REQUEST LETTER

 

01-030

Response 11/27/01

 

 

NAME

COMPANY

ADDRESS

 

Dear Sir or Madam:

We are seeking assistance from the Tax Commission with regard to the taxability of certain transactions as they pertain to sales and use taxes. In writing the following text, we are aware that substantial nexus is created by our client’s activities and that Utah sales and use tax must be collected on any taxable transactions.

Our client (“Company Z”) provides commercial customers with an integrated electronic commerce solution, which consists of canned and/or customized software, application hosting services, and other services designed to automate the Customer’s business functions. Most revenues are realized through the execution of contracts for the license to use the Product, however, the access to this license is typically via the Internet. License agreements are typically structured for a three-year term, and automatically renew at the end of the term for additional one-year periods, unless terminated earlier by either party. During the term of the contract, Company Z realizes several standard revenue streams related to the Customer’s utilization of it’s product and services: monthly subscription fees, license revenue, maintenance revenue and revenue for services billed on a time and materials basis (i.e. consulting services).

The following is a list of products/services for which we are seeking sales/use tax guidance:

- Application Hosting Services

Usage and Hosting Services

Hosting of Company Z’s Software

Hosting of Third Party Software

Network and Server Hosting Services

Shared Server Option

Premium Shared Server Option

Single Dedicated Server Option

Dual Dedicated Server Option

 

- Application Maintenance and Technical Support

Database/Network Administration

 

- Consulting and Development Services

Customization of Software

Set up of Software Modules

Website Design and Development

Website Hosted on Company Z’s Site

Website Hosted by Customer

Website Content

 

- Other Incidental Services / Overhead

Computer Time

Communications Charges

The following is a list of descriptions of the above products/services for which we are seeking sales/use tax guidance:

 

(a)                Shared Server Option, which entitles the customer to 4 gigabytes of disk space for storage, 4 gigabytes maximum data transfer per month (bandwidth), access to the SQL server 7.0, an Internet connection license, a Verisign certificate, and PC Anywhere. PC Anywhere (software that allows the customer’s PC to communicate with Company Z’s network) is separately licensed and paid for by the customer from a third party.

(b)               Premium Shared Server Option, which entitles the customer to a maximum of 3-5 sites per year on a shared web server, a maximum of 3-5 sites per year on a shared data server, 10 gigabytes of disk space for storage, 5 gigabytes maximum data transfer per month (bandwidth), access to the SQL server 7.0, an Internet connection license, a Verisign certificate, and PC Anywhere (see above). PC Anywhere is separately licensed and paid for by the customer from a third party.

(c)                Single Dedicated Server Option, which includes one web/data/application server, server maintenance, and 6 gigabytes maximum data transfer per month (bandwidth). Customer provides hardware and operating system.

(d)               Dual Dedicated Server Option, which includes one web/application server, one data server, server maintenance; and 6 gigabytes maximum data transfer per month (bandwidth). Customer provides hardware and operating system.

·        Customers are charged a flat monthly fee for any of the aforementioned server options (a-d).

o       Consulting services that include the design and development of the customer’s Internet website. Websites, if not hosted by Company Z, are delivered via the Internet.

o       In addition to developing a website, Company Z will also develop website content which may contain information, communications, software, photos, text, video, graphics, music, sounds, images, or other materials and services. Such content is delivered via the internet.

·         Company Z could host the website outside Utah.

·         The customer could host the website.

·         Website design and development is separately charged from the development of website content.

§         Such services are billed on a time and materials basis.

·         Other Incidental Services / Overhead

o                   Incidental expenses, including computer time and communications charges that are separately stated on the invoice and charged with consulting-type services. Computer time is really an administrative charge based on minutes/hours of use, while communications are another type of administrative charge. Communications are NOT the reselling of telecommunications services, but merely an overhead charge.

§                     Expenses are separately stated on each invoice.

Assuming that Utah has jurisdiction to tax Company Z, please advise as to whether each revenue-generating product or service is subject to sales/use taxation in Utah. Please assume that all base fees are separately stated on invoices sent to the Customer.

