubt or the seller must collect the applicable tax.
(i) Resolving Doubts About Purchaser Eligibility for Exemption. A seller has the burden of demonstrating to the Department that the purchaser was eligible for exemption. In resolving any doubt about a purchaser's eligibility for exemption, a seller must either comply with the requirements of this paragraph (2)(c)(i) or collect the tax.
(ii) Collecting Tax if Doubts About the Purchaser’s Eligibility for Exemption Cannot be Resolved. A seller who has not verified the purchaser’s eligibility for exemption in accordance with paragraph (2)(c)(i) of this rule must collect the applicable tax at the time of sale and issue the purchaser a receipt pursuant to § 39-26-102(22), C.R.S. The purchaser may then file a claim for refund with the Department.
(3) Seller’s Requirements Under Audit. If the Department finds the records of a seller do not demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this rule, the Department shall allow the seller 120 days to collect information sufficient to comply with the requirements of this rule. The Department may extend the 120- day period by 60 days for good cause shown.
Rule 39-26-105–4.
When an item of tangible personal property is rented with a warranty for the maintenance or servicing of the property for a given period of time, the sales tax will be imposed, collected, and paid upon the rentals payable, including the value of the warranty, if the rental is subject to the sales tax under the provisions of C.R.S. 1973, 39- 26-102(23). Lessors of tangible personal property providing a warranty for the maintenance or servicing of the rental property may apply to the executive director to exclude from the rental price the average value of the cost of service included within the warranty. If written permission is granted by the executive director, the sales tax will apply to the rental price of such article of tangible personal property, exclusive of that part of the rental price which is assignable to the anticipated cost of repair labor included within the warranty.
If a separate warranty or service contract is purchased, the sales price of the warranty or service contract is not subject to a sales or use tax. However, the individual providing the warranty or service must pay sales or use tax on the purchase price of tangible personal property used to provide such service when the property is purchased or is taken from inventory for this purpose. When a vendor or lessor contracts with another unrelated entity to provide the warranty service, he shall exclude the cost of the warranty contract from the sales price subject to sales tax; in this situation the individual providing the warranty is liable for payment of tax as provided above. Rule 39-26-105.3. Electronic Address Databases.
Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are §§ 39-21-112, 39-26-105.3, and 39-26- 204.5, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to establish procedures and requirements for the testing and certification of electronic address databases and to establish the criteria retailers must meet to be held harmless for tax underpayments resulting from use of a certified database.
(1) Definitions. As used in this rule, unless context otherwise requires:
(a) “Database” means a system that specifies the taxing jurisdictions that have the authority to impose a tax on purchases made at each address in Colorado. A “System” may consist of one or more software applications and/or other electronic processes.
(b) “Department” means the Department of Revenue.
(c) “Local Tax Jurisdiction” includes every governmental entity and special district located within Colorado, other than the State of Colorado, that has the authority to levy a sales and/or use tax (d) “Provider” means a person, company, or other entity that owns and/or operates a Database.
(e) “Verifier” means a person, company, or entity designated by the Department to conduct testing of Databases and verify that said Databases satisfy the requirements of § 39-26-105.3, C.R.S. and this rule. In such case that the Department directly conducts testing and verification, the term “Verifier” means the Department.
(2) Procedure for Certification.
(a) A Provider may request the Department certify its Database by submitting an application in accordance with Department instructions. The Department may request information in support of an application including, but not limited to, the Provider’s name (including trade name) and address; the name, address, telephone number, and email address of the person representing the Provider to whom the Department shall direct communications; and sufficient information so as to specifically identify the Database and System, including any version number or similar designation.
(b) Upon receipt of an application and any additional information the Department requests, the Department shall direct the Verifier to initiate the testing process prescribed in subsection (3) of this rule. If the Database satisfies the requirements set forth in § 39-26-105.3, C.R.S. and this rule, the Department shall issue written certification to the Provider stating that the Database is certified subject to the limitations and conditions set forth in § 39-26-105.3, C.R.S. and this rule.
(c) Effective Date / Expiration Date. The certification shall be effective for three years, beginning with the date the Department issues notice of certification. The certification shall expire automatically three years from the effective date. A Provider may, prior to the expiration of certification, apply for recertification. The process for recertification shall be the same as the process for initial certification.
(d) List of Certified Databases. For each Database that has been certified pursuant to this rule, the Department shall list on its web site:
(i) the Provider’s name, website address, and contact information;
(ii) the Database and System receiving certification;
(iii) the effective date of the certification; and (iv) the expiration date for the certification or, in the case of revocation under subsection (5) of this rule, the date such revocation is effective.
(e) Rules Subject to Modification. The Department may amend this rule. Any Provider owning and/or operating a certified Database may be required to comply with any additional requirements included in the amended rule including, but not limited to retesting pursuant to any revised testing requirements.
(3) Testing and Verification.
(a) Upon the direction of the Department as described in paragraph (2)(b) of this rule, the Verifier shall commence the testing and verification process as set forth in this subsection (3). In execution of the testing and verification process the Verifier shall:
(i) create a test sample and answer key for use in evaluating the accuracy of the Provider’s Database;
(ii) transmit the test sample electronically to the applying Provider;
(iii) receive the Database responses for the test sample from the Provider; and (iv) evaluate the submitted responses for accuracy and produce a report.
(b) Creation of Test Sample. The Verifier shall create the test sample in accordance with all requirements of this paragraph (b).
(i) The test sample shall consist of not less than 2000 physical addresses located in Colorado. The addresses in the test sample shall be selected at random from the full population of business addresses in with active sales tax licenses according to Department records. The Department shall review and confirm the statistical validity of the test sample prior to the administration of the test. The determination of the statistical validity of the test sample shall be within the sole discretion of the Department.
(ii) The Verifier may supplement the test with additional addresses. The Verifier may solicit such supplemental addresses from Local Tax Jurisdictions.
(iii) In addition to the test sample, the Verifier shall create a key that specifies all state and local jurisdictions authorized to impose a tax on purchases made at each address included in the test sample. Such key must be created using information from Department records and, where deemed necessary by the Verifier, may be further verified with local treasurer and assessor records.
(iv) The Verifier shall provide the test sample and the accompanying key to each Local Tax Jurisdiction. The Local Tax Jurisdiction shall have 30 days to verify the accuracy of the key and dispute any information contained therein. If the Local Tax Jurisdiction disputes any of the information contained in the key, such dispute will be resolved by reference to the applicable treasurer or assessor records.
(c) The Verifier shall transmit an electronic copy of the test sample to the applying Provider. Using its Database, the Provider shall, with respect to purchases made at each address included in the test sample, identify all jurisdictions with the authority to impose a tax. The Provider shall submit, in the form and within the time prescribed by the Verifier, a list of all jurisdictions so identified with respect to each address in the test sample.
(d) Upon receipt of the Provider’s submission, the Verifier shall evaluate it for accuracy and prepare a report detailing the Verifier’s findings.
(i) A Provider’s response for each address in the test sample shall be deemed correct only if it properly identifies all jurisdictions with the authority to impose a tax on purchases made at the address, including the state and all Local Tax Jurisdictions.
(ii) The Verifier will communicate to the Provider each response the Verifier determines is incorrect, the jurisdiction that was omitted or incorrectly identified in the response, and the correct jurisdictions for the address. The Provider may challenge the Verifier’s determination of incorrectness with respect to any address. In the event of a challenge, the Verifier shall contact the relevant Local Tax Jurisdiction(s) to verify the jurisdictions authorized to impose a tax on purchases made at the address. Disputes between or among Local Tax Jurisdictions regarding the location of an address shall be resolved by said jurisdictions.
(iii) After evaluating the Database’s responses and resolving any challenges made by the Provider, the Verifier shall prepare a report detailing the test and the test results, and provide the report to the Department. The report such information as the Department requires, which may include, but is not limited to: the Verifier’s name and contact information; the Provider’s name and contact information; information sufficient to identify the Database and System tested, including any version number or similar designation; the date(s) testing was conducted; the test sample and key; and the test results.
(4) Certification Criteria. A Database must satisfy the certification criteria set forth below in order to receive and retain certification.
(a) Accuracy. A Database must produce correct and complete responses for at least 95% of the addresses included in the test sample in order to receive certification.
(b) Access for Local Tax Jurisdictions Verification. The Department shall notify Local Tax Jurisdictions when certification has been granted for a Database. Upon certification, any Provider that owns or operates a certified Database must allow each Local Tax Jurisdiction readily accessible means of determining whether the Database correctly specifies the jurisdictions with the authority to impose a tax at a given address. The Provider shall work cooperatively with the Department and Local Tax Jurisdictions to facilitate checking of individual addresses or groups of addresses against the Database.
(c) Prompt Updating of Information. A Provider shall have in place a process for regularly updating its Database and promptly correcting any errors and omissions. Updates must be made at least quarterly, and the Provider must make reasonable efforts to include in each update the correction of any error or omission about which it received notification in the ninety days preceding the update. The Provider must correct any error or omission in the Database about which it receives notification no later than 120 days following the notification. If a Local Tax Jurisdiction determines that the Database does not completely and correctly identify the jurisdictions authorized to impose a tax at a given address, the Local Tax Jurisdiction may notify the Department of the error or omission. The Department shall promptly notify the Provider of any error or omission that it or any Local Tax Jurisdiction finds with respect to the Database.
(d) Version Designation - Record Retention. The Provider of any certified Database must retain a complete copy of each iteration of the Database for no less than four years from the date that such iteration was replaced by an updated version.
(e) Requirement to Recertify Prior to Expiration. If the Department identifies numerous errors or omissions in the Database prior to the expiration of the certification, the Department may require the Provider to complete a recertification process. The recertification process shall consist of the testing and verification process outlined in subsection (3) of this rule.
(5) Denial or Revocation of Certification. The Department may deny a request for certification or revoke the certification of a Database for just cause. The Department may reassess at any time whether the Database should continue to be certified.
(a) “Just cause” for denial or revocation of certification shall include, without limitation, that:
(i) the Database is not in compliance with requirements established by § 39-26-105.3 and this rule;
(ii) the Provider's application contains a material misstatement(s);
(iii) the Database fails, during the testing process, to produce complete and correct responses for at least 95% of the addresses in the test sample;
(iv) the Provider fails to maintain the accuracy of the Database; or (v) the Provider failed to properly and timely notify its users, pursuant to paragraph (d) of this subsection (5), of a prior revocation of certification.
(b) Any denial or revocation of certification shall be made in accordance with § 24-4-104, C.R.S.
(c) In the event of revocation, the Department shall, in accordance with subparagraph (iv) of paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of this rule, update its website to reflect the effective date of the revocation and the date on which such update was made.
(d) In the event of revocation, the Provider shall provide prompt and effective notice to users of its Database that it has been decertified. Such notification shall be made no later than five business days after the Provider receives notice of revocation from the Department.
(6) Verifiers.
(a) Designation. The Department has the authority to designate one or more persons, companies, or entities to serve as Verifiers. The designations shall be based on the sole and exclusive judgment of the Department regarding the person's, company’s, or entity’s expertise, experience, and performance of duties set forth herein. The Department has the authority to withdraw its designation of a Verifier at any time if, in the Department's sole and exclusive judgment, the Verifier should not be so designated.
(b) Fee of Verifier. The Verifier may charge a Provider a reasonable fee, in light of its costs and reasonable profit, for work performed in connection with this rule. In no event is the Department responsible to the Verifier or Provider for payment of such fee.
(7) Retailers Held Harmless.
(a) A retailer that properly uses and demonstrably relies upon a certified Database to determine the jurisdiction(s) to which tax is due shall be held harmless for any underpayment of tax, charge, or fee liability that results solely from an error or omission in the Database. In order to be held harmless under §§ 39-26-105.3 and 204.5, C.R.S. and this rule with respect to any particular sale, a retailer must collect, retain, and produce, upon request, documentation sufficient to demonstrate proper use of and reliance on a certified Database at the time of the sale.
(i) Proper Use. A retailer shall be held harmless only when an underpayment of tax results solely from an error or omission in a certified Database. If a retailer queries a certified Database for an address that is either incomplete or contain errors, any underpayment with respect thereto shall not be deemed the result solely of an error or omission in the Database. In such case, the retailer that improperly used the Database shall not be held harmless for any underpayment of tax, charge, or fee.
(ii) Demonstrable Reliance.
(b) Held Harmless. If a retailer is held harmless under §§ 39-26-105.3 or 204.5, C.R.S. and this rule, the retailer will not be held liable for any underpayment of tax, charge, or fee liability that results solely from an error or omission in a certified Database. In the event that an assessment is issued for such an underpayment, the Department shall, upon receipt of sufficient documentation to demonstrate both proper use and reliance, adjust its records to cancel such assessment.
