Hawaii Administrative Rules
Title 18 - DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Chapter 237D - TRANSIENT ACCOMMODATIONS TAX
Section 18-237D-3-01 - Exemptions
Current through August, 2024
(a) Exempted from this chapter are the following:
Example. A captain in the United States Army rents a condominium unit in Waikiki for one month while looking for permanent housing in Hawaii. The gross income received by the hotel operator is not subject to the transient accommodations tax because the captain is seeking living accommodations in Hawaii.
Example. A pineapple company provides lodging to employees who travel to Lanai to work in the pineapple fields. During the summer, the pineapple company employs high school and college students to work in the fields on Lanai and provides lodging to the students during their period of summer employment. Although the lodging provided by the pineapple company is for a period of less than 180 days, the pineapple company is not subject to the transient accommodations tax for such lodging because operators who furnish transient accommodations to students during summer employment are exempt under the law.
Example. The Consul General of Australia is in Hawaii for official business and rents a hotel room in Waikiki for one week. The Consul General holds a card issued by the United States Department of State granting an exemption from state hotel taxes. The gross income received by the hotel operator will not be subject to the transient accommodations tax.
(b) Accommodations furnished to transients who present cards or certificates stating that the holder is exempted from state hotel room taxes are nevertheless transient accommodations and their operators are subject to the tax except as provided in chapter 237D, HRS, and these rules.
(c) There is no transient accommodations tax exemption for gross income received by an operator for the rental of transient accommodations to a nonmilitary employee of the federal government or an employee of a state government.
Example. An employee of the United States Department of the Interior is in Hawaii for official business and rents a hotel room in Waikiki for one week. The gross income received by the hotel operator is subject to the transient accommodations tax because there is no transient accommodations tax exemption for renting transient accommodations to a non-military employee of the federal government.
(d) The director shall determine the sufficiency of the proof necessary for the application of the exemptions set forth in subsection (a). The necessary proof includes the following:
The operator shall maintain copies of documents supporting any claim for an exemption under this paragraph for three years.