Under separate circumstances, please advise as to whether the true object of Company Z’s Product is providing various services. Accordingly, if a single lump fee is charged, could the revenues from the product be classified by the State either in whole or part as nontaxable services?

It would be helpful if you would direct us to specific citations in Utah statutes, regulations, or rulings when applicable.

Would you please provide us with your name, position, and a telephone number where we may reach you if we need further clarification.

If you should have any questions regarding the Product or any of the accompanying services provided by Company Z, please feel free to contact me at PHONE

(EMAIL) or NAME at PHONE (EMAIL)

Sincerely,

 

NAME

COMPANY

 

 

RESPONSE LETTER

 

DATE

NAME

COMPANY

ADDRESS

 

RE: Advisory Opinion – Application of Sales Tax on Services to Host Websites and Maintain Databases

 

Dear Mr. NAME

 

You have requested information concerning the taxability of services offered by your client (“Company”), which has sales tax nexus with Utah. These services primarily consist of providing canned and/or custom software, “hosting” customers’ websites, and automating customers’ business functions. You have provided descriptions of and asked for sales tax direction on the various services offered by the Company. Before addressing each of these services, we first offer some general observations concerning the taxation of computer software in Utah.

 

Utah Admin. Rule R865-19S-92 (“Rule 92”) (copy enclosed) provides that the sale of “canned computer software” (prewritten computer software) is taxable, while the sale of “custom computer software” (programs written specifically for a particular user) is not. Nevertheless, canned computer software may be individually modified to a limited extent without it becoming custom software. As a general threshold, adding a customer=s name or other superficial adaptations is not enough to qualify the software as custom software. Similarly, bundling several prewritten software components together into a set for a particular customer does not change the software’s character from Acanned@ to Acustom@ software. To become custom computer software, the adaptations must be sufficient to change the functional operation of the software. Whether the final software product is “canned” or “custom” depends on the circumstances surrounding the development of each product and the nature of the programs that comprise it.

 

I. Application Hosting Services

 

Utah currently applies its sales and use tax if the customer receives possession of canned computer software, whether the software is received on disk or downloaded by electronic means. On the other hand, if a customer goes to an Internet site to access software without downloading it on his or her own computer, then the customer has not received possession of the tangible personal property; i.e., the canned computer software.[1] Nor does Utah currently impose the sales and use tax in this latter circumstance under the theory of renting or leasing tangible personal property because the customer does not have possession of the tangible personal property. Accordingly, for electronic transactions, the software must at least temporarily “reside” in the customer’s computer for the transaction to be the taxable sale of tangible personal property. Accessing software at a “host” provider site without downloading the software onto ones computer is not a taxable transaction.

 

In providing its hosting services, we assume the Company retains physical possession of all software and hardware at a facility outside Utah and that its customers do not download the software to its computers in Utah. We also assume that the data transfer you describe is not the transfer of computer code that comprises canned computer software, but is the transfer of data relating to information in a database or marketing and sales information relating to the customer’s eBusiness. Under these circumstances, there has been no sale of any computer software in Utah that is subject to taxation.

 

In addition, your descriptions of the various “server options” offered by the Company indicate that customers are entitled to a certain amount of disk space for storage. We assume the disk space is located outside of Utah. While the leasing of disk space in Utah for storage would typically be viewed as the lease of tangible personal property and, therefore, taxable under Utah Code Ann. §59-12-103(1)(k), it is not subject to taxation by Utah when the property being leased is located in another state.

 

Subject to assumptions made above and the information you have provided, we find that the Company’s “application hosting services” are not subject to Utah’s sales and use tax.

 

II. Application Maintenance and Technical Support

 

As for other charges associated with the hosting services, Subsection (C) of Rule 92 provides that “[c]harges for services such as software maintenance, consultation in connection with a sale or lease, enhancements, or upgrading of custom software are not taxable” (emphasis added). However, charges for these services made in connection to the sale of canned computer software are taxable.

 

Should any of the Company’s charges for maintenance and technical support be related to the sale of taxable canned computer software, any charges relating to the maintenance or upgrading of that software might also be taxable, in addition to any consulting charges in connection with the sale or lease. However, as we have previously found that there has been no taxable sale or lease of tangible personal property under the circumstances you described as “application hosting services,” the “application maintenance and technical support” charges you describe would also be nontaxable.

