Idaho Admin. Code r. 35.01.02.027 - COMPUTER EQUIPMENT, SOFTWARE, AND DATA SERVICES
Section 63-3616, Idaho Code
01.
Definitions. For purposes of
this rule, the following terms will have the following meanings: (3-31-22)
a. Canned Software. Canned software is
prewritten software which is offered for sale, lease, or use to customers on an
off-the-shelf basis with little or no modification at the time of the
transaction beyond specifying the parameters needed to make the program run.
Evidence of canned software includes the selling, licensing, or leasing of
identical software more than once. Software may qualify as custom software for
the original buyer, licensee, or lessee, but become canned software when sold
to others. Canned software includes program modules which are prewritten and
later used as part of a larger computer program. (3-31-22)
b. Computer. A computer is a programmable
machine or device having information processing capabilities and includes word,
data, and math processing equipment, testing equipment, programmable
microprocessors, and any other integrated circuit embedded in manufactured
machinery or equipment. (3-31-22)
c. Computer Hardware. Computer hardware is
the physical computer assembly and all peripherals, whether attached physically
or remotely by any type of network, and includes all equipment, parts and
supplies. (3-31-22)
d. Computer
Program. A computer program, or simply a program, is a sequence of instructions
written for the purpose of performing a specific operation in a computer.
(3-31-22)
e. Computer Software.
Computer software, or simply software, is defined as any of the following:
(3-31-22)
i. A computer program;
(3-31-22)
ii. Any part of a
computer program; (3-31-22)
iii.
Any sequence of instructions that operates automatic data processing equipment;
or (3-31-22)
iv. Information stored
in an electronic medium. (3-31-22)
f. Custom Software. Custom software is
software designed and written by a vendor at the specific request of a client
to meet a particular need. Custom software includes software which is created
when a user purchases the services of a person to create software which is
specialized to meet the user's needs. (3-31-22)
g. Digital Product. See definition for
"Information Stored in an Electronic Medium" in Subsection
027.01.h. (3-31-22)
h. Information Stored in an Electronic
Medium. Any electronic data file other than a computer program which can be
contained on and accessed from storage media. The term includes audio and video
files and any documents stored in an electronic format. For purposes of this
rule, the term is interchangeable with "digital product." (3-31-22)
i. Load and Leave Method. A method of
software delivery in which the vendor or an agent of the vendor loads software
onto the user's storage media at the user's location but does not transfer
storage media containing the software to the user. (3-31-22)
j. Remotely Accessed Computer Software.
Computer software that a user accesses over the internet, over private or
public networks, or through wireless media, and the user only has the right to
use or access the software by means of a license, lease, subscription, service,
or other agreement. (3-31-22)
k.
Storage Media. Storage media include, but are not limited to, hard disks,
optical media discs, diskettes, magnetic tape data storage, solid state drives,
and other semiconductor memory chips used for nonvolatile storage of
information readable by a computer. (3-31-22)
02.
Computer Hardware. The sale
or lease of computer hardware is a sale at retail. Sales tax is imposed based
on the total purchase price, lease, or rental charges. See Rule
024 of these rules.
(3-31-22)
03.
Canned
Software. When canned software is sold and delivered on storage media to
the user and the storage media remains in the possession of the user, it is
tangible personal property and the sale is taxable. If the storage media is
sold along with other computer hardware, any canned software loaded on the
storage media is tangible personal property the sale of which is taxable. If
canned software is sold and delivered electronically or by the load and leave
method, it is not tangible personal property and the sale is not taxable. If
canned software is sold using a physical package but the package does not
contain the canned software on storage media, it is not tangible personal
property and the sale is not taxable. For example, if a printed key code is
sold in a box that allows the user to download canned software and activate the
canned software using the key code, the sale is not taxable. (3-31-22)
a. If canned software is loaded on a user's
computer but has minimal or no functionality without connecting to the
provider's servers over the internet, the sale of that canned software may
still be taxable based upon the delivery method of the canned software as
outlined in Subsection
027.03 of this rule.
(3-31-22)
b. Special rules apply to
digital music, digital books, digital videos, and digital games. See
Subsections 027.06 and
027.07 of this rule.
(3-31-22)
c. When a sale of canned
software is taxable, tax applies to the entire amount charged to the customer
for canned software. If the consideration consists of license fees, royalty
fees, right to use fees or program design fees, whether for a period of minimum
use or for extended periods, all fees are included in the taxable price.
(3-31-22)
04.
Remotely Accessed Computer Software. Remotely accessed computer
software is not tangible personal property and charges to use or access such
software are not taxable. (3-31-22)
05.
Maintenance Contracts.
Maintenance contracts sold in connection with the sale or lease of canned
software generally provide that the buyer will be entitled to receive periodic
program enhancements and error correction, often referred to as upgrades,
either on storage media or through remote telecommunications. The maintenance
contract may also provide that the buyer will be entitled to telephone or
on-site support services. (3-31-22)
a. If the
maintenance contract is required as a condition of the sale, lease, or rental
of canned software, the gross sales price is taxable if the software to which
the contract applies is taxable. Tax applies whether or not the charge for the
maintenance contract is separately stated from the charge for software. In
determining whether an agreement is optional or mandatory, the terms of the
contract will be controlling. (3-31-22)
b. If the maintenance contract is optional to
the buyer of canned software: (3-31-22)
i.
