Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a)
Coin-operated Amusement Devices - Taxable Devices
1) To be taxable, the device must be
coin-operated, or operated by the insertion of tokens, chips or similar
objects, or operated by the use of a debit or prepaid card or mobile device,
and it must be an amusement device. However, if an otherwise taxable amusement
device is equipped to be operated by means of the insertion of coins, tokens,
chips or similar objects, or operated by the use of a debit or prepaid card or
mobile device, it is the Department's position that the device does not cease
to be a taxable device because of the fact that the operator of the device has
his or her customers pay for the use of the device at the bar or in some other
way that avoids the use of a receptacle that accepts coins, tokens, chips or
similar objects, or a debit or prepaid card or mobile device.
2) The device cannot return money or property
or the right to receive money or property to the player. For example, a crane
game that offers players the right to receive merchandise contained in the
machine is not subject to the tax.
3) An amusement device is a device that is
played primarily for amusement or entertainment rather than for the purchase of
some specific commodity or service. Every kind of coin-operated amusement
device, that does not return money or property or the right to receive money or
property to the player, is subject to the tax. Therefore, the tax applies not
only to coin-operated pinball machines, gun-ray devices and shuffleboards (as
it did prior to August 1, 1963), but also (commencing August 1, 1963) to
coin-operated hockey games, baseball games, horse racing games, gun games of
all kinds, pool games, mechanical pony rides and other similar devices, juke
boxes, fortune-telling machines and anything else that comes within the
foregoing definition of a coin-operated amusement device.
b) Redemption Machines
Tax shall be imposed as required in Section
460.101
on the privilege of operating a redemption machine. For purposes of this Part,
a redemption machine is a single-player or multi-player amusement
device involving a game, the object of which is throwing, rolling, bowling,
shooting, placing, or propelling a ball or other object that is either physical
or computer generated on a display or with lights into, upon, or against a hole
or other target that is either physical or computer generated on a display or
with lights, or stopping, by physical, mechanical, or electronic means, a
moving object that is either physical or computer generated on a display or
with lights into, upon, or against a hole or other target that is either
physical or computer generated on a display or with lights, provided that all
the following conditions are met:
1)
The outcome of the game is
predominantly determined by the skill of the player;
2)
The award of the prize is based
solely upon the player's achieving the object of the game or otherwise upon the
player's score;
3)
Only merchandise prizes are awarded;
4)
The wholesale value of prizes
awarded in lieu of tickets or tokens for single play of the device does not
exceed $25 [
720 ILCS
5/28-2(a)(4)] ;
and
5) The redemption
value of each individual ticket, token, or other representations of value from
a single play of the device does not exceed $25. The redemption value
of tickets, tokens, and other representations of value may be accumulated by
players to redeem prizes of greater value. [
720 ILCS
5/28-2(a)(4)(E)]
c) Nontaxable Devices and
Redemption Machines
1) The tax does not apply
to a coin-operated device maintained by a public utility for furnishing public
utility service (such as telephone service). The tax does not apply to any
coin-operated device designed and used strictly as a means of vending
merchandise or service. For example, this tax does not apply (among other
things) to cigarette, soft drink and other merchandise vending machines, nor to
coin-operated scales that merely provide information concerning a person's
weight, nor to coin-operated machines that merely provide the customer with a
photographing service, nor to coin-operated machines that merely provide a
laundry or dry cleaning service.
2)
The tax does not apply to gambling devices, as defined in Section 28-2 of the
Criminal Code [
720 ILCS 5/28-2
].
3) The tax does not apply to a
coin-operated amusement device or redemption machine that would otherwise be
taxable when the person operating the device or machine is a private club or
organization, and when the club or organization restricts the displaying of the
amusement device or machine to its membership and the device or machine is not
displayed in such a manner as to be accessible to the public. The exemption
described in the preceding sentence arises from the fact that the Act is worded
so that it applies only to the displaying of coin-operated amusement devices or
redemption machines that are "to be played or operated by the public". However,
a private club or organization cannot be established for the purpose of
displaying amusement devices or redemption machines and thus evade the
privilege tax decal requirements of the Act.