(c) Effect of Revocation or Expiration of Certification. A taxpayer shall not be held harmless for use of a Database after the expiration or revocation of certification. Unless the taxpayer is also the Database Provider, a revocation of certification shall not affect the right of the taxpayer to be held harmless, pursuant to §§ 39-26-105.3 or 204.5, C.R.S. and this rule, for sales and use tax liabilities for transactions that occurred prior to the effective date of the revocation. However, a retailer who is also the Database Provider shall not be held harmless for sales or use taxes incurred prior to the effective date of the revocation if the Department determines that the Provider has knowingly or recklessly disregarded the requirements of this rule.
Rule 39-26-106–1. Separately Stated Tax.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 104, 39-26-105, 39-26-106, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify how sales tax must be shown to purchasers.
(1) General Rule. Except as provided in section 39-26-106(2)(b), C.R.S., a retailer who makes taxable retail sales shall add to the purchase price or charge to the customer the sales tax in effect at the time of the sale. The retailer shall show such sales tax on any receipt, invoice, or other document setting forth the purchase price as a separate and distinct item from the price of the items purchased and any applicable fees required to be shown separately from the sales tax.
(a) It is not sufficient to state the sales tax rate on an invoice, receipt, or other document setting forth the purchase price.
(b) When more than one state or local sales tax is charged to the purchaser, the retailer may either separately state each sales tax amount or state the total sales tax amount.
(c) Retail delivery fees cannot be included in the tax line shown on any final invoice, receipt, or other document setting forth the purchase price.
(d) In the case of a retailer that does not provide the purchaser with a written or electronic invoice, receipt, or other document setting forth the purchase price, the retailer shall nonetheless disclose the amount of the sales tax pursuant to section 39-26-106(2), C.R.S., either by:
(i) showing the sales tax as a separate and distinct line item at checkout; or (ii) showing the sales tax for each item sold on a conspicuous sign clearly visible to the purchaser at checkout.
Rule 39-26-106–2. Minimum Taxable Sale.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 104, 39-26-106, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify that if a sale that is less than the minimum taxable includes more than one good, tax shall be collected on all items.
If a sale consists of more than one item and includes an item with a sales price less than the minimum taxable sale prescribed in section 39-26-106, C.R.S., tax shall be collected on the total sales price of all the items.
Rule 39-26-106–3.
A vendor who sells malt, vinous or spirituous liquors by the drink shall, at the time of making his first retail sale of such beverage, elect either of the following methods to impose the tax:
(a) The tax may be included in fee price of the drink or (b) The tax may be separately stated and added to the price of the drink. The vendor may elect to operate under method (a) for drinks sold at the bar and method (b) for drinks sold at tables, or he may elect to operate under the same method for drinks sold at the bat and tables. Once having made the election he must continue to collect the tax in the manner elected, unless permission to change the election is first obtained from the department of revenue.
If the vendor elects to use different methods on bar and table sales, he must keep adequate records. If the vendor elects to include the tax in the price of the drink, the following method must be used to determine taxable sales: exempt sales are deducted from gross sales and the difference is divided by the total of one hundred percent plus the applicable sales tax percentage.
Vendors dispensing liquor, wine or beer by the drink, who purchase ingredients which the; use in mixing the drink are not required to pay sales tax on the purchase of such ingredients.
Rule 39-26-109. Sales Tax Filing Schedules.
Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26-105, 39- 26-109, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to prescribe sales tax filing schedules and conditions for the modification thereof.
(1) General Rule. Except as provided by this rule, every retailer shall file a sales tax return for the preceding calendar month and remit sales tax to the Department on or before the twentieth day of every month.
(2) Standard Filing Schedules.
(a) A retailer may request permission to file sales tax returns and remit sales tax on a schedule less frequent than monthly. The Department will presume that filing on a monthly schedule will impose unnecessary hardship, and that less frequent filing will not jeopardize the collection of the tax, if the retailer’s average monthly Colorado sales tax collection is less than one thousand one hundred dollars.
(b) Average Monthly Sales Tax Collections.
(i) If the retailer’s average monthly Colorado sales tax collection is, or is estimated to be, one thousand one hundred dollars or more, the retailer shall file returns and remit tax on a monthly schedule.
(ii) If the retailer’s average monthly Colorado sales tax collection is, or is estimated to be, less than one thousand one hundred dollars, but more than fifty dollars, the retailer may file returns and remit tax on a quarterly schedule.
(iii) If the retailer’s average monthly Colorado sales tax collection is, or is estimated to be, fifty dollars or less, the retailer may file returns and remit tax on an annual schedule.
(iv) For purposes of this paragraph (2)(b), the average monthly Colorado sales tax collection includes the total state and state- administered local sales tax for which the retailer is, or is estimated to be, liable, on average, over a twelve-month period.
(c) Initial Application. If a retailer requests permission to file quarterly or annually on the application for a sales tax license, the retailer must indicate the amount of its estimated average monthly sales tax collection. The Department shall establish the retailer’s required filing frequency initially on the basis of this estimate as set forth in paragraph (2)(b) of this rule.
(d) Annual Adjustment. Annually, the Department shall calculate the average monthly sales tax collection of any retailer permitted to file less frequently than monthly pursuant to this paragraph (2).
(i) If a retailer’s average monthly Colorado sales tax collection exceeds the threshold set forth in paragraph (2)(b) of this rule for the retailer’s currently assigned schedule, the Department shall increase the retailer’s filing schedule accordingly.
(ii) The Department shall make such adjustments effective for tax periods beginning on and after January 1 of the next calendar year and notify the retailer in writing of the change.
(iii) The Department will not decrease a retailer’s filing schedule. A retailer may request a change to the retailer’s filing schedule pursuant to paragraph (4)(a) of this rule.
(iv) For purposes of the annual adjustment described in this paragraph (2)(d), the Department shall calculate the estimated average monthly Colorado sales tax using actual remittance for the twelve- month period preceding the date of the calculation.
(3) Alternate Filing Schedules. A retailer may request permission to file sales tax returns and remit sales tax on a schedule other than a calendar month as provided in this paragraph (3). The retailer must demonstrate that filing on a calendar-month schedule will impose unnecessary hardship and that the alternate schedule will not jeopardize the collection of tax. The Department shall notify a retailer in writing of the approval or denial of any request for an alternate filing schedule submitted pursuant to this paragraph (3).
(a) If a retailer is engaged in a seasonal business (a business that the retailer does not operate in Colorado during certain months of the year), the retailer may request permission to file returns and remit tax only for the months of the year that the business operates.
(i) The request must indicate the months the retailer expects to operate the business in Colorado. The retailer may make such request on the retailer’s initial sales tax application or by submitting such request to the Department in writing.
(ii) For each calendar month during any portion of which the retailer operates its business, the retailer shall file a sales tax return and remit tax to the Department on or before the twentieth day of the following month.
(iii) The retailer must immediately notify the Department if the retailer operates its business in any month for which the retailer’s request indicated the retailer would not operate the business.
(b) If a retailer regularly employs accounting methods involving reporting periods other than calendar months (such as thirteen four-week periods over the course of the year), the retailer may request permission to file returns and remit tax on a filing schedule consistent with such accounting methods. Any retailer requesting such permission must make such request to the Department in writing.
(4) Changes to Filing Schedules.
(a) A retailer may submit a written request to the Department to change the retailer’s filing schedule to a schedule described in this rule. The Department will approve the request upon a showing by the retailer that filing sales tax returns and remitting sales tax on a calendar-month schedule will impose unnecessary hardship and the proposed schedule will not jeopardize the collection of tax. The Department will presume that the collection of tax will be jeopardized if:
(i) The average monthly Colorado sales tax collection exceeds the thresholds set forth in paragraph (2)(b) of this rule;
(ii) The retailer has been delinquent in filing any required sales tax returns or in remitting any sales tax in any of the past thirty-six months; or (iii) The retailer previously failed to notify the Department of operations outside of its normal season pursuant to paragraph (3)(a)(iii) of this rule.
(c) If a retailer becomes delinquent in the filing of any required sales tax returns or the remittance of any sales tax, the Department may revoke any prior approval of a filing schedule other than monthly. Upon such revocation the retailer will be required to file sales tax returns and remit sales tax on a calendar-month schedule.
(d) The Department shall notify a retailer in writing of any change made to the retailer’s filing schedule in accordance with this paragraph (4) along with the effective date of any such change.
(5) Due Dates. Every retailer shall file a sales tax return and remit sales tax to the Department on or before the twentieth day following the close of the tax period. If the twentieth day following the close of the tax period falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the due date is the next business day.
(6) Wholesalers. Wholesalers that make no retail sales must file returns on an annual schedule to report their gross sales and allowable subtractions therefrom. A wholesaler that makes retail sales in addition to wholesale sales is subject to the requirements of this rule and must file returns and remit tax monthly or quarterly, as applicable, unless the wholesaler has received permission to file less frequently.
(7) Special Sales Events. This rule does not apply to sales tax returns with respect to special sales events required to be filed pursuant to section 39-26-103(9)(b.5), C.R.S.
Rule 39-26-111.
This rule deals only with credit sales. (Cash sales must be reported currently.) For the purpose of this rule, a “credit sale” is a retail sale that is created by a time payment plan, a conditional sale, or a sale secured by a chattel mortgage, whereby the remittance of the full selling price is to be paid at a future date. If the retailer elects to report the credit sales on the cash basis, he must keep adequate and complete records to show separately the sales price of the tangible personal property, the sales tax applicable to each credit sale, and any interest, insurance or carrying charges that have been added to the sale.
When the retailer reports the credit sale on the accrual basis, he shall include the selling price in the return for the month in which the sale was made and remit the entire applicable sales tax.
The retailer on the accrual basis is allowed a deduction for bad debts on the taxable portion of worthless credit sales. No deduction for bad debts is allowable when the retailer is reporting his taxable sales on the cash basis. When a repossessed article is resold, the transaction constitutes an entirely new, separate and distinct sale upon which the sales tax shall be collected in the regular manner.
On the sale of a motor vehicle, C.R.S. 1973, 39-26-113 requires that the retailer collect and remit all the applicable sales tax on the accrual basis. No refund or credit for sales tax paid is allowed on the repossession of a motor vehicle. A cash discount allowed for payment on or before a given date is not an allowable adjustment to the selling price in determining taxable sales. Rule 39-26-112. Excess Tax Collected.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 112, and 39-26-122, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify that any excess sales tax collected must be remitted to the department.
(1) Excess Tax. Tax collected on sales of more than the minimum taxable amount will usually result in the collection of tax in excess of the tax rate. For example, the state sales tax on a purchase of $3.00 is $0.087, but the retailer will collect $0.09. Any excess tax collected during a filing period must be included in the total amount of sales tax for which the retailer is required to account.
(a) If a retailer maintains more than one physical or non-physical site within Colorado, the retailer cannot offset any under collection of sales tax at one site against an over collection of sales tax at another site.
(b) A retailer cannot offset any under collection of sales tax in one filing period against an over collection of sales tax in another filing period.
(c) Any excess tax collected as a result of rounding may offset the under collection of tax due when a purchase is for less than the minimum taxable sale prescribed in section 39-26-106, C.R.S.
Rule 39-26-113.
When applying for registration, title or license, every new owner of a vehicle or mobile home must produce either (1) a receipt from the department showing that the sales or use tax has been paid, or (2) a receipt on forms provided by the department showing that the vehicle was purchased from a Colorado licensed motor vehicle dealer and that the dealer has collected no sales tax or use tax is due. The collection of sales or use tax as provided in this section does not apply to the titling, licensing or registration of motor vehicles transferred by gift or operation of law or where the transaction is otherwise exempt from the imposition of sales or use tax. See Rule 39-26-102(10) for bona fide gifts.
Rule 39-26-113.5. Refunds of Sales and Use Tax for Vehicles Used in Interstate Commerce.
(1) Qualification Requirements.
(a) The truck tractor or semitrailer giving rise to the refund must be model year 2010 or newer with a gross vehicle weight rating of fifty-four thousand pounds or greater, and must be purchased on or after July 1, 2011.
(b) Only truck tractors or semitrailers that were purchased or first stored or used in the year when the model year of such truck tractor or semitrailer was sold as new are eligible for the refund allowed by this section.
(2) Refund Calculation.
(a) The percentage of tax to be refunded will be computed by dividing the non-Colorado miles by the total miles as used in the computation of the specific ownership tax. (Example: If the total miles driven is 10,000 with 8,000 of those Colorado miles and 2,000 non-Colorado miles, the refund percentage will be 20%.) This percentage establishes the amount of the refund, which shall be paid in three equal installments.
