Cloud Computing Transactions are the New "Wild West" Sales Tax Frontier

By Steven P. Bryde  |  September 13, 2013  |  Download PDF

New York imposes a sales tax on basic data access known as a taxable information service. In addition, the state has begun subjecting software-as-a-service (“SaaS”) and cloud computing to sales/use tax if the buyer is located in New York. It is one of a limited number of jurisdictions at the leading edge of aggressiveness in defining the taxability of online and cloud-computing transactions. But such aggressiveness is a growing trend. And for businesses, this tax posture creates a new set of obligations.

This article, “Cloud Computing Transactions are the New ‘Wild West’ Sales Tax Frontier as Jurisdictions Push Aggressively to Increase Online Revenue”, was originally published in The Metropolitan Corporate Counsel, September 2013.

Jurisdictions are aggressive in taxing internet and cloud computing transactions

It is not easy to determine when a transaction is taxable and who must pay

A systematic questionnaire can flag hidden sales tax exposure

About Steven P. Bryde:

Jurisdictions are aggressive in taxing internet and cloud computing transactions

There are several issues in play. The first and broadest is the question of what constitutes a taxable presence or nexus. In the brick-and-mortar world, nexus generally requires a physical presence within the jurisdiction’s boundaries – a warehouse, a factory or a sales office, for example – that, if it existed, would make the out-of-jurisdiction entity subject to local sales tax collection for goods sold to in-state customers. Obviously, the Internet wreaks havoc with the question of physical presence. Amazon, for example, sells billions of dollars’ worth of goods via online transactions. In the early days of the Internet, those transactions were generally exempt from local sales taxation (or tax codes were simply unenforced). But in an era of huge online sales and local tax revenue shortfalls, few jurisdictions are willing to forgo that income and hence the rush to define “click-through nexus” – the level of presence that would make an online interstate transaction subject to state and local sales tax. Of the 46 states that collect sales tax, 26 have not enacted click-through nexus standards, at least not yet. New York is at the forefront, however. The State’s so-called “Amazon Tax” (NYS Tax Law Sec. 1101(b)(8)(vi), passed April 2008) imposes sales tax collection responsibility when a non-resident seller (like Amazon) does business in excess of $10,000 in the previous four quarterly periods in New York. The law applies if there is a written agreement with a local individual or corporation who gets paid a fee or a commission for sales it helps generate. Amazon responded by challenging the law in court. The NYS Court of Appeals recently upheld the law but an appeal to the US Supreme Court is likely. Meanwhile, the federal government hopes to impose something like New York’s Amazon Tax nationally. The Marketplace Fairness Act of 2013, which is based on a similar definition of a “remote seller”, has passed the Senate. If a remote seller has national remote sales of greater than $1million, such seller would have to collect sales tax from customers located in any state that it makes a remote sale of taxable property or services. The Act goes now to the House, where it is likely to receive broad support.

It is not easy to determine when a transaction is taxable and who must pay

In such complex circumstances, when is sales tax due? And who – customer or vendor – is responsible for paying it? New York holds that when you purchase data and other forms of software-as-a-service (SaaS), you are in constructive possession of tangible personal property, which is subject to sales tax. If the cloud-based vendor has a physical presence in New York State, it must collect sales tax even if its server is located elsewhere. If not, you, as the customer, are responsible for paying the reciprocal use tax.

A systematic questionnaire can flag hidden sales tax exposure

How do you know if you are responsible for sales tax on an Internet or cloud transaction, or if your vendor is? The best practice is to have your tax professional provide a nexus questionnaire for both corporate income and sales tax. A comprehensive questionnaire, listing activities by jurisdiction, can determine where income tax and sales tax filing requirements exist. But it is even more important to engage a state and local tax consulting expert in the wild, rapidly evolving world of Internet and cloud taxation, where there are only a few certainties. The tax picture is confusing, jurisdictions are hungry and aggressive, and the result can be akin to a Mack-truck collision, especially for small and mid-sized businesses that aren’t sufficiently focused on fast-moving state and local tax laws.


This article, “Cloud Computing Transactions are the New ‘Wild West’ Sales Tax Frontier as Jurisdictions Push Aggressively to Increase Online Revenue”, was originally published in The Metropolitan Corporate Counsel, September 2013.

About Steven P. Bryde:

Steven P. Bryde, JD, is a lawyer and a Principal in the Tax Practice at New York accounting firm Marks Paneth LLP. He specializes in state and local taxation for corporations and flow-thru entities in a cross section of industries as well as for individuals.

Contact Steven P. Bryde:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Phone: 212.503.8806; Fax: 212.503.8807                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            sbryde@markspaneth.com

 


About Steven P. Bryde

Steven P. Bryde Linkedin Icon

Steven P. Bryde, JD, is a Senior Consultant in the Tax Practice at Marks Paneth LLP. He specializes in state and local taxation for corporations and flow-thru entities in a cross section of industries as well as for individuals. With more than 30 years of tax experience, Mr. Bryde has spent nearly his entire career in public accounting. Over the years, he has held positions at both global and regional accounting firms. Among his accomplishments... READ MORE +


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