April 23, 2011

 

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Comments

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Ken,

In response to the Florida sales tax issue. It is illegal to charge sales tax on real property in Florida which includes alarm systems. Monitoring and fire alarm inspections are required to be taxed, but there are "exceptions" written into the law that give multiple scenarios of instances where you do not need to charge sales tax. I have my distributors tax me at the time of the sale so the tax burden on equipment is already paid. I just have to recoup it in my sale price.

Florida Dealer

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Ken,

For what it's worth...

Here in Arkansas, we have to collect state and local sales tax on each

monitored account and remit it to the State of Arkansas. But note that

while the state tax is a fixed rate, the local sales tax varies by

municipality, which makes it necessary for us to have multiple tax rates

set up in our accounting software (and have to change every time a

particular city changes its sales tax rate). As it was explained to me,

we are providing a service (monitoring) and services are taxable the same

way that goods are. But we do not pay excise-type taxes on

telecommunications. I used to be an Internet Service Provider (until

2005), and while it may have changed since then, at the time we did not

have to charge sales tax to our subscribers because we were already paying

taxes on the telecommunications services every time the telco billed us

for our T1 lines (plus those onerous Universal Service Fund taxes).

A question worth asking would be whether ISPs are exempt from collecting

sales tax from their subscribers. If so, then I would think that the

telecommunications from alarm panels should be exempt from sales tax as

well, since the alarm subscriber is paying any applicable taxes on the

phone line when he pays his phone bill and the Central Station, regardless

of where it is located, pays any applicable taxes on its phone lines when

it pays its own phone bill. To me, any additional taxes imposed, since

both ends of an alarm communication are already paying their applicable

taxes, seems like unwarranted double-dipping by the state. I'm glad

Arkansas just taxes monitoring as a service. While it does create more

work for our accounting staff and it does make monitoring cost more for

our subscribers, it's still revenue-neutral for us. We collect it with

our left hand and give it to the State with our right, and few of our

subscribers have ever objected since they are used to paying sales tax on

everything else. The few who did object when we had to implement it all

left and now live on a compound somewhere in Wyoming.

Lee Hearn

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This tax stuff is over my head and likely not of much interest to you guys but IÂ’m not sure. I donÂ’t think weÂ’re facing this issue here, yet. The first section is complicated. Second personÂ’s comments make it much more simple.

Regards,

Kevin Buckland

True Steel Security & Care Link Advantage