Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. General.
R.S.
47:287.95(L) provides for
the inclusion in the numerator of the sales factor of sales other than sales of
tangible personal property.
B.
Market-Based Sourcing. Sales other than sales of tangible personal property are
sourced to Louisiana if and to the extent that the taxpayers market for the
sales is in Louisiana. In general, the provisions in this section establish
rules for:
1. determining whether and to what
extent the market for a sale other than the sale of tangible personal property
is in Louisiana,
2. reasonably
approximating the state or states of assignment where the state or states
cannot be determined,
3. excluding
certain sales of intangible property from the numerator and denominator of the
receipts factor pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95(L)(1)(e),
and
4. excluding sales from the
numerator and denominator of the sales factor, pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95(M), where the
state or states of assignment cannot be determined or reasonably approximated,
or where the taxpayer is not taxable in the state to which the sales are
assigned.
C. Taxable in
another State. A taxpayer is taxable within another state if it meets either
one of two tests:
1. by reason of business
activity in another state, the taxpayer is subject to one of the following
types of taxes: A net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net income, a
franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, or a corporate stock tax;
or
2. by reason of such business
activity, another state has jurisdiction to subject the taxpayer to a net
income tax, regardless of whether or not the state imposes such a tax on the
taxpayer.
D. State. For
purposes of this regulation, state means a State of the United
States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States.
E. General
Principles of Application; Contemporaneous Records. In order to satisfy the
requirements of this regulation, a taxpayers assignment of sales other than
sales of tangible personal property must be consistent with the following
principles:
1. A taxpayer shall apply the
rules set forth in this regulation based on objective criteria and shall
consider all sources of information reasonably available to the taxpayer at the
time of its tax filing, including, without limitation, the taxpayers books and
records kept in the normal course of business. A taxpayer shall determine its
method of assigning sales in good faith, and apply it consistently with respect
to similar transactions and year to year. A taxpayer shall retain
contemporaneous records that explain the determination and application of its
method of assigning its sales, including its underlying assumptions, and shall
provide those records to the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Revenue
upon request.
2. This regulation
provides various assignment rules that apply sequentially in a hierarchy. For
each sale to which a hierarchical rule applies, a taxpayer must make a
reasonable effort to apply the primary rule applicable to the sale before
seeking to apply the next rule in the hierarchy (and must continue to do so
with each succeeding rule in the hierarchy, where applicable). For example, in
some cases, the applicable rule first requires a taxpayer to determine the
state or states of assignment, and if the taxpayer cannot do so, the rule
requires the taxpayer to reasonably approximate the state or states. In these
cases, the taxpayer must attempt to determine the state or states of assignment
(i.e., apply the primary rule in the hierarchy) in good faith and with
reasonable effort before it may reasonably approximate the state or
states.
3. A taxpayers method of
assigning its sales, including the use of a method of approximation, where
applicable, must reflect an attempt to obtain the most accurate assignment of
sales consistent with these regulatory standards rather than an attempt to
lower the taxpayers tax liability. A method of assignment that is reasonable
for one taxpayer may not necessarily be reasonable for another taxpayer,
depending upon the applicable facts.
F. Rules of Reasonable Approximation
1. In General. In general, this regulation
establishes uniform rules for determining whether and to what extent the market
for a sale other than the sale of tangible personal property is in Louisiana.
This regulation also sets forth rules of reasonable approximation, which apply
if the state or states of assignment cannot be determined. In some instances,
the reasonable approximation must be made in accordance with specific rules of
approximation as prescribed in this regulation. In other cases, the applicable
rule in this regulation permits a taxpayer to reasonably approximate the state
or states of assignment, using a method that reflects an effort to approximate
the results that would be obtained under the applicable rules or standards set
forth in this regulation.
2.
Approximation Based Upon Known Sales. In an instance where, applying the
applicable rules set forth for sale of a service, a taxpayer can ascertain the
state or states of assignment of a substantial portion of its sales from sales
of substantially similar services ("assigned sales"), but not all of those
sales, and the taxpayer reasonably believes, based on all available
information, that the geographic distribution of some or all of the remainder
of those sales generally tracks that of the assigned sales, it shall include
those sales which it believes tracks the geographic distribution of the
assigned sales in its sales factor in the same proportion as its assigned
sales.
3. Related-Party
Transactions; Information Imputed from Customer to Taxpayer. Where a taxpayer
has sales subject to this regulation from transactions with a related-party
customer, information that the customer has that is relevant to the sourcing of
receipts from these transactions is imputed to the taxpayer.
G. Rules with Respect to Exclusion
of Receipts from the Receipts Factor
1. The
sales factor only includes those amounts defined as sales under applicable
statutes and regulations.
2.
Certain sales arising from the sale of intangibles are excluded from the
numerator and denominator of the sales factor pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95 (L)(1)(e).
3. In a case in which a taxpayer cannot
ascertain the state or states to which sales are to be assigned pursuant to the
applicable rules set forth in this regulation, (including through the use of a
method of reasonable approximation, where relevant) using a reasonable amount
of effort undertaken in good faith, the receipts must be excluded from the
numerator and denominator of the taxpayers sales factor pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95 (M).