(3) Prioritization of Claims.
(a) Claims will be eligible for issue based on the date they are received by the Department. Claims will be prioritized based on the date received. Once a claim has been filed, if it is not paid in the year in which it was filed, its priority will carry over to the next year. Therefore, the taxpayer need not file another claim in subsequent years. However, claims for leases must be filed for each of the 3 years as stated in paragraph (5).
(4) Remaining Balance to be Refunded.
(a) The annual funds available for refund is limited by § 42-1-225, C.R.S. Claims will be honored based on the prioritization stated in paragraph (3), above. Claims filed after the fund has been depleted will not receive a refund for that year, but may be for the year 2 and/or year 3 refund.
(b) In the event that more than one claim is received on the same date and the amount available in the fund is less than the total amount of the claims, the earlier purchase date will be used to determine which refund claims will be issued.
(5) Leases.
(a) A lease term must be for more than 3 years and must be entered into after July 1, 2011 to qualify for the refund. All leases entered into prior to July 1, 2011 are not eligible for this refund.
(b) If the total sales tax is paid at the time the vehicle is leased, then the lessee may apply for a refund of the total tax paid and the refund will be calculated in the same manner listed in paragraph (2).
(c) If the tax is included in the lease payments, the applicant must wait until the last payment has been made for that calendar year before a refund claim can be submitted. The refund will be calculated based on the amount of tax paid in the previous calendar year. A separate refund claim must be submitted for each of the 3 years that the refund is allowed under § 39-26-113.5, C.R.S.
(6) Application and Documentation Required to Qualify for the Refund.
(a) A taxpayer shall apply for the refund allowed by this section by filing a claim for refund after registering the vehicle and being assessed specific ownership tax at less than one hundred percent as noted in (2)(a).
(b) For purchases in Colorado, a refund request must include a copy of the retail purchase agreement from the dealer, the standard sales tax receipt (DR 0024) and any other documentation the Department requests to validate the statutory requirements for the refund.
(c) For purchases made outside of Colorado, a refund request must include a copy of the purchase agreement, a copy of the county registration and any other documentation the Department requests to validate the statutory requirements for the refund.
(d) For leases, a refund request must include a copy of the lease agreement, documentation stating the term of lease, the taxes paid with each lease payment and any other documentation the Department requests to validate the statutory requirements for the refund.
Rule 39-26-116.
(a) General.
It is the duty of every person engaged or continuing in business in this state, for the transaction of which a license is required under this Part 1, and the duty of every lessor and lessee of tangible personal property for use in this state, to keep adequate and complete records. Unless the department authorizes an alternate method of recordkeeping in writing, these records should show:
(1) Gross receipts from sales, or rental payments from leases, of tangible personal property (including any services that are a part of the sale or lease) made in this state, irrespective of whether the seller or lessor regards the receipts to be taxable or nontaxable.
(2) All deductions allowed by law and claimed in filing returns.
(3) Total purchase price of all tangible personal property purchased for sale or consumption or lease in this state.
These records must include the normal books of account maintained by the ordinarily prudent businessman engaged in such business, together with all bills, receipts, invoices, cash register tapes, or other documents or original entry supporting the entries in the books of accounts together with all schedules or working papers used in connection with the preparation of tax returns.
The preceding provisions shall not apply to organizers of special sales events unless the organizer elects to obtain a sales tax license, file the sales tax return, and remit the sales tax as provided in C.R.S. 39-26-103(9)(b.5)(IV)(B).
(b) Microfilm Records.
Records may be microfilmed; however, microfilm reproductions of general books of account, such as cash books, journals, voucher registers, ledgers, etc., are not acceptable as original records. Where microfilm reproductions of supporting records are maintained, such as sales invoices, purchase invoices, credit memoranda, etc., the following conditions must be met:
(1) Appropriate facilities are provided for preservation of the films for periods required.
(2) Microfilm rolls are indexed cross referenced, and labeled to show beginning and ending numbers and to show beginning and ending alphabetical listing of documents included, and are systematically filed.
(3) The taxpayer agrees to provide transcriptions of any information contained on microfilm which may be required for verification of tax liability.
(4) Proper facilities are provided for the ready inspection and location of the particular records, including machines for viewing and copying the records.
A posting reference must be on each invoice. Credit memoranda must carry a reference to the document evidencing the original transaction. Documents necessary to support claimed exemptions from tax liability, such as bills of lading and purchase orders, must be maintained in an order by which they readily can be related to the transactions for which exemption is sought.
(c) Records Prepared by Automated Data Processing Systems. An ADP tax accounting system must be capable of producing visible and legible records for verification of taxpayer's tax liability.
(1) Recorded or Reconstructible Data.
ADP records must provide an opportunity to trace any transaction back to the original source or forward to a final total. If detail printouts are not made of transactions at the time they are processed, the systems must have the ability to reconstruct these transactions.
(2) General and Subsidiary Books of Account.
A general ledger, with source references, will be written out to coincide with financial reports for tax reporting periods. In cases where subsidiary ledgers are used to support the general ledger accounts, the subsidiary ledgers should also be written out periodically.
(3) Supporting Documents and Audit Trail.
The audit trail should be designed so that the details underlying the summary accounting data may be identified and made available to the Department upon request. The system should be so designed that supporting documents, such as sales invoices, purchase invoices, credit memoranda, etc., are readily available.
(4) Program Documentation.
A description of the ADP portion of the accounting system should be available. The statements and illustrations as to the scope of operations should be sufficiently detailed to indicate, (A) the application being performed, (B) the procedures employed in each application (which, for example, might be supported by flow charts, block diagrams or other satisfactory description of the input or output procedures), and (C) the controls used to insure accurate and reliable processing. Important changes, together with their effective dates, should be noted in order to preserve an accurate chronological record.
(d) Records Retention.
All records pertaining to transactions involving sales or use tax liability must be preserved for a period of not less than three years.
(e) Examination of Records.
All of the foregoing records must be made available for examination on request by the executive director or his authorized representatives.
Rule 39-26-117.
Where any vendor sells his business he shall make a return and pay all taxes due within ten days of such sale. The purchaser of the business is liable for any unpaid tax due on sales made by his predecessor, including tax on outstanding accounts on which sales tax has not been remitted. The purchaser is required to withhold a sufficient amount of the purchase money to cover any taxes due and unpaid until the vendor can provide proof any such taxes have been paid.
Sales tax shall be remitted by the purchaser on the price paid for tangible personal property, other than inventory, acquired with the purchase of business and for use or consumption in the operation of the business. The tax shall be based on the price paid for such chattels as are recorded in the bill of sale or purchase agreement and which constitute part of the total transaction at the time of sale or transfer. Where the transfer of ownership is a “package deal” in a lump sum transaction the sales tax shall be based on the book value set up by the purchaser for income tax depreciation purposes or, if no such value is established, the fair market value.
Rule 39-26-125.
The statute of limitations does not apply when no return has been filed; see section 39- 21-107, C.R.S.
Rule 39-26-202. Imposition of Use Tax.
Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1) and 39- 26-202, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to clarify when use tax is imposed.
(1) As used in part 2 of article 26 of title 39, “consumption” means the act or process of consuming; the term includes waste, destruction, depreciation, depletion, and using up.
(2) Unless otherwise exempt from tax, if sales tax was not paid to a retailer, the purchaser shall remit use tax directly to the department.
(3) To bring about the imposition of use tax, the property’s use need not necessarily be the actual and ultimate use of the property. Instead, the use may be only such use as is made by the owner or purchaser in exercising control. Use shall be deemed sufficient for the imposition of use tax when the article purchased is actually used or made available for use after the purchaser (or the purchaser’s designee) takes possession even if such use is temporary, as well as keeping, storing, withdrawing from storage, moving, installing, or performing any other act by which dominion or control over the property is assumed by the purchaser unless otherwise exempt.
(4) If tangible personal property is traded or exchanged between unlicensed persons, each person shall pay sales or use tax on the fair market value of the tangible personal property the person received in exchange, excluding exchanges of motor vehicles governed by section 39-26-704 (5), C.R.S. Rule 39-26-204.
Effective January 1, 1999, all entries on the consumer's use tax return must be rounded to the nearest dollar. Amounts less than fifty cents must be rounded down to zero cents and amounts from fifty to ninety-nine cents must be rounded to the nearest dollar. Rounding is required on the tax return only; books, records, and other consumer's use tax documents must reflect actual tax amounts.
Rule 39-26-208.
Persons in the business of leasing vehicles or mobile homes within this state must have a Sales/Store License and must collect and remit to the Department of Revenue the state sales tax, and RTD tax if applicable, and applicable local taxes imposed by those municipalities and counties for whom the state collects local sales tax. Rule 39-26-210.
The statute of limitations does not apply when no return has been filed; see section 39- 21-107, C.R.S.
Rule 39-26-703–2. Buyer’s Claims for Refund of Sales or Use Tax Paid. Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26-702, and 39-26-703, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to prescribe, pursuant to section 39-26- 703(2)(d), C.R.S., the form for making an application for refund of sales or use taxes and the data, information, and documentation an applicant must provide. The rule also provides guidance regarding protective refund claims for sales and use tax paid to the seller and the penalty imposed for incomplete refund claims.
(1) General Rule. Any applicant filing a refund claim after the effective date of this rule for sales or use tax paid to a seller must comply with the requirements of this rule. For the purpose of this rule, unless context otherwise requires, an “applicant” includes both the purchaser who paid the sales or use tax for which the refund claim is filed and any person who prepares the refund claim, in whole or in part, on the purchaser’s behalf. An applicant does not include a seller who is claiming a sales tax refund that the seller will distribute to the purchaser pursuant to section 39-26-703(2.5), C.R.S.
(2) Required Data, Information, and Documentation. Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (7), (8), and (9)(c) of this rule, an applicant must submit with their claim for refund of sales or use tax paid:
(a) a completed Department form DR 0137B, Claim for Refund of Tax Paid to Vendors, signed by the purchaser and the preparer, if any, including:
(i) the purchaser’s name, address, and either their:
(ii) a description of the purchaser’s business activity and the products or services it provides (if any);
(b) a complete itemization of all purchases included in the claim, pursuant to paragraph (3) of this rule;
(c) invoices, purchase orders, and receipts, pursuant to paragraph (4) of this rule;
(d) proof of payment, pursuant to paragraph (5) of this rule; and (e) any additional data, information, and documentation required by paragraph (6) of this rule based on the nature of the claim.
(3) Itemization of Purchases.
(a) With respect to each purchased item or service included in a refund claim, the claim must include, in an electronic or paper spreadsheet approved by the Department:
(i) the seller’s name;
(ii) except as otherwise provided in paragraph (3)(b) of this rule, the seller’s Colorado account number (CAN) or federal employer identification number (FEIN);
(iii) the date of the purchase;
(iv) the invoice number for the purchase;
(v) the sales price for the item before tax;
(vi) except as otherwise provided in paragraph (3)(c) of this rule, the amount of state, city, county, and special district sales or use tax paid, each stated separately;
(vii) indication of whether a copy of the invoice has been submitted with the claim;
(viii) indication of whether a copy of proof of payment has been submitted with the claim;
(ix) a brief description of the item or service purchased;
(x) an explanation of how the item or service is used; and (xi) an explanation of how the item or service qualifies for exemption or is otherwise not subject to tax.
(b) Seller’s Account Number. Refund applicants must make a good faith effort to obtain the Colorado account number (CAN) or federal employer identification number (FEIN) for the seller of every item and transaction included in the refund claim. If the applicant is unable to obtain the CAN or FEIN for the seller, despite the applicant’s good faith effort, because the seller is no longer in business, refuses to provide their CAN or FEIN to the applicant, or for any other reason, the applicant must include with their refund claim information that allows the Department to identify the seller’s CAN or FEIN.
(c) Separate Statement of Local Sales or Use Taxes. If the purchases included in a refund claim were made in the conduct of business by the purchaser, the applicant must separately state in their refund claim the amount of state, city, county, and special district sales or use tax paid, as required by paragraph (3)(a)(vi) of this rule. If the purchases included in a refund claim were not made in the conduct of business by the purchaser, the applicant is not required to separately state in their refund claim the amount of state, city, county, and special district sales or use tax paid.
(4) Proof of Purchase. Except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (4)(c) and (4)(d) of this rule, an applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of invoices pursuant to this paragraph (4). The applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of the invoices provided to the applicant by the seller in connection with the purchase.
(a) Number of Invoices Required with Claim.
(i) In the case of a refund claim that includes one hundred or fewer separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of each invoice included in the refund claim.
