KPMG report: State and local tax, technology-related developments (table, second quarter 2023)

A KPMG report of state and local technology-related tax developments for the second quarter of 2023.

A KPMG report of state and local technology-related tax developments for second quarter

A report of U.S. state and local tax developments concerning technology-related tax issues, for the second quarter of 2023, provides updates in table format and covers topics such as the taxability of software, guidance on digital equivalents, and other items.

Read the KPMG report PDF 194 KB] of state and local technology-related tax developments for the second quarter of 2023.

Highlights

  • Maryland: The state Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Office of the Comptroller in a challenge to the state’s digital advertising gross revenues tax, and the comptroller has advised taxpayers that they should file their first return for tax year 2022 and remit their tax payment.
  • Missouri: The state Supreme Court affirmed that a telecommunications service provider qualified for the state’s manufacturing exemption. Missouri defines manufacturing as activities that transform an input into an output separate and distinct from the original. Because the taxpayer’s service transformed an input (the caller’s voice) into an output (a reproduction of the caller’s voice that could be heard and understood by the recipient) with a separate and distinct value from the original, the taxpayer’s process qualified as manufacturing and the equipment purchased to manufacture the service qualified for the exemption.
  • Tennessee: The Department of Revenue determined that a taxpayer’s membership fees were subject to sales tax as transactions that included taxable specified digital goods. The department explained that the taxpayer’s on demand fitness classes were included in the membership cost and sold as one nonitemized price; therefore, the entire transaction was subject to tax.
  • Georgia: Beginning on January 1, 2024, Georgia will impose sales and use tax on the sale of specified digital products, other digital goods, or digital codes sold to an end user in Georgia. Tax will apply if the end user receives the right of permanent use of such products and the transaction is not conditioned upon continued payment by the end user.

 

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