4. In a case in which a taxpayer can
ascertain the state or states to which sales are to be assigned pursuant to
this regulation, but the taxpayer is not taxable in one or more of those
states, the sales that would otherwise be assigned to those states where the
taxpayer is not taxable must be excluded from the numerator and denominator of
the taxpayers sales factor pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95(M).
H. Sale of a Service
1. General Rule
a. The sale of a service is sourced to
Louisiana if and to the extent that the service is delivered to a location in
Louisiana. In general, the term "delivered to a location" refers to the
location of the taxpayers market for the service, which may not be the location
of the taxpayers employees or property. The rules to determine the location of
the delivery of a service in the context of several specific types of service
transactions are set forth below.
2. Direct Personal Services Received by a
Natural Person
a. In General
i.
(a).
Except as otherwise provided in this regulation, direct personal services are
services that are physically provided in person by the taxpayer, where the
customer or the customers tangible property upon which the services are
performed is in the same location as the service provider at the time the
services are performed. This rule includes situations where the services are
provided on behalf of the taxpayer by a third-party contractor. Examples of
direct personal services include, without limitation: cleaning services; pest
control; medical and dental services, including medical testing, x-rays and
mental health care and treatment; child care; hair cutting and salon services;
live entertainment and athletic performances; and in-person training or
lessons. Direct personal services include services within the description above
that are performed at:
[i] a location that is
owned or operated by the service provider or
[ii] a location of the customer, including
the location of the customers tangible property.
(b) Various professional services, including
legal, accounting, financial and consulting services, and other similar
services, although they may involve some amount of direct person contact, are
not treated as direct personal services within the meaning of this regulation.
b. Assignment
of Sales
i. Rule of Determination. Except as
otherwise provided in this regulation, if the service provided by the taxpayer
is a direct personal service, the service is delivered to the location where
the service is received. Therefore, the sale is in Louisiana if and to the
extent the customer receives the direct personal service in Louisiana. In
assigning its sales from direct personal services, a taxpayer must first
attempt to determine the location where a service is received, as follows:
(a). If the service is performed with respect
to the body of an individual customer in Louisiana (e.g. hair cutting or x-ray
services) or in the physical presence of the customer in Louisiana (e.g. live
entertainment or athletic performances), the service is received in
Louisiana.
(b). If the service is
performed with respect to the customers immovable property in Louisiana or if
the service is performed with respect to the customers tangible personal
property at the customers residence in Louisiana or in the customers possession
in Louisiana, the service is received in Louisiana.
(c). If the service is performed with respect
to the customers tangible personal property and the tangible personal property
is to be received by the customer at the taxpayer's location in Louisiana, the
service is received in Louisiana.
(d). If the service is performed with respect
to the customers tangible personal property and the tangible personal property
is to be shipped or delivered to the customer, whether the service is performed
within or outside Louisiana, the service is received in Louisiana if the
property is shipped or delivered to the customer in Louisiana.
c. Rule of Reasonable
Approximation. In an instance in which the state or states where a service is
actually received cannot be determined, but the taxpayer has sufficient
information regarding the place of sale from which it can reasonably
approximate the state or states where the service is received, the taxpayer
shall reasonably approximate such state or states. If the state to which the
sales are to be assigned can be determined or reasonably approximated, but the
taxpayer is not taxable in that state, the receipts that would otherwise be
assigned to the state are excluded from the numerator and denominator of the
taxpayers sales factor pursuant to
R.S.
47:287.95(M).
3. Non Direct Personal
Services Received by a Natural Person. Non direct personal services delivered
to a natural person shall be sourced to the customer's billing address.
a. Non direct personal services include,
without limitation, management services, bank and financial services, financial
custodial services, investment and brokerage services, fiduciary services, tax
preparation, payroll and accounting services, lending services, credit card
services (including credit card processing services), data processing services,
legal services, consulting services, video production services, graphic and
other design services, engineering services, and architectural
services.
b.
Billing
address means the location indicated in the books and records of the
taxpayer as the primary mailing address relating to a customers account as of
the time of the transaction as kept in good faith in the normal course of
business and not for tax avoidance purposes.
4. Services Delivered to an Unrelated
Business Entity
a. Services with a
Substantial Connection to a Specific Geographic Location
i. Services provided to an unrelated business
entity that have a substantial connection to a specific geographic location
shall be sourced to the state of the specific geographic location. If the
services have a substantial connection to specific geographic locations in more
than one state, the services shall be reasonably sourced between those
states.
ii. Examples
(a). Cleaning Company, Inc. (taxpayer) has a
contract to provide cleaning services to Company A, an unrelated business
entity. The contract specifies that cleaning services are to be provided to
company A's locations in Louisiana and other states. Cleaning Company, Inc.
should source a portion of the total service receipts to Louisiana based on the
amount of services performed at company A's locations in Louisiana compared to
the total amount of services performed at all of company A's
locations.