(ii) In the case of a refund claim that includes more than one hundred separate invoices, but not more than five thousand separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of at least one hundred invoices included in the claim plus twenty-five percent of the total number of invoices included in the refund claim in excess of one hundred invoices.
(iii) In the case of a refund claim that includes more than five thousand separate invoices, but not more than ten thousand separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of at least one thousand three hundred twenty-five invoices included in the claim plus twenty percent of the total number of invoices included in the refund claim in excess of five thousand invoices.
(iv) In the case of a refund claim that includes more than ten thousand separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim copies of at least two thousand three hundred twenty-five invoices included in the claim plus two and one-half percent of the invoices included in the refund claim in excess of ten thousand invoices.
(b) Representation Required in Invoices Submitted with Claim. The invoices submitted with the refund claim pursuant to this paragraph (4) of this rule must include:
(i) a copy of at least one invoice from each seller included in the refund claim;
(ii) a copy of at least one invoice from each calendar month included in the refund claim;
(iii) a copy of at least one invoice with respect to each type of exemption included in the claim; and (iv) copies of all invoices for which proof of payment is provided pursuant to paragraph (5) of this rule.
(c) If a seller does not provide the applicant an invoice for a particular transaction included in a refund claim, the applicant may submit with their refund claim a copy of the receipt from the transaction, in lieu of an invoice.
(d) If a seller does not provide the applicant either an invoice or a receipt for a particular transaction included in a refund claim, the applicant may submit with their refund claim a copy of the purchase order for the transaction, in lieu of either an invoice or a receipt.
(e) An applicant may not submit with their refund claim accounting records, internal memos, or other documentation that is not an invoice, receipt, or purchase order to satisfy the requirements of this paragraph (4).
(5) Proof of Payment. Along with their refund claim, an applicant must provide proof of payment pursuant to this paragraph (5). For the purpose of this paragraph (5), the term “invoice” includes any receipt or purchase order submitted with a refund claim pursuant to paragraph (4)(c) or (4)(d) of this rule, respectively.
(a) Number of Invoices for Which Proof of Payment is Required. Except as provided in paragraph (5)(b) of this rule, refund applicants must provide with their refund claim proof of payment for the number of invoices prescribed by this paragraph (5)(a).
(i) In the case of a refund claim that includes one hundred or fewer separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim proof of payment for each invoice included in the refund claim.
(ii) In the case of a refund claim that includes more than one hundred separate invoices, the applicant must submit with their refund claim proof of payment for at least one hundred invoices plus two tenths percent of the invoices included in the refund claim in excess of one hundred invoices.
(b) Limitation for Sales from the Same Seller, During the Same Period, and for the Same Exemption Type. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (5)(a) of this rule, a refund applicant is not required to provide proof of payment for more than twenty-five percent of the invoices included in the refund claim that:
(i) were from the same seller;
(ii) occurred during the same calendar quarter; and (iii) qualified for the same exemption type.
(c) Representation Required in Proof of Payment Submitted with Claim. Proof of payment submitted with the refund claim pursuant to this paragraph (5) must include:
(i) proof of payment for at least one purchase made from each seller included in the refund claim;
(ii) proof of payment for at least one purchase made in each calendar month included in the refund claim; and (iii) proof of payment for at least one purchase made with respect to each type of exemption included in the claim.
(d) Types of Proof of Payment. Proof of payment required pursuant to this paragraph (5) must be furnished in the following forms.
(i) Canceled Check. For any payment the purchaser made by check, the applicant must submit with their refund claim a copy of the front and back of the cancelled check.
(ii) Electronic Payments. For any payment the purchaser made electronically, the applicant must submit with their refund claim a copy of the bank statement reflecting the payment or EFT transaction details and confirmation.
(iii) Payment Processing Services. For any payment the purchaser made using payment processing services provided by a third party, the applicant must submit with their refund claim a copy of the account statement or other documentation from the third party detailing the payment.
(iv) Payments Made with Credit Cards or Purchasing Cards. For any payment the purchaser made with a credit card or purchasing card, the applicant must submit with their refund claim a copy of the credit card or purchasing card statement reflecting the payment.
(v) Other Payments. For payments the purchaser made in any form not described in paragraphs (5)(d)(i) through (5)(d)(iv) of this rule, the applicant must submit with their refund claim documentation verifying the payer, payee, amount, date, and confirmation of the payment. An applicant may not submit with their refund claim accounting records, internal memos, or other documentation created by the purchaser in order to satisfy the requirements of this paragraph (5).
(6) Additional Data, Information, and Documentation Required for Certain Claims.
(a) Exempt Use of Gas or Electricity. Along with any refund claim for exempt use of gas or electricity pursuant to section 39-26-102(21)(a), C.R.S., the applicant must submit:
(i) a completed copy of form DR 1666, Sales Tax Exempt Certificate Electricity & Gas for Industrial Use; and (ii) computations and documentation reflecting the applicant’s exempt and non-exempt use of gas or electricity, including:
(b) Machinery Used in an Enterprise Zone. Along with any refund claim for machinery used in oil and gas exploration or production that is exempt under section 39-30-106, C.R.S., the applicant must provide with their refund claim the American Petroleum Institute (API) well number for the well at which the machinery is used within the enterprise zone. In lieu of the API well number, the applicant may provide the latitude and longitude for the geographic location of the well.
(c) Computer Software. Along with any refund claim for computer software that is excluded from the definition of “tangible personal property” pursuant to section 39-26-102(15)(c), C.R.S., the applicant must submit:
(i) in the case of computer software, the use of which is not governed by a tear-open nonnegotiable license agreement, as defined in section 39-26-102(15)(c)(II)(G), C.R.S., a copy of the written license agreement or contract signed by the licensor and the licensee; or (ii) in the case of computer software that is not delivered in a tangible medium, as defined in section 39-26-102(15)(c)(II)(F), C.R.S., documentation demonstrating the computer software was:
(7) Requests for Permission to Submit Alternate Forms of Documentation. No less than forty-five calendar days prior to submitting a refund claim, an applicant may request permission from the Department to submit with their claim an alternate form of documentation in lieu of the documentation required by paragraphs (4), (5), and (6) of this rule. A request to submit an alternate form of documentation must explain how the alternate form of documentation provides sufficient evidence in support of the claim in a manner comparable to the documentation required by paragraphs (4), (5), and (6) of this rule. Such permission, if granted by the Department, applies only to the specific refund claim for which it is requested. A request to submit an alternate form of documentation is not itself a refund claim and, therefore, cannot satisfy the requirement in section 39-26-703(2)(d), C.R.S., regarding the deadline for filing a claim.
(8) Protective Claims.
(a) Protective Claims Defined.
(i) For the purpose of this paragraph (8), a protective claim is a present claim for refund of sales or use tax paid to the seller:
(ii) A refund claim is not a protective claim merely because the claimant labels it as such. For example, a refund claim that fails to state an actual amount of the claim or provide required documentation because of the taxpayer’s failure to compile records, rather than from a stated contingency affecting the amount of the claim, is not a protective claim.
(b) Requirements for Protective Claims. A protective claim must satisfy all of the following requirements:
(i) The claim must be in writing and signed by the claimant.
(ii) The claim must include the claimant’s name, address, and either social security number (if the claimant is an individual) or federal employer identification number or Colorado account number (if the claimant is a corporation, partnership, or other legal entity).
(iii) The claim must identify and describe the contingencies upon which it depends.
(iv) The claim must clearly alert the Department to the nature of the claim.
(v) The claim must identify the specific calendar month(s) for which the refund is sought.
(c) Processing of Protective Claims. The Department has discretion in deciding how to process protective claims. In general, it is in the interests of the Department and taxpayers to delay action on protective claims until the pending litigation or other contingency is resolved.
(d) Required Data, Information, and Documentation. A refund applicant may submit a valid protective claim that satisfies all of the requirements of paragraphs (2)(a) and (8) of this rule by the applicable deadline pursuant to section 39-26-703(2)(d), C.R.S., without the data, information, and documentation required by paragraphs (2)(b) through (2)(e) and (3) through (6) of this rule. The refund applicant must perfect the claim by submitting any additional data, information, and documentation required by paragraphs (2)(b) through (2)(e) and (3) through (6) of this rule, or withdraw the claim, within sixty calendar days of the earlier of:
(i) notification from the Department that the refund claim is not a protective claim pursuant to this paragraph (8); or (ii) the resolution of the contingency upon which the protective claim is based, plus any additional time requested by the applicant and allowed by the Department for reasonable cause shown.
(e) Penalty Assessment for Incomplete Claims. If the Department identifies an application for refund at the time of filing as a protective claim filed in order to preserve the right to a refund prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations and all of the requirements of this paragraph (8) are met, the Department shall determine if the claim for refund is subject to the penalty under section 39-26-703(5)(a)(I)(A), C.R.S., after the claim for refund is perfected as described in paragraph (8)(d) of this rule. However, the identification of a refund claim as a protective claim does not preclude the Department from deciding how to process it (see paragraph (8)(c) of this rule).
(9) Penalty for Incomplete Refund Claims. Subject to the requirements of section 39-26-703(5)(c)(II), C.R.S., and paragraph (9)(b) of this rule, a penalty equal to five percent of the total refund claimed is imposed pursuant to section 39-26- 703(5)(a)(I)(A), C.R.S., if a refund claim totaling five thousand dollars or more is found to be materially incomplete.
(a) Incomplete Claims. Under section 39-26-703(5)(b)(I), C.R.S., a claim for refund is subject to the penalty if it is incomplete. A claim for refund is incomplete if it does not include both:
(i) the form required by paragraph (2)(a) of this rule; and (ii) substantially all of the pertinent data, information, and documentation required by section 39-26-703(2)(d), C.R.S., and this rule.
(b) Notification and Period to Correct or Withdraw.
(i) Prior to assessing a penalty for an incomplete claim for refund, the Department must notify the purchaser, or the preparer of the claim, if any, that the claim appears to be incomplete.
(ii) The notification the Department provides to the purchaser, or the preparer of the claim, if any, must specify the pertinent data, information, and documentation that appears to be missing.
(iii) The purchaser, or the preparer of the claim, if any, must, within sixty calendar days of the date of the notice, plus any additional time allowed by the Department for reasonable cause shown either:
(c) Requests for Additional Time to Provide Required Data, Information, and Documentation.
(i) An applicant may request additional time to submit the data, information, and documentation required by this rule. The Department may allow additional time for reasonable cause shown. An applicant may make a request for additional time either at the time the applicant submits their refund claim or after submitting their refund claim.
(ii) Any refund claim submitted with a request for additional time to provide the data, information, and documentation required by this rule must, at a minimum, include:
(d) Penalty Assessment. If the purchaser, or the preparer of the claim, if any, does not within sixty calendar days of the date of the notice, plus any additional time allowed by the Department either correct the omission or withdraw the claim, the Department will impose the penalty pursuant to section 39-26-703(5)(a)(I)(A), C.R.S. The executive director shall give the person against whom the penalty is assessed written notice of the penalty in accordance with section 39-21-105.5, C.R.S. Within thirty days after such notice is mailed, the person against whom the penalty was assessed may petition the executive director for a hearing on the notice in the manner provided in section 39-21-103, C.R.S., and may appeal to the district court in the manner provided in section 39-21-105, C.R.S. The Department may waive the penalty for good cause demonstrated by the applicant.
(10) Additional Documentation May Be Required. Notwithstanding any provision of this rule, the Department may require a refund applicant to provide any additional data, information, or documentation it reasonably determines is necessary for the evaluation and processing of a refund claim. Refund applicants must maintain and provide to the Department upon request proof of purchase and proof of payment with respect to each sales transaction included in the refund claim. The Department shall not assess a penalty pursuant to section 39-26-703(5)(a)(I)(A), C.R.S., with respect to any additional data, information, or documentation that is not required by this rule.
Rule 39-26-704–1.
There is no sales tax on sales to the United States government, and to the state of Colorado, or any department, institution, subdivision of the state or federal government, when purchased within its governmental capacities. To secure exemption from the sales tax, the order for the goods must be on a prescribed government form or purchase order and paid for directly to the seller by warrant or check drawn on governmental funds.
