Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 006 - Department of Finance and Administration
Division 05 - Division of Revenues
GROSS RECEIPTS TAX RULES
Rule 006.05.08-004-GR-5 - TAX IMPOSED UPON SALE AND NOT PROPERTY - INTERSTATE AND INTRASTATE SALES
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
A. The Arkansas gross receipts tax is a tax imposed on the sale of tangible personal property and not the property itself. Thus, when a sale of tangible personal property occurs in Arkansas, a taxable event has occurred and the tax should be collected and remitted.
B. INTRASTATE (ARKANSAS) SALE.
C. INTERSTATE SALES.
D. DROP SHIPMENTS. A drop shipment is a sales transaction involving three parties - two sellers and one consumer. The first seller sells property to the second seller, who sells to the consumer; however, the first seller delivers the property directly to the consumer. The taxability of drop shipments depends on the location of the second seller and the consumer. The location of the first seller is irrelevant because the sale from the first seller to the second seller is an exempt sale for resale.
Example 1: An out-of-state company, Company A, sells tangible personal property to another out-of-state company, Company B, but drop ships the property directly to Company B's customer located in Arkansas. The sale by Company A to Company B is an out-of-state transaction and is not taxed in Arkansas. The sale of the property is also a sale for resale and would be exempt if it occurred in Arkansas. The sale from Company B to its customer is taxable. Since Company B is making a sale to an Arkansas customer, Company B may be required to collect Arkansas tax. If Company B does not collect Arkansas tax, then the Arkansas customer is responsible for reporting and remitting Arkansas compensating use tax. See Ark. Code Ann. § 26-53-101 et seq. and the Arkansas Compensating Use Tax Rules.
Example 2: An Arkansas retailer, Company A, sells tangible personal property to a company located outside of Arkansas, Company B. Company A ships the tangible personal property directly to Company B's Arkansas customer. If Company B claims the sale-for-resale exemption, then the tax obligation is between Company B and the Arkansas customer. Company B may be required to collect Arkansas tax. If Company B does not collect Arkansas tax, then the Arkansas customer is responsible for reporting and remitting Arkansas compensating use tax. See Ark. Code Ann. § 26-53-101 et seq. and the Arkansas Compensating Use Tax Rules.
E. SERVICES.
Example: XYZ is a business located in West Memphis, Arkansas that repairs automobile motors. After repairing the motor, XYZ ships the motor by common carrier to Nashville, Tennessee. Since the customer took receipt of the service in Nashville, Tennessee, XYZ will not collect Arkansas tax.
Example: XYZ ships office equipment out of state for repairs. Following the repair, the office equipment is returned to XYZ in Arkansas. Office equipment repairs are subject to tax in Arkansas. Tax is due on the parts, labor, and delivery charged based on where the repaired item is delivered within Arkansas.
F. ENGAGED IN AN ESTABLISHED BUSINESS. A person is considered to be engaged in an established business within Arkansas if the person either directly, or through a subsidiary, has a store, salesroom, sample room, showroom, distribution center, warehouse, service center, factory, credit and collection office, administrative office, or research facility in Arkansas.
G. DELIVERY. Delivery in Arkansas means that physical possession of the tangible personal property is actually transferred to the buyer within Arkansas, or that the tangible personal property is placed in the mail or given to a common or contract carrier at a point outside this state and directed to the buyer in Arkansas.
Ark. Code Ann. §§ 26-52-103; 26-52-301; 26-52-302; 26-52-303