Then only the portion of the contract fee representing upgrades is taxable if
the fee for any maintenance agreement support services is separately stated and
the upgrades are delivered on storage media; (3-31-22)
ii. If the fee for any maintenance agreement
support services is not separately stated from the fee for upgrades and the
upgrades are delivered on storage media, then fifty percent (50%) of the entire
charge for the maintenance contract is taxable; (3-31-22)
iii. If the maintenance contract only
provides upgrades delivered on storage media, and no maintenance agreement
support services, then the entire sales price of the contract is taxable;
(3-31-22)
iv. If the maintenance
contract only provides support services, and the customer is not entitled to or
does not receive any canned computer software upgrades or enhancements, then
the sale of the contract is not taxable. (3-31-22)
c. If an optional software maintenance
contract provides for software updates to be delivered electronically but also
allows a customer to receive software updates on storage media, no portion of
the contract is taxable unless the customer receives software updates on
storage media. (3-31-22)
06.
Digital Products. Digital
music, digital books, digital videos, and digital games are tangible personal
property regardless of the delivery or access method but only if the buyer has
a permanent right to use the digital music, digital books, digital videos, or
digital games. Where the buyer has a permanent right to use these digital
products, the sale is taxable. Leases or rentals of these digital products are
not taxable. (3-31-22)
a. Other than digital
music, digital books, digital videos, or digital games, information stored in
an electronic medium is tangible personal property only if it is transferred to
the user on storage media that is retained by the user. (3-31-22)
b. If a digital game requires the internet
for some or all of its functionality, the sale of that digital game is taxable
if the buyer has a permanent right to use the digital game. If a user pays a
periodic subscription charge to play a digital game, the periodic subscription
charge is not taxable. If a user pays a periodic subscription charge for a
gaming service that enables certain functionality such as multiplayer
capability in one or more digital games, the periodic charge is not taxable.
(3-31-22)
07.
Digital Subscriptions. Digital subscriptions consist of an
agreement with a seller that grants a user the right to obtain or access
digital products in a fixed quantity or for a fixed period of time. Digital
subscriptions are not taxable. (3-31-22)
08.
Reports Compiled by a
Computer. The sale of statistical reports, graphs, diagrams, microfilm,
microfiche, photorecordings, or any other information produced or compiled by a
computer and sold or reproduced for sale in substantially the same form as it
is produced is a sale of tangible personal property and is taxable if the final
product is printed or delivered in an electronic format on storage media. If a
report is compiled from information furnished by the same person to whom the
finished report is sold, the report will be taxable unless the person selling
the report performs some sort of service regarding the data or restates the
data in substantially different form than that from which it was originally
presented or delivers the report to the buyer electronically. (3-31-22)
a. Example: An accountant uses a computer to
prepare financial statements from a client's automated accounting records. No
tax will apply since what is sought is the accountant's expertise and knowledge
of generally accepted accounting principles. (3-31-22)
b. Example: A company sells mailing lists
which are transferred to the user on storage media that remains in the
possession of the user. The seller compiles all the mailing lists from a single
data base. Since the same data base is used for all such mailing lists it is
not custom software. Therefore, the sale is taxable. (3-31-22)
c. Example: An auto parts retailer hires a
data processing firm to optically scan and record its parts book on a computer
disk. No analysis or other service is performed regarding the data.
Essentially, this is the same as making a copy of the parts books and the sale
is, therefore, taxable. (3-31-22)
d. When additional copies of records,
reports, manuals, tabulations, etc., are provided, tax applies to the charges
made for the additional copies. Additional copies are all copies in excess of
those produced simultaneously with the production of the original and on the
same printer, where the copies are prepared by running the same program, by
using multiple printers, by looping the program, by using different programs to
produce the same output, or by other means. (3-31-22)
e. Charges for copies produced by means of
photocopying, multilithing, or by other means are taxable.
(3-31-22)
09.
Online or Remote Data Storage. Charges to store data on storage
media owned and controlled by another party is a nontaxable service.
(3-31-22)
10.
Training
Services. Separately stated charges for training services are not
taxable, unless they are incidental services agreed to be rendered as a part of
the sale of tangible personal property as provided by Rule
011 of these rules. (3-31-22)
a. When separate charges are made for
training materials, such as books, manuals, or canned software, sales tax
applies. (3-31-22)
b. When training
materials are provided at no cost to the buyer in conjunction with the sale of
tangible personal property, the training materials are considered to be
included in the sales price of the tangible personal property.
(3-31-22)
c. When no tangible
personal property, computer hardware or canned software, is sold and training
materials are provided at no charge to the customer, the provider of the
training is the consumer of the training materials and is required to pay sales
tax or accrue and remit use tax. (3-31-22)
11.
Custom Software. The
transfer of title, possession, or use for a consideration of custom software is
not taxable. Custom software is specified, designed, and created by a vendor at
the specific request of a client to meet a particular need. Custom software
includes software which is created when a user purchases the services of a
person to create software which is specialized to meet the user's needs. The
term includes those services that are represented by separately stated and
identified charges for modification to existing canned software which are made
to the special order of the customer, even though the sales, lease, or license
of the existing program remains taxable. Examples of services that do not
result in custom software include loading parameters to initialize program
settings and arranging preprogrammed modules to form a complete program.
(3-31-22)
a. Tax does not apply to the sale,
license, or lease of custom software regardless of the form or means by which
the program is transferred. The tax does not apply to the transfer of custom
software or custom programming services performed in connection with the sale
or lease of computer equipment if such charges are separately stated from the
charges for the equipment. (3-31-22)
b. If the custom programming charges are not
separately stated from the sale or lease of equipment, they will be considered
taxable as part of the sale. (3-31-22)
c. Custom software includes a program
prepared to the special order of a customer who will use the program to produce
and sell or lease copies of the program. The sale of the program by the
customer for whom the custom software was prepared will be a sale of canned
software. (3-31-22)
12.
Purchases for Resale. Sales tax does not apply when computer
hardware or software is purchased for resale. A properly executed resale
certificate must be on file. See Rule
128 of these rules.
(3-31-22)
Notes
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