Rule 39-26-704–2. Sales Tax Exemption for Housing Authorities. Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are §§ 39-21-112(1), 39-26-704(1.5), 29-4- 227, 29-1-204.5, and 29-4-507, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to establish guidelines for the sales and use tax exemption authorized by § 39-26-704(1.5), C.R.S., including the process for requesting exemption certificates and refunds for tax paid. To alleviate the administrative burden on housing authorities, an affidavit, as described in this rule, may be submitted in lieu of receipts for refund claims for state sales and use tax paid prior to September 30, 2016. Receipts are required for refunds of state sales and use tax paid after September 30, 2016 and for local sales tax paid after August 10, 2016. These refund claims requiring receipts are expected to be infrequent because, beginning August 10, 2016, exemption certificates will be available to prevent the payment of tax at the point of sale, thus reducing the burden on housing authorities. Receipts are required for refunds of all local sales taxes claimed because local sales taxes can often be exempted at the point of sale with a building permit, which would have been obtained for all projects prior to construction.
(1) General Rule.
(a) Exemption for Housing Authorities. All sales to and all storage, use, or consumption of tangible personal property or otherwise taxable services by Housing Authorities are exempt from state, local, and special district sales and use taxes.
(b) Exemption for Qualifying Projects. Beginning August 10, 2016, an exemption from state, local, and special district sales and use taxes is allowed to any Qualifying Entity for any Qualifying Project in the manner described in this rule. Only state sales and use taxes paid prior to August 10, 2016 are eligible to be refunded. Local sales and use taxes paid prior to August 10, 2016 are not eligible to be refunded. Eligible Qualifying Projects should obtain exemption certificates beginning August 10, 2016 in order to make purchases tax-free after that date. In the event, expected to be rare, that sales and use taxes are paid on or after August 10, 2016, refunds for all sales and use taxes paid will be made in accordance with subsection (3)(f) of this rule.
(2) Definitions.
(a) “Authority” or “Housing Authority” means:
(i) A city housing authority as defined in § 29-4-203(1), C.R.S., or (ii) A multijurisdictional housing authority established under § 29-1- 204.5, C.R.S., or (iii) A county housing authority as defined in § 29-4-502(1), C.R.S.
(b) “Department” means the Department of Revenue.
(c) “Qualifying Entity” means an entity that is wholly or partially owned by:
(i) A Housing Authority, or (ii) An entity that is wholly owned by a Housing Authority, or (iii) An entity of which a Housing Authority is the sole member.
(d) “Qualifying Project” means a project, as defined in § 29-4-203(12), C.R.S., that is wholly owned by, leased to, or under construction by a Qualifying Entity. A Qualifying Project will involve capitalizable expenditures.
(3) Sales and Use Tax Exemption for Qualifying Projects.
(a) The exemption for Qualifying Projects under paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this rule applies only to tangible personal property and otherwise taxable services purchased, acquired, stored, used, or consumed for Qualifying Projects during the construction period determined under paragraph (b) of this subsection (3).
(b) Determination of Construction Period. The exemption under paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this rule applies only during the construction of a Qualifying Project. The Housing Authority shall determine and certify the beginning and ending dates for the construction of the Qualifying Project and the period of time defined thereby will be the construction period for the Qualifying Project.
(c) Determination of Low-Income Percentage. The exemption allowed under paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this rule is in proportion to the percentage of the project that is for occupancy by persons of low income. The Housing Authority shall determine and certify this percentage and such determination shall be presumed valid absent manifest error.
(i) With respect to the definition of “low income” used in the determination made under this paragraph (c), no manifest error exists where a Qualifying Entity uses a definition established by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority, or any similar public lender for Qualifying Projects.
(ii) With respect to the calculation of the percentage of the project that is for occupancy by persons of low income made under this paragraph (c), no manifest error exists where the calculation by the Qualifying Entity is consistent with any such calculation made in accordance with rules prescribed by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority, or any similar public lender for Qualifying Projects.
(d) Application for Exemption for Qualifying Projects. Exemption certificates may be requested from the Department for any Qualifying Project to allow Qualifying Entities and contractors to make tax-free purchases for the Qualifying Project. The exemption certificate may be requested by the Qualifying Entity, the general contractor for the Qualifying Project, or both by completing and submitting the appropriate application. The application must be accompanied by a statement from the Housing Authority detailing the Authority’s ownership interest in the Qualifying Entity, certifying the percentage calculated under paragraph (c) of this subsection (3), and certifying the construction period determined under paragraph (b) of this subsection (3).
(e) Remittance of Tax for Mixed Use Qualifying Projects. Qualifying Entities that own, lease, or construct Qualifying Projects for which an exemption certificate is issued under paragraph (d) of this subsection (3), and for which the percentage calculated under paragraph (c) of this subsection (3) is less than 100% periodically must file sales tax returns and remit payment of the sales tax for the percentage of the Qualifying Project that is not exempt.
(i) Except as provided in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph (e), such filing and payment shall be made at least quarterly and shall be made in accordance with all rules governing the filing and payment of sales tax generally.
(ii) If the aggregate annual sales or use tax a Qualifying Entity must remit under this paragraph (e) is less than five thousand dollars, the Qualifying Entity may request from the executive director and the executive director may grant permission to file and remit sales tax under this paragraph (e) on an annual filing basis.
(f) Refund Claims for Qualifying Projects. A Qualifying Entity that owns, leases, or constructs a Qualifying Project may, subject to the percentage determined under paragraph (c) of this subsection (3), submit a refund claim for sales and use taxes paid.
(i) A refund claim for a Qualifying Project must be submitted by the Qualifying Entity, not by a contractor performing work for the Qualifying Project.
(ii) Any refund claim submitted under this paragraph (f) must meet the following requirements:
(1) State Sales Tax. The state sales tax imposed pursuant to section 39-26- 104(1)(f), C.R.S., does not apply to the amount charged for any room or accommodations rented to any natural person who:
(a) is a permanent resident of such room or accommodations; and (b) enters into or has entered into a written agreement for occupancy of such room or accommodations for a period of at least thirty consecutive days.
(2) State-Administered Local Sales Taxes.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (2)(c) of this rule, local taxes administered by the Department do not apply to the amount charged for any room or accommodations rented to any occupant, including, but not limited to, any natural person, who:
(i) is a permanent resident of such room or accommodations; and (ii) enters into or has entered into a written agreement for occupancy of such room or accommodations for a period of at least thirty consecutive days.
(b) For the purpose of this rule, “local taxes administered by the Department” include, but are not limited to:
(i) sales taxes administered by the Department for any county, city, town, or home rule municipality pursuant to section 29-2-106, C.R.S.;
(ii) sales taxes administered by the Department for any special district pursuant to title 32, C.R.S.;
(iii) sales taxes administered by the Department for any local improvement district pursuant to section 30-20-604.5, C.R.S.;
(iv) sales taxes administered by the Department for public safety improvements pursuant to section 30-11-107.9, C.R.S.;
(v) sales taxes administered by the Department for any multijurisdictional housing authority pursuant to section 29-1- 204.5(3)(f.1), C.R.S.;
(vi) sales taxes administered by the Department for any regional transportation authority pursuant to section 43-4-605, C.R.S.;
(vii) county lodging taxes administered by the Department pursuant to section 30-11-107.5, C.R.S.;
(viii) marketing and promotions taxes administered by the Department pursuant to section 29-25-112, C.R.S.
(ix) sales taxes administered by the Department for any regional library authority pursuant to section 24-90-110.7, C.R.S.;
(x) sales taxes administered by the Department for any unit of government hospital care provider pursuant to section 25-42-103, C.R.S.; and (xi) sales taxes administered by the Department for any Republican river water conservation district pursuant to section 37-50-110, C.R.S.;
(c) A city, county, special district, or other taxing authority that imposes a tax listed in paragraph (2)(b) of this rule may, by ordinance, resolution, or amendment thereto, subject to such tax all rentals of rooms and accommodations described in paragraph (2)(a) of this rule. In such case, all rentals of rooms and accommodations, regardless of the duration of such rental, shall be subject to the tax imposed by such city, county, special district, or other taxing authority.
(3) For the purpose of section 39-26-704(3), C.R.S., and this rule, “written agreement” includes any legally enforceable written contract for the furnishing of rooms or accommodations, whether made in writing, electronically, or by any other means. Evidence of such agreement includes, but is not limited to, a hotel registration or a rent receipt. A canceled check shall not, by itself, be sufficient to substantiate a written agreement.
Rule 39-26-707. Articles and Containers Re: Food Products.
(1) Nonessential Articles or Containers Furnished in Connection with Sale of Taxable Food. On or after March 1, 2010, a retailer of food, meals, or beverages (referred to as “retailer”) who purchases nonessential tangible personal property (“article”) or nonessential containers or bags (“container”) and furnishes the article or container to a consumer or user (collectively referred to as the “consumer”) in connection with the taxable retail sale of food, meals, or beverages (“food”), must pay sales or use tax on the purchase of the nonessential article or container.
(a) Nonessential Articles and Containers. An article or container is nonessential if it is primarily used for the convenience of the consumer and is not necessary to transfer the food to the consumer.
(i) Examples of nonessential articles or containers include, but are not limited to, non-reusable:
(ii) Examples of essential articles or containers include, but are not limited to, non-reusable:
• Disposable containers or packaging material on, or in which, food is transferred to the consumer, including pizza delivery box, baskets, boxes, sleeves for French fries, buckets, clamshells or other containers if the retailer cannot transfer the food to the consumer without such article or container. However, carryout containers used to by a consumer to carry leftover meals from the restaurant are not essential.
(2) Articles or Containers Not Furnished to Consumer. A retailer is liable for sales or use tax for its purchase, use, storage, or consumption of an article or container, regardless of whether it is essential to the consumer, if the article or container is not transferred to the consumer. An article or container is treated as transferred to the consumer if the retailer makes the article or container available to consumers on the retailer's premises.
(a) Examples of non-transferred articles include, but are not limited to:
(i) Reusable articles such as glassware, ceramic plates, cloth napkins, and silverware;
(ii) Non-reusable articles the retailer uses to cook or store food, such as plastic storage wrap for storage, aluminum foil used primarily for cooking, food labels, and cooking tray liners.
Rule 39-26-708–1.
Contractors and subcontractors should be aware that the exemption for charitable organizations applies only to those that qualify under C.R.S. 1973, 39-26-102(2.5) and to schools as defined in C.R.S. 1973, 39-26-102(13).
Rule 39-26-708–2.
Every contractor or subcontractor shall apply for a certificate of exemption prior to the time the work is started. Said contractor or subcontractor shall also obtain the exemption number from the exempt organization for whom the work is performed. Rule 39-26-709.
For machinery to be used predominantly in manufacturing, the greatest use of the machinery must be its use in manufacturing. If a machine has other uses in addition to its manufacturing use, the manufacturing use must be greater than 50% of all use to qualify for the exemption. For purposes of determining whether the manufacturing use of an item of machinery is greater than 50% of all use, machinery which is shut off is not in use, even while being repaired or maintained.
(A) The following are examples of direct uses in manufacturing:
(1) Machinery which cleans or prepares raw or prepared materials for production on the manufacturing line, after manufacturing has begun and before it has stopped.
(2) Machinery which performs testing of a particular product tested during the manufacturing process, or testing as a step in a continuous manufacturing line process.
(3) Loader, fork lift or conveyor belt machinery integral to the manufacturing line process, moving material from inventory on the contiguous plant site, through the manufacturing line steps, and such machines moving material through the final alternation or packaging.
(B) The following are not direct uses in manufacturing, and are not exempt:
(1) Machinery used in repair and maintenance of machines or other items, or in cleaning of machinery. Repairing, maintaining or cleaning manufacturing facilities is not manufacturing. Manufacturing is working to alter a product within the manufacturing definition, or cleaning the product in its raw, intermediate or finished state.
(2) Machinery used in managerial, sale research and development, or other non-operational activities.
(D) The limitation imposed by C.R.S. 39-26-709(1)(e) requires that property would have qualified for the investment tax credit against federal income tax. The investment tax credit was limited to used property, and only the first $150,000 of used property in a tax period could be claimed as a credit against federal income tax. [§48(c)(2)(a), ref. §46(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as it existed prior to the Tax Reform Act of 1986.] As the excess over $150,000 could not qualify for credit against federal income tax, the excess does not qualify for the sales tax exemption. Therefore, annually, only the first $150,000 of purchases of used machinery to be used directly and predominantly in manufacturing would qualify for this sales tax exemption. All purchases of used property in excess of that amount annually would be sales taxable.
(E) Leases of machinery or machine tools used in manufacturing are exempt under the following conditions:
(1) The lessee must qualify for the investment tax credit (ITC) against federal income tax as was provided by Section 38 of the “Internal Revenue Code of 1954”, as amended. For federal ITC to have passed through to the lessee, the lease must be for more than three years. Leases under three years may qualify if within the transaction, complete payment for the machine occurs within three years, via balloon payments, large down payments, or full amortization of all financed balance over a short term lease.