 

III. Consulting and Development Services

 

You do not describe these services as occurring only at a location outside of Utah, in which case they would be nontaxable under the circumstances previously described. Accordingly, our response below will assume that the services are performed in Utah (i.e., the services are performed on software/hardware located in Utah or the product on which the services are performed is delivered to a customer in Utah).

 

As previously discussed, customizing software to a customer’s working environment without altering its underlying functional operation does not change canned computer software into custom software. Nevertheless, any charges to perform such “customization” services are nontaxable if stated separately from taxable charges. Should such charges be combined with taxable charges, however, the entire charge is taxable. Creating “software modules” at the request of a customer to enhance canned computer software would be considered nontaxable customization charges if stated separately from taxable charges.

 

For consulting services involving the “design and development” of websites, we assume that such services relate only to an individual client; i.e., that the computer code written to design and develop a specific customer’s website is unique. In this case, such design and development services would be considered the “creation” of custom computer software, the sale of which under Rule 92 is nontaxable.

 

In addition to developing the computer code that results in a website, you also provide services to provide the “content” placed on that website. This content may consist of information, communications, software, photos, text, video, graphics, music, sounds, and images. If the website is hosted outside of Utah and none of the content is created or delivered in Utah, then the services are nontaxable.

 

For content created in Utah or delivered in Utah, further analysis is needed. Charges for graphic design services may be taxable under Utah Admin. Rule 865-19S-111 (copy enclosed) if the design services for the photos, text, video, graphics, etc., are incorporated into tangible personal property and the object of the transaction is for the tangible personal property. A customer who receives a website designed by the Company is in possession of tangible personal property.[2] Accordingly, whether the graphic design services are taxable depends on whether the customer is primarily purchasing the Company’s expertise in knowing what designs work best on a website and how to incorporate the various designs into a website, or whether it is primarily purchasing a website with the Company’s design services being a secondary concern. Naturally, such a determination would be dependent upon the facts surrounding each transaction. However, we would consider the Company’s expertise in designing the content of a website to be of paramount importance in the success and function of a website. So, although the customer is receiving tangible personal property in the form of a website, we would, without further information convincing us otherwise, determine that the customer was purchasing nontaxable graphic design services, not taxable tangible personal property.[3]

 

IV. Other Incidental Services/Overhead

 

As discussed previously, charges to access computer software that is not downloaded to the customer’s computer are nontaxable. Accordingly, for “computer time” charges that relate to accessing canned computer software that is not downloaded, the charges are nontaxable. If, however, they relate to downloading canned computer software to a Utah location or the use of hardware located in Utah, then the charges would be considered taxable as the sale or lease of tangible personal property.

 

You state that the Company’s “communications” charge represents an “overhead” charge. If this charge is associated with a taxable sale, it is considered part of the sale price of the taxable item or service and, thus, is taxable itself. If the communication, or overhead, charge were associated with a nontaxable item or service, then it would be nontaxable, as well.

 

For questions concerning the application of sales and use tax in Utah, you may contact Taxpayer Services at (801) PHONE. Should you need further clarification from the Commission, please contact us.

 

For the Commission,

 

 

 

Marc B. Johnson

Commissioner

 

MBJ/KC

01-030



[1] As an example, if a legal database company sends a compilation of all State cases to a customer either in a book, on a disk, or by downloading them electronically, the company has sold tangible personal property. However, Utah does not currently charge sales and use tax on a transaction that allows the customer to use the Internet to view the State cases for a fee on a “host provider,” as long as the customer does not download the software onto his or her own computer.

[2] In COMPANY. Utah Tel. Ass'n v. Auditing Div. Of the Utah State Tax Comm'n, 951 P.2d 218 (Utah 1997), the Utah Supreme Court determined that the electronic signals of installed software are tangible. Accordingly, a customer who receives computer software is in possession of tangible personal property.

 

[3] On the other hand, should the design of a website entail only the bundling of pre-existing programs into a unique website for a specific client, we would probably consider this purchase the sale of canned computer software, not design services. Under such circumstances, the purchase would be taxable.