(A) Consolidated elections, generally.
(1) For purposes of the commercial activity
tax, a group of two or more persons may elect under section
5751.011 of the Revised Code to
be in a consolidated elected taxpayer group that includes all persons that are
at least fifty per cent owned and controlled or at least eighty per cent owned
and controlled by common owners. The group also may elect to include or exclude
all non-United States entities that otherwise meet the requirements to be in
the group.
(2) The percentage
chosen by the members of a consolidated elected taxpayer group applies to all
persons meeting the requisite common ownership requirements. For example,
person A, a corporation, elects to consolidate at eighty per cent with its
wholly owned subsidiary, B. Person B owns two of its own subsidiaries (C and D)
at sixty per cent. Because A, the common owner, elected to consolidate at
eighty per cent with B, entities C and D are not included in the consolidated
elected taxpayer group of their common owners (A and B). Instead, C and D are
part of a combined taxpayer group that is commonly owned by A and B. In
addition, C and D may not make a separate election to consolidate at fifty per
cent in order to exclude their receipts. Since A and B are members of both
taxpayer groups, A's and B's taxable gross receipts are reported with the
consolidated elected taxpayer group.
(B) Change of ownership and control.
(1) Any time the ownership structure changes
such that a common owner no longer owns and controls a person by the requisite
percentage chosen, that person shall be removed from the group. The group shall
notify the commissioner of this change at the time it files its next return or
in writing prior to the due date of that return. Taxpayers wishing to notify
the commissioner of such change prior to filing the next return may obtain a
form on the department of taxation's
web
site
website or notify the commissioner
electronically through the Ohio business gateway. As applicable, the
person no longer meeting the requirements shall register for the commercial
activity tax as a stand-alone taxpayer or be added as a member of another
group.
(2) It is important to note
that a change in the ownership structure may impact the tax liability of a
taxpayer group. For example, assume that a calendar year taxpayer acquires a
person at some point during the tax period that has taxable gross receipts in
excess of one million dollars. Since the calendar year taxpayer previously had
only a minimum tax liability, by acquiring an additional person, the calendar
year taxpayer's tax liability will surpass its previous liability. If the
calendar year taxpayer does not timely notify the commissioner of this change,
there will be an underpayment, which is subject to statutory interest and may
be subject to penalties. Therefore, when it is reasonably certain that a
calendar year taxpayer will have taxable gross receipts in excess of one
million dollars during the calendar year, that taxpayer shall switch to a
quarterly taxpayer. In this situation, it is advised that the taxpayer notify
the commissioner of the acquisition and/or change in filing frequency within a
reasonable period of time. A form to make such notice may be obtained on the
department of taxation's website.
(C) Acquiring a member.
(1) If a consolidated elected taxpayer group
acquires a person, such person will be included in the consolidated elected
taxpayer group if that person meets the requisite ownership and control
threshold requirements. It is important to note that if the group elected to
consolidate at eighty per cent and the new person is owned and controlled by
less than eighty per cent but more than fifty per cent, that person would
become part of a combined taxpayer group along with any other potential members
having less than eighty per cent but more than fifty per cent common ownership.
For example, A elects to consolidate at eighty per cent with B, its
wholly-owned subsidiary. A later acquires C at sixty per cent. Since A made an
eighty per cent election, C is not included in the group; instead, C will be in
a combined taxpayer group with its common owner, A.
(2) The rules in paragraph (C)(1) of this
rule apply to a consolidated elected taxpayer group that acquires either a
combined taxpayer group or another consolidated elected taxpayer group. In such
case, the ownership threshold of the acquiring group controls. For example,
consolidated elected taxpayer group