(2) The minimum lease payments must be for more than $500 during that three year period.
(3) The machinery must be used in Colorado directly and predominantly in manufacturing, (i.e., meet the other statutory tests).
Rule 39-26-711.
A commercial airline is defined as an airline carrying freight or passengers on regularly schedule flights for a fee.
Rule 39-26-713–1.
In order to secure this permission, the lessor must apply to the department prior to acquisition of such tangible personal property. This permission, once it has been granted, does not have to be requested for each purchase. The permission to collect tax on rentals or lease payments is in effect for all subsequent purchases, unless rescinded by the department. The department will give notice to any lessor if this permission is rescinded. Once the election is made by the lessor to collect tax on rentals or lease payments, he must continue to operate in this manner. He cannot alternate methods of paying tax on some purchases and applying for permission to collect tax on rentals or leases on other purchases. The department will furnish application forms for applying for this permission.
If permission has not been secured prior to the time that the tangible personal property is acquired, the lessor must pay the sales tax to the vendor. If immediately thereafter, the lessor applies for and receives permission to collect the tax on the rentals or lease payments, the lessor may apply for a refund of sales tax paid at the time of acquisition of the tangible personal property being rented or leased. When leased property is sold by the lessor, sales tax should be collected and remitted on the actual additional considerations paid for such property at the time of sale. If the leased property being sold is a motor vehicle, unless the lessor is an authorized dealer, the tax will be paid by the purchaser at the time of application for title or registration, and in that instance the lessor should furnish the lessee with a bill of sale to show the selling price to the lessee.
Out-of-state or corporate lessors must designate an agent in Colorado for service of process.
See Rule 39-26-105–4 for the method of taxing repairs used in maintenance of tangible personal property rented or leased.
This rule will hereafter be referred to as “Lease/Rental Agreement.” Rule 39-26-713–2.
The “exemption statute” is intended to prevent the imposition of a use tax on tangible personal property where the consumer actually paid sales tax to a Colorado vendor or use tax to a licensed out-of-state vendor.
Rule 39-26-713–3.
Use tax is a complement to sales tax. Since sales tax is imposed only on retail sales, which are defined by rule as sales to the user or consumer of property or services sold, use tax shall not apply to the storage, use or consumption of tangible personal property purchased by a licensed retailer for resale within the regular course of a business. Tangible personal property that was purchased tax free for resale or an ingredient of a manufactured or compounded product, and subsequently withdrawn from stock for the purchaser's own use or consumption, shall be taxed at the acquisition cost of all materials. The tax liability attaches at the time the tangible personal property is withdrawn from stock. The tax must be reported on the appropriate return provided by the Department.
The Act exempts a sale of tangible personal property which becomes an ingredient or component part of the product. To be exempt from the operation of the sales and use tax Acts, tangible personal property purchased by a manufacturer, which property enters into the processing of the manufactured article, must become a constituent part thereof, wholly or partially, either by chemical or mechanical means. (See Rule 39-26- 102(20).) (Also see Western Electric v. Weed, Jr., 185 Colo. 340, 524 P.2d 1369 (1974) and Bedford v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp., 102 Colo. 538, 81 P.2d 752 (1938). Rule 39-26-713–4.
Use tax shall not apply to the storage, use, or consumption of tangible personal property, the sale or use of which has been subjected to a tax by another state and the tax paid in an amount equal to or in excess of the sales tax imposed by this article. The storage, use, or consumption of tangible personal property, the sale or use of which has been subjected to a lesser tax than the tax imposed by this article, is not exempt; however, a credit for any similar tax paid to another state will be allowed against any tax accruing under this article, in respect to a given item of tangible personal property. This exemption or credit will be denied if a tax paid to another state was not legally due under the laws of the other state.
Multistate Tax Compact. C.R.S. 1973, 24-60-1301, (Article V (1) of the Multistate Tax Compact) provides sales or use tax credit as follows:
“Each purchaser liable for a use tax on tangible personal property shall be entitled to full credit for the combined amount or amounts of legally imposed sales or use taxes paid by him with respect to the same property to another state and any subdivision thereof. The credit shall be applied first against the amount of any use tax due the state, and any unused portion of the credit shall then be applied against the amount of any use tax due a subdivision.”
Rule 39-26-713–5.
The use tax law provides an exemption as to property brought into this state by a nonresident for his own use if he becomes a resident. This exemption does not extend to a nonresident engaged in business within this state who purchases tangible personal property for use or consumption in his business.
Rule 39-26-715.
An exemption from sales tax is granted on sales which are subject to tax under the motor fuel tax statute, article 27 of title 39, C.R.S. 1973, as amended. This exemption applies even though such motor fuel tax is refundable or has in fact been refunded, as in the case of farmers or other nonhighway motor fuel consumers. Aviation jet fuel sales and special fuel sales not taxed under article 27 of title 39, C.R.S. 1973, are subject to sales tax because the exemptions and dates in the law do not apply to those sales.
Rule 39-26-716.
(1) Exemption. A farm close-out sale that meets the requirements set forth in § 39- 26-102(4), C.R.S. and as more fully described in this rule is exempt from sales and use tax. See § 39-26-716(4)(a), C.R.S.
(2) Due Diligence of Auctioneer. A farm close-out sale is often conducted by an auctioneer. An auctioneer is a retailer and responsible for collecting, reporting, and remitting sales tax on an auction sale, unless the sale is exempt or the owner has a sales tax license. § 39-26-102(1.3), C.R.S. An auctioneer who is responsible for collecting sales tax must exercise due diligence to determine whether goods sold at an auction sale are exempt under the “farm close out sale” exemption. The department will presume that an auctioneer exercised due diligence if the auctioneer obtained a written declaration, signed by the farm or ranch owner or owner's agent, and the declaration contains the following:
(a) a description of each item of property offered for sale (regardless of whether such property is actually sold) and in such detail as to allow the specific property to be identified by a third-party (e.g., VIN of motor vehicles and “disc plow” are sufficient, but “farm implement” is not sufficient);
(b) a declaration that:
(i) the property was used in the owner's farming or ranching operation;
(ii) the owner/owner's agent is making or attempting to make a full and final disposition of all property used in the farming or ranching operation;
(iii) the owner is abandoning the operation on the premises whereon the farming or ranching operation was previously conducted; and (iv) if the statement is signed by the owner's agent, a declaration that the owner's agent has personal knowledge of the facts supporting the statements or has confirmed with a person (whose name and address are set forth in the declaration) who has such personal knowledge, that the forgoing statements are true.
(3) Department May Independently Review Declarations. The department is not bound by such declarations and may independently review a farm close-out sale to determine whether the exemption applies.
(a) Purchasers. A purchaser is liable for sales tax if the department later determines that the exemption does not apply.
(b) Auctioneers. An auctioneer who, through the exercise of due diligence, reasonably concludes that the sale qualifies as an exempt farm close-out sale is not liable for sales tax if the department later determines that the sale is subject to tax. An auctioneer who has reasonable grounds to believe that any property sold does not qualify for the farm close-out sale exemption must collect sales tax on such property and, if the purchaser believes that such sale is exempt, advise the purchaser that he or she may apply to the department which will evaluate whether the sale is exempt.
(c) Farm or Ranch Owners. Farm and ranch owners typically are not “retailers” because they sell their farm and ranch produce at wholesale. Therefore, such owners do not have an obligation to collect tax on the sale of taxable goods. However, a farm or ranch owner who holds a sales tax license issued by the department must, among its other responsibilities as a retailer, exercise the same due diligence otherwise required of the auctioneer at a farm close-out sale.
(4) Claiming Farm Close-Out Sale Exemption for Motor Vehicles. The auctioneer or licensed owner shall provide, at the conclusion of the farm close-out auction sale, to the purchaser of exempt property a copy of the owner's or owner's agent's written declaration, if such declaration has been made. The purchaser of a motor vehicle sold as part of a farm close-out auction sale shall present a copy of the declaration to the county clerk when the purchaser registers the motor vehicle. The county clerk shall not collect any sales or use tax administered by the department if presented with such a declaration. If a purchaser a motor vehicle is not provided a declaration, the purchaser who believes that the purchase is exempt must pay the appropriate sales or use tax to the county clerk and may file a claim for refund with the department which will review whether the sale is exempt.
(5) Retained Ownership of Real Property. A farmer or rancher may retain ownership of his improved and unimproved real property and his personal property not used in the farming or ranching operations and still be eligible for this exemption if he is abandoning his farming or ranching operations. Rule 39-26-717. Medical Material, Equipment, and Drugs. Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are section 39-21-112(1) and section 39- 26-717, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to provide clarification regarding sales tax exemptions allowed for medical materials, equipment, and drugs.
(1) Definitions. As used in this rule and section 39-26-717, C.R.S., unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) “Prescription drug” has the same meaning as set forth in section 12-280- 103(42), C.R.S.
(b) “Urine- and blood-testing kits and materials” include glucose strips and puncture lancets.
(c) “Prosthetic device” means a replacement, corrective, or supportive device, including repair and replacement parts for such device, worn on or in the body to:
(i) artificially replace a missing portion of the body;
(ii) prevent or correct physical deformity or malfunction; or (iii) support a weak or deformed portion of the body.
(d) “Corrective eyeglasses and contact lenses” include over-the-counter corrective eyeglasses. However, the charges for eyeglass lens coatings (anti-reflective, scratch-resistant, anti-fog, etc.) that are separately stated on the invoice for corrective eyeglasses are taxable.
(e) “Furnished by a practitioner as part of professional services provided to a patient,” as used in section 39-26-717(2)(a) and (2)(k), C.R.S., means “furnished to a patient” by a “practitioner” as part of “professional services” as those terms are defined in section 39-26-717(1)(c), C.R.S., and this paragraph (1)(e).
(i) Furnished to a Patient.
(ii) Professional Services.
(f) “Materials”, as used in section 39-26-717(2)(k), C.R.S., does not include non-medical materials, such as baby diapers, disposable razors, boxes of tissues, toilet paper, deodorant, mouthwash, hand lotion (even if medicated), baby bottles, denture cleaner and adhesive, slippers, shave kits, admission kits, sanitary pads, and tampons, regardless of whether such non-medical materials are “furnished to a patient” as defined in paragraph (1)(e)(i) of this rule.
(g) “Oxygen delivery equipment” means a system used to transport oxygen directly into the patient’s lungs and administered because the patient experiences an inadequate supply of oxygen.
(i) “Oxygen delivery equipment” includes:
(h) Durable medical equipment, including repair and replacement parts.
(i) “Durable medical equipment” includes, to the extent such items meet the statutory definition in section 39-26-717(1)(a), C.R.S.:
(ii) In general, equipment used primarily for preventative care, such as elder care or bariatric care, is not exempt durable medical equipment because the equipment is primarily and customarily used in the absence of an existing illness or injury. Equipment not specifically designed for the treatment of an existing illness or injury does not qualify for the durable medical equipment exemption even though the practitioner may believe that the equipment is useful or beneficial to the patient.
(i) “Mobility enhancing equipment”:
(i) includes accessories related to equipment listed in section 39-26- 717(1)(b)(II), C.R.S., such as ramps, motorized mechanical lifts, and carrying racks whose primary and customary purpose is to load or carry an exempt scooter in or on a motor vehicle;
(ii) includes stairglides, lifts in home, and patient transport devices; and (iii) does not include items that are not primarily and customarily used to enhance mobility, such as shoe insoles, arch pads, dancer pads, knee braces, and ankle braces.
(j) “Equipment and related accessories for inhalation therapy” include room humidifiers, vaporizers, aspirators, aerosol compressors (stationary and portable), ultrasonic nebulizers, volume ventilators, respirators and related device supplies, percussors, vibrators, intermittent positive pressure breathing, circuits, devices and supplies, air oxygen mixers, oxygen concentrators, apnea monitors, ventilator vaporizers, and tubing.
(2) Dispensed Pursuant to a Prescription Order. The exemptions authorized by section 39-26-717(2)(g), (h), (i), and (j), C.R.S., apply only to items named therein that are dispensed pursuant to a prescription order and are therefore limited to purchases and leases of such items by a patient.
(a) A hospital or other medical service provider’s purchases are not exempt under section 39-26-717(2)(g), (h), (i), or (j), C.R.S., because the hospital or provider’s purchase is not made pursuant to a prescription order.
(b) The exemptions authorized by section 39-26-717(2)(g), (h), (i), and (j), C.R.S., do not apply to any items named when used for animals because the term “person” used in the definition of “prescription order” in section 39-26-717(1)(e)(II), C.R.S., does not include animals.
Rule 39-26-717–2. Period Products.
Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1) and 39-26-717, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to provide examples and guidance regarding the sales and use tax exemption for period products.
(1) General Rule. Beginning January 1, 2023, sales of period products are exempt from sales and use taxes. Section 39-26-717(1)(b.5), C.R.S., defines “period products” as “consumer products used to manage menstruation.” A product manages menstruation if its primary purpose is to absorb or contain menstrual flow.
(a) Examples of Qualifying Products. Period products include, but are not limited to, tampons, menstrual pads and sanitary napkins, pantiliners, menstrual sponges, menstrual cups, menstrual discs, 2-in-1 incontinence and period pads, and menstrual underwear designed to hold menstrual flow.
(b) Examples of Non-Qualifying Products. Period products do not include products that have the primary purpose of providing pain relief; digital or electronic products used for tracking menstruation or ovulation; home products such as sheets, bed liners, or mattress covers; general grooming products; or general hygiene products such as soap, body wash, cleaning solution, shampoo or conditioner, toothpaste, mouthwash, deodorant or antiperspirant, lotion, and sun tan lotions.
Rule 39-26-717–3. Incontinence Products and Diapers.
Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1) and 39-26-717, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to provide examples and guidance regarding the sales and use tax exemption for incontinence products and diapers.
(1) General Rule. Beginning January 1, 2023, sales of incontinence products and diapers are exempt from sales and use taxes. Section 39-26-717(1)(a.5), C.R.S., defines “incontinence products and diapers” as “absorbent cloth or disposable products worn by humans who are incapable of, or have difficulty, controlling their bladder or bowel movements.”
(a) Examples of Qualifying Products. Incontinence products and diapers include, but are not limited to, cloth diapers; disposable diapers; diaper inserts and liners; 2-in-1 incontinence and period pads; and pads and liners for bladder leaks.
(b) Examples of Non-Qualifying Products. Incontinence products and diapers do not include clothing suitable for general use; hygiene products such as rash creams, soaps and cleaning solutions, or lotions; or home products such as sheets, bed and crib liners, or mattress covers. Rule 39-26-718. Charitable and Other Exempt Organizations. Basis and Purpose. The bases for this rule are §§ 39-21-112(1), 39-26-102(2.5), 39- 26-718, and 39-26-725, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to provide clarification regarding what organizations, activities, and purchases qualify for the charitable and other exempt organizations exemption.
(1) General Rule.
(a) Purchases by charitable organizations are exempt from state sales and use taxes and state-administered local sales and use taxes if the purchases are part of the charitable organization’s regular charitable functions and activities.
(b) Sales by charitable organizations generally are not exempt from sales tax, except for occasional sales, sales where a portion of the purchase price is a donation, and sales by certain school-related entities.
(c) The following are common situations where the acquisition of property by a charitable organization is not subject to sales tax.
(i) The charitable organization does not pay the donor for the donation (sales tax does not apply to transactions when consideration is not paid), or (ii) The purchase was part of its regular charitable function and activity, or (iii) The purchase was made with the intention of reselling the item at a fundraising event, in which case the charitable organization’s purchase is exempt as a wholesale purchase for resale.
(2) Types of Charitable Organizations.
(a) Charitable organizations must serve a public rather than a private interest and be organized and operated exclusively for one or more of the following purposes or functions:
(i) Religious; to the extent consistent with Catholic Health Initiatives Colo. v. City of Pueblo, 207 P.3d 812, (Colo. 2009).
(ii) Charitable;
(iii) Scientific;
(iv) Literary;
(v) Educational;
(vi) Testing for public safety;
(vii) Fostering national or international amateur sports competition, as long as no part of its activities involves providing athletic facilities or equipment;
(viii) Preventing cruelty to children or animals;
(b) Veterans’ Organizations. A veterans’ organization registered under section 501(c)(19) of the Internal Revenue Code is a charitable organization for purposes of the Colorado charitable organizations exemption.
(c) Charitable, as used in paragraph (2)(a)(ii) of this rule, is used in its generally accepted legal sense and is, therefore, not to be construed as limited by the separate enumeration of other tax-exempt purposes which may fall within the broad outlines of charity as developed by judicial decisions. Charitable includes:
(i) Relief of the poor and distressed or of the underprivileged;
(ii) Advancement of education or science;
(iii) Erection or maintenance of public buildings, monuments, or works;
(iv) Lessening of the burdens of government;
(v) Care of the sick, infirm, or aged;
(vi) Lessen neighborhood tensions;
(vii) Eliminate prejudice and discrimination;
(viii) Defend human and civil rights secured by law; or (ix) Combat community deterioration and juvenile delinquency.
(d) Educational, as used in (2)(a)(v) of this rule, relates to:
(i) The instruction or training of the individual for the purpose of improving or developing his capabilities; or (ii) The instruction of the public on subjects useful to the individual and beneficial to the community.
(e) Testing for public safety, as used in paragraph (2)(a)(vi) of this rule, includes the testing of consumer products to determine whether they are safe for use by the general public.
(f) Scientific, as used in paragraph (2)(a)(iii) of this rule, includes carrying on of scientific research in the public interest. For research to be scientific, it must be carried on in furtherance of the scientific purpose.
(g) IRS 501(c)(3) Certificates. A charitable organization that holds a 501(c)(3) determination letter from the Internal Revenue Service is provisionally presumed to qualify as a charitable organization that is exempt from Colorado sales and use tax. However, the Department is not bound by an IRS determination of an organization’s charitable status, and the Department may independently evaluate whether the entity qualifies as a charitable entity.
(h) Religious Organization. The IRS does not require religious organizations to apply for a 501(c)(3) certificate in order to qualify as a tax-exempt charitable organization. In such cases, the Department will issue a sales tax exemption certificate to a religious charitable entity, even in the absence of an 501(c)(3) certificate, if the organization has a charitable purpose and meets the conditions set forth below. In lieu of the 501(c)(3) certificate, a religious organization shall provide to the Department a copy of its IRS No Record of Exempt Organization letter and Department Form DR 0716, “Statement of Nonprofit Church, Synagogue, or Organization”.
(i) If the applicant is a religious organization that is an affiliate of a national organization that holds a Colorado exemption certificate, applicant may submit, in lieu of such a determination letter, documentation from the national organization demonstrating that applicant is an affiliate of such organization.
(i) Nonprofit Organizations. An organization that is a nonprofit or an organization that performs some charitable services or provides funding to a qualified charitable organization does not automatically qualify as a charitable organization for sales and use tax purposes. In order to qualify, the organization must be established and operated exclusively for one or more of the charitable purposes listed above. Examples of organizations that do not typically qualify as a charitable organization for purposes of this exemption are nonprofit country clubs, private clubs, employees or social clubs or organizations, nonprofit recreational organizations, lodges, patriotic organizations, fraternities, sororities, professional and trade associations, civic organizations, labor unions, political organizations, and other nonprofit entities.
(3) Application for Exemption Certificates.
(a) Applicants must submit a completed application for a sales tax exemption certificate and include a copy of the organization's federal exemption determination letter.
(b) Notwithstanding a determination by the IRS of an applicant’s exempt status, the Department may conduct, either before or after the issuance of an exemption certificate, an independent review of whether the organization qualifies for the exemption authorized by § 39-26-718, C.R.S.
(4) Restrictions on Charitable Organization Activities. The restrictions in this paragraph (4) are applicable only to charitable organizations described in paragraph (2)(a) of this rule.
(a) Exclusively. A charitable organization described in paragraph (2)(a) of this rule will be regarded as operating exclusively for one or more exempt purpose only if the organization exclusively engages in activities in furtherance of its exempt purpose. A charitable organization described in paragraph (2)(a) of this rule will not lose its exempt charitable status if its non-charitable activities are insubstantial.
(i) Examples.
(b) Other Restrictions. A charitable organization described in paragraph (2)(a) of this rule is subject to the following limitations in order to qualify for the sales and use tax exemption certificate:
(i) No part of an organization’s net earnings can benefit any private shareholder or individual. Compensation paid by the organization for services rendered, including services performed by employees or officers of the charitable organization, must be reasonable.
(ii) No substantial part of an organization’s activities can be carrying-on propaganda or otherwise attempting to influence legislation. For example, an organization whose main activity is scientific is not a charitable organization for sales and use tax purposes if a substantial portion of the organization's activities involves dissemination of propaganda that is favorable to its political objectives or consists of lobbying for legislation that supports the organization's activities and mission.
(iii) An organization may not participate in, or intervene in, a political campaign on behalf of any candidate for public office (including the publishing or distributing of statements).
(5) Purchases by Charitable Organizations.
(a) Purchases by charitable organizations are exempt from sales and use taxes if the goods or services are used exclusively in the conduct of the charitable organization’s regular charitable functions and activities. Purchases must be made directly from the organization’s funds and, for purchases over two-hundred fifty dollars, must be made with a check or credit card issued in the organization’s name. Purchases made with funds other than the organization’s own funds or purchases made with a charitable organization’s funds but reimbursed by someone who is not a qualified charitable organization are not exempt from sales or use tax. Whenever a charitable organization purchases tangible personal property (such as cards, food, cars, etc.) that is to be transferred to anyone else for personal use and all or part of the price of the goods is recouped from the user through direct payment, donation or games of chance (but not including a sale), the organization's exempt status does not apply and sales tax must be paid to the vendor by the exempt organization. If such purchases are made outside Colorado or in Colorado without payment of Colorado sales tax, the tax must be paid directly to the Department by the organization.
(i) Examples.
(6) Donor’s Obligation for Sales and Use Tax.
(a) A donor who purchases tangible personal property for the purpose of donating it to a charity must pay sales or use tax on the purchase and cannot claim the charitable organization’s exemption. The donor cannot claim a sale for resale exemption because the property is donated, not resold, to the charitable organization.
(b) A retailer who initially makes a wholesale (exempt) purchase of an item for resale (e.g., retailer buys an item for its inventory it plans to resale) and later withdraws that item from inventory and donates it to a charitable organization incurs use tax on the withdrawal from inventory. However, see cross reference (1) for information on the exemption for donations of manufactured goods by manufacturers.
(7) Sales by Charitable Organizations.
(a) General Rule. Sales made by charitable organizations are generally not exempt from sales tax, unless the sale qualifies for the occasional sale exemption, as a donation, or for any other exemption that may apply (see paragraphs (8) and (9) of this rule). For that reason, a charitable organization that makes repeated sales of tangible personal property to the public and otherwise meets the definition of a retailer must have a sales tax license and collect and remit tax in the same manner as any other retailer. For example, a charitable organization that operates a gift or book shop, rummage store, or coffee shop must collect sales tax on sales. The fact that the merchandise sold may have been acquired by gift or donation, or that the proceeds are to be used for charitable purposes, does not make the sales exempt from tax.
(b) Occasional Sale Exemption. Occasional sales of taxable tangible personal property by a charitable organization that holds a Colorado exemption certificate are exempt from sales and use taxes. See paragraph (10), below, for information of local taxes. An occasional sale must meet the following criteria:
(i) The charitable organization conducts sales for a total of twelve days or less during a calendar year, and
(ii) The “net proceeds” from all these events do not exceed twenty-five thousand dollars in that calendar year. “Net proceeds” means the total gross receipt(s) minus expenses directly attributable to the event(s).
(iii) The funds retained by the charitable organization are used in the course of the organization’s charitable service.
(iv) Living accommodations and other taxable services. The exemption for occasional sales applies only to the sale of tangible personal property. Therefore, sales of taxable services by a charitable organization are subject to tax. For example, a charitable organization conducts a silent auction at which it auctions a weekend rental of a timeshare or hotel room. The sale of living accommodations is a sale of a service. The sale is subject to state and local sales taxes applicable to where the accommodation is located even if the charitable organization has not exceeded the twelve day or twenty-five thousand dollar thresholds. The sale of the living accommodation is not included in the calculation of the twenty-five thousand dollar threshold.
(v) Goods sold on consignment. Goods given by a retailer to a charitable organization for sale at a fundraising event with the understanding that the goods will be offered for sale at a minimum price and the minimum price is paid to the retailer, and with the further understanding that the goods would be returned to the retailer if not sold at the event are subject to sales tax on the minimum price even if the twenty-five thousand dollar threshold is not met. For example, a bike shop offers a bike to a charitable organization to be sold at a fundraising auction, but the bike shop requires the charitable organization to pay the bike shop a portion of the purchase price in the event the bike is sold. The charitable organization must collect sales tax from the successful bidder for the payment made to the bike shop, even if the net proceeds from the event do not exceed the twenty-five thousand dollar threshold.
(c) Donations. A portion of the purchase price for a sale made by a charitable organization may be a donation if the amount paid exceeds the fair market value of the good purchased.