(b). Training Company,
Inc. (taxpayer) contracts with company B, an unrelated business entity, to
provide on-site training services to company B's employees at company B's
business offices located in Louisiana and three other states. The services are
related to specific geographic locations; therefore they should be sourced to
the state where company B's employees received the training. Training Company,
Inc. should source the receipts from its contract with company B by reasonably
assigning those receipts between Louisiana and the three other states using a
formula based on the number of training hours provided to company B locations
in Louisiana to the total number of training hours provided to all company B
locations.
(c). Engineering
Company, Inc. (taxpayer) contracts with company C, an unrelated business
entity, to provide engineering services related to the construction of an
office complex in Louisiana. Engineering Company, Inc. performs some of their
service in Louisiana at the building site and additional service in state B at
their headquarters. The engineering services are related to a specific
geographic location; i.e. the building site in Louisiana; therefore all of the
services should be sourced to Louisiana.
b. Services without a Substantial Connection
to a Specific Geographic Location
i. Services
provided to an unrelated business entity that do not have a substantial
connection to a specific geographic location shall be sourced to the state of
the taxpayer's commercial domicile.
ii.
Commercial domicile is
the principal place from which the business is directed or
managed.
c. Alternative
Methods. In the case where the methods contained in Subparagraphs H.4.a and
H.4.b of this section fail to clearly reflect the taxpayer's market in
Louisiana, the taxpayer may utilize, or the department may require, the use of
alternative methods, including but not limited to the following:
i. By assigning the sales to the state where
the contract of sale is principally managed by the customer:
(a). state where a contract of sale is
principally managed by the customer" means the primary location at which an
employee or other representative of a customer serves as the primary contact
person for the taxpayer with respect to the day-to-day execution and
performance of a contract entered into by the taxpayer with the
customer.
ii. by
assigning the sales to the customers place of order;
iii. by assigning the sales to the customers
billing address; provided, however, in any instance in which the taxpayer
derives more than 5 percent of its receipts from sales of all services from a
customer, the taxpayer is required to identify the state in which the contract
of sale is principally managed by the customer.
5. Services Delivered to a Related Business
Entity. In any instance in which the service is sold to a related entity, the
state or states to which the service is assigned is the place of receipt by the
related entity as reasonably approximated using the following hierarchy:
a. if the service primarily relates to
specific operations or activities of a related entity conducted in one or more
locations, then to the state or states in which those operations or activities
are conducted in proportion to the related entitys payroll at the locations to
which the service relates in the state or states; or
b. if the service does not relate primarily
to operations or activities of a related entity conducted in particular
locations, but instead relates to the operations of the related entity
generally, then to the state or states in which the related entity has
employees, in proportion to the related entity's payroll in those
states.
I.
Sale, Rental, Lease, or License of Immovable Property. In the case of the sale,
rental, lease, or license of immovable property, the receipts are sourced to
Louisiana if and to the extent that the immovable property is located in
Louisiana.
J. Rental, Lease, or
License of Tangible Personal Property. In the case of the rental, lease, or
license of tangible personal property, the receipts are sourced to Louisiana if
and to the extent that the tangible personal property is located in
Louisiana.
K. Lease or License of
Intangible Property. In the case of the lease or license of intangible
property, the receipts are sourced to Louisiana if and to the extent that the
intangible property is used in Louisiana.
L. Sale of Intangible Property
1. Assignment of Sales. The assignment of
sales to a state or states in the instance of a sale or exchange of intangible
property depends upon the nature of the intangible property sold.
2. Sale Where Receipts are Contingent on
Productivity, Use or Disposition of the Intangible Property
a. In the case of a sale or exchange of
intangible property where the receipts from the sale or exchange are contingent
on the productivity, use or disposition of the property, the receipts from the
sale are assigned as follows:
i. the receipts
are in Louisiana if and to the extent the intangible is used in Louisiana. In
general, the term use is construed to refer to the location of
the market for the use of the intangible property that is being sold and is not
to be construed to refer to the location of the property or payroll of the
owner.
3.
Contract Right or Government License that Authorizes Business Activity in
Specific Geographic Area
a. In the case of a
sale or exchange of intangible property where the property sold or exchanged is
a contract right, government license or similar intangible property that
authorizes the holder to conduct a business activity in a specific geographic
area, the sale is assigned to a state if and to the extent that the intangible
property is used or is authorized to be used within the state. If the
intangible property is used or may be used only in this state, the taxpayer
shall assign the sale to Louisiana. If the intangible property is used or is
authorized to be used in Louisiana and one or more other states, the taxpayer
shall assign the sale to Louisiana to the extent that the intangible property
is used in or authorized for use in Louisiana through the means of a reasonable
approximation.
4.
Excluded Sales
a. Sales of intangible
property not described by Paragraphs 2 and 3 of this Subsection shall be
excluded from the numerator and the denominator of the sales factor. Excluded
sales include, but are not limited to, the sale of a partnership interest, the
sale of business "goodwill," the sale of an agreement not to compete, and sales
of similar intangible property.
AUTHORITY NOTE:
Promulgated in accordance with
R.S.
47:1511 and
R.S.
47:287.95.