(i) The exclusion of donations from the tax base applies even if the charitable organization exceeds the twelve day / twenty-five thousand dollar threshold of the occasional sale exemption. This rule also applies to state-administered local sales taxes even if the local tax jurisdiction elected to tax occasional sales of charitable organizations.
(ii) The donation amount is not included in the calculation of the twenty-five thousand dollar net proceeds threshold for the occasional sale exemption.
(iii) Examples.
(iv) In order to claim a sales tax exemption for a donation included in the buyer’s purchase price, the buyer and charitable organization must establish the following:
(v) The Department will presume that the price paid for an item sold at auction is the item’s fair market value and that the buyer did not knowingly pay in excess of the fair market value. These presumptions can be rebutted by reasonable evidence, such as the price for comparable goods sold by a retailer in its regular course of business and that buyer knew the fair market value of the goods at the time of the purchase. For example, the fair market value of a signed professional sports jersey sold at auction will be presumed to be the price paid by the successful bidder, but the presumption can be rebutted by documentation of the sales price of a comparable signed jersey sold to the public at the professional team’s or other retail store.
(vi) The Department will presume that any donation that qualifies as a donation for federal income tax purposes also qualifies as a donation for sales tax purposes.
(8) Parent-Teacher Associations. Sales by associations or organizations of parents and teachers of public school students are exempt from sales tax if:
(a) The association or organization is a charitable organization, and;
(b) The sale proceeds are used for the benefit of a public school, an organized public school activity, or to pay reasonable expenses of the association or organization.
(c) The exemption does not apply to sales by private schools. However, sales by private schools that qualify as charitable organizations are exempt as occasional sales or are not taxable to the extent the purchase price is a donation, or are exempt pursuant to paragraph 9, below. § 39-26- 718(1)(c), C.R.S. See paragraph (10), below, for information on local taxes.
(d) Occasional Sales Restrictions Do Not Apply. This exemption applies even if the sale has exceeded the occasional sale exemption threshold (twelve days / twenty-five thousand dollar as discussed in (7)(b) “Occasional Sale Exemption”).
(i) Example. A public school parent-teacher association can raise funds by selling candy exempt from sales tax in order to purchase school sports uniforms. However, if the parent-teacher association is supporting a private school, its sales are taxable, unless the association is a charitable organization for educational purposes. In addition, if students reimburse the school for the uniforms, then tax must be collected on the amount paid by students.
(9) Sales by Public, Private Schools and Supporting Organizations. Sales by public and private schools and supporting organizations are exempt from sales tax if the conditions described in paragraphs (a) to (d) are met. See paragraph (10), below, for information on local taxes.
(a) The school is for students in kindergarten through twelfth grade.
(b) Preschools, trade schools and post-secondary schools do not qualify.
(c) The sale is made by any of the following:
(i) the school;
(ii) an association or organization of parents and school teachers;
(iii) booster club or other club, group or organization whose primary purpose is to support a school activity; or (iv) a school class, student club, group or organization. These organizations qualify for this exemption even if they are not charitable organizations. Examples include: concession sales by booster club or a silent auction sales conducted by a parent-teacher association or school are exempt if all the proceeds are donated to the school or school- approved student organization (d) All the proceeds from the sale, except the actual cost incurred by a person or entity to acquire the good or service sold, must be donated to the school or school-approved student organization. Actual costs incurred to acquire the goods or services include, payment facility charges (rent for space, furniture or equipment), labor (wages for security, independent contractors, employees), transportation, meals, insurance, and other costs.
(e) Sales by a parent-teacher association that are not exempt under this paragraph (9) may, nevertheless, be as exempt if the sale meets the requirements for an exempt sale as a charitable organization or as a public school parent-teacher association or organization.
(f) Occasional Sales Restrictions do not apply. This exemption applies even if the sale has exceeded the thresholds for the occasional sale exemption (twelve days / twenty-five thousand dollar as discussed in (7)(b) “Occasional Sale Exemption”).
(g) Purchases by public schools are exempt from sales tax. § 39-26-704(4), C.R.S. Purchases by private schools are not exempt unless the private school is a charitable organization.
(10) State-Administered Local Tax Jurisdictions. State-administered cities and counties have the option to adopt the following exemptions from sales tax (1) occasional sales by charitable organizations, (2) sales that benefit a Colorado school, and (3) sales by an association or organization of parents and teachers of public school students that is a charitable organization. See § 29-2- 105(1)(d)(I)(E), (K), and (L), C.R.S., respectively. However, state-administered special districts, such as the Regional Transportation District, must always exempt such sales from sales tax in conformity with state sales tax exemptions. Unless exempt, charitable organizations are responsible for collecting state- administered city and county sales taxes for the local jurisdiction in which the sale occurs. If the state-administered city or county taxes occasional sales, then the charitable organization must obtain a Colorado sales tax license prior to such sales so that the organization can report and remit the local sales tax to the Department, even though these sales are exempt from Colorado state sales tax. Home rule cities are not governed by these rules and procedures and should be contacted directly for more information on their procedures (11) Other Tax Exempt Organizations. Other tax-exempt organizations (including governmental entities) that sell tangible personal property (for example, through a secondhand goods retail store, a fundraiser sales event or routine sales of organization-related items) must obtain a sales tax license and collect all applicable state and local sales taxes.
Cross References 1. For information on the exemption for donations of manufactured goods by manufacturers, see § 39-26-705(2), C.R.S.
2. Catholic Health Initiatives Colo. v. City of Pueblo, 207 P.3d 812, (Colo. 2009). Rule 39-26-734–1. Declared Wildfire Disaster Rebuild Exemption Refund Rate. Basis and Purpose. The statutory bases for this rule are sections 39-21-112(1), 39-26- 122, 39-26-734(6)(c), 32-9-119(2), and 32-13-107, C.R.S. The purpose of this rule is to explain how the sales and use tax exemptions allowed by section 39-26-734(3)(a) and related refunds will be calculated with respect to qualified residential structures that are outside the Regional Transportation District, the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District, or both.
Qualified residential structures that are outside the Regional Transportation District established by article 9 of title 32, C.R.S., the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District established by article 13 of title 32, C.R.S., or both, are eligible for the four percent refund rate set forth in section 39-26-734(4)(b), C.R.S. Editor's Notes History Regulations 39-26-102.3, 39-26-102.13, 39-26-102.21, 39-26-707.1 emer. rules eff. 03/01/2010.
Regulations 39-26-115, 39-26-118.2, 39-26-207 emer. rules eff 03/01/2010; expired 06/01/2010.
Regulations 39-26-102.3, 39-26-102.13, 39-26-102.21, 39-26-707.1 emer. rules eff. 06/01/2010.
Regulation 39-26-102.21 emer. rule eff. 06/28/2010.
Regulation 39-26-102.3 eff. 07/30/2010.
Regulation 39-26-102.21 eff. 08/14/2010.
Regulation 39-26-707.1 emer. rule eff. 09/14/2010.
Regulation 39-26-102.13 emer. rule eff. 09/14/2010.
Regulation 39-26-707.1 eff. 10/30/2010.
Regulation 39-26-102.13 emer. rule eff. 01/10/2011.
Regulations 39-26-102.13; 39-26-113.5 eff. 03/02/2011.
Regulations 39-26-102.4, 39-26-716.4(A) eff. 08/15/2011. Regulations 39-26-102(1.3), 39-26-104(1)(A), 39-26-105(1)(B), 39-26-105.5, 39-26- 118(1) eff. 03/03/2014. Regulations 39-26-102.16, 39-26-106.3, 39-26-108, 39- 26-501(3), 39-26-502, 39-26-601(3), 39-26-602 repealed eff. 03/03/2014. Regulations 39-26-102.17, 39-26-103.5, 39-26-104(1)(B)(I), 39-26-105(1)(A), 39-26- 106, 39-26-113.5, 39-26-718 eff. 05/30/2014. Regulations 39-26-102.2.5, 39-26- 102.7(b), 39-26-103.5.6, 39-26-104.1(b)(I)(B), 39-26-106.2(a), 39-26-708.2(b), 39-26-709.2, 39-26-715.2(b), 39-26-716.4(b)-(c) repealed eff. 05/30/2014. Regulation 39-26-105(1)(B) eff. 07/15/2014.
Regulation 39-26-706.1 repealed eff. 08/30/2014.
Regulation 39-26-717 eff. 10/15/2014.
Regulation 39-26-102.1 repealed eff. 10/30/2014.
Regulations 39-26-102(17), 39-26-103.5, 39-26-104(1)(B)(I), 39-26-105, 39-26-113.5, 39-26-718 eff. 02/14/2015. Regulation 39-26-104.1(B)(I)(A) repealed eff. 02/14/2015.
Regulation 39-26-717.1 repealed eff. 04/30/2015.
Regulation 39-26-105.5 emer. rule eff. 06/03/2015; expired 10/01/2015. Regulation 39-26-105.5 eff. 01/14/2016.
Regulation 39-26-718 eff. 06/14/2016. Regulations 26-204.3, 39-26-703.1, 39-26-705.1, 39-26-707.1(E) repealed eff. 06/14/2016.
Rule 39-26-704(1.5) eff. 03/17/2017.
Rule 39-26-105.3 eff. 07/15/2017. Regulations 39-26-713.2(d), 39-26-713.2(e), 39-26- 715.1(a)(II) repealed eff. 07/15/2017.
Rule 39-26-109 eff. 01/01/2018.
Regulation 39-26-718(5)(a), Rule 39-26-105(3) eff. 07/30/2018. Regulations 26-102.14, 26-102.22, 39-26-105.1(c), 39-26-713.2(c) repealed eff. 07/30/2018. Rule 39-26-105 eff. 08/14/2018. Regulation 39-26-105.5 repealed eff. 08/14/2018. Regulations 39-26-102(1.3), 39-26-102(9), 39-26-103.5, 39-26-104(1)(b)(I), 39-26-105, 39-26-204(2), 39-26-704(2) emer. rules eff. 12/01/2018. Regulations 39-26- 102.3, 39-26-105(1)(A) emer. rules repealed eff. 12/01/2018. Regulations 39-26-102(1.3), 39-26-718 emer. rules eff. 12/18/2018. Regulations 39-26-102(1.3), 39-26-102(9), 39-26-103.5, 39-26-104(1)(b)(I), 39-26-105, 39-26-204(2), 39-26-704(2), 39-26-718 eff. 04/14/2019. Regulations 39-26-102.3, 39-26-105(1)(A) repealed eff. 04/14/2019.
Rules 39-26-102(9), 39-26-104–1, 39-26-105, 39-26-106–1, 39-26-106–2, 39-26-112, 39-26-202 eff. 03/16/2020.
Regulation 39-26-204(2) repealed eff. 03/30/2020.
Rule 39-26-105-5 emer. rule eff. 04/07/2020; expired 08/05/2020. Rules 39-26-102(1.3), 39-26-102(3), 39-29-102(4.5) (1)(b)(3), 39-26-102(21)(1)(b)-(c), 39-26-103, 39-26-103.5, 39-26-104–2, 39-26-104–3, 39-26-105–2, 39-26-105–3, 39-26-105.3, 39-26-109, 39-26-116(a), 39-26-118, 39-26-125, 39-26-210, 39-26- 704–2, 39-26-717, 39-26-718 eff. 09/30/2020. Rule 39-26-106–4 repealed eff. 09/30/2020.
Rule 39-26-102(15) eff. 01/30/2021.
Rule 39-26-717 eff. 04/30/2021.
Rule 39-26-704–4 eff. 05/15/2021.
Rules 39-26-717(1)(c), 39-26-717(2) eff. 03/17/2022.
Rule 39-26-102(11) eff. 12/30/2022.
Rules 39-26-717-2, 39-26-717-3 eff. 05/15/2023.
Rule 39-26-734-1 emer. rule eff. 08/03/2023; expired 12/01/2023. Rules 39-26-110, 39-26-703-1, 39-26-703-2, 39-26-720, 39-26-721 repealed eff. 08/30/2023.
Rules 39-26-102(11), 39-26-734-1 eff. 12/15/2023.
Rule 39-26-703-2 eff. 03/01/2024.
Rules 29-2-106(9) repealed eff. 10/30/2025.
Rules 39-26-104-2, 39-26-105-1, 39-26-106-1, 39-26-717-3(b) eff. 10/30/2025, 39-26- 118, 39-26-122, 39-26-704-3, 39-26-704-5 repealed eff. 10/30/2025. Rule 39-26-109 eff. 04/14/2026.
Annotation Regulation 39-26-102.13 was repealed by House Bill 11-1293, eff. 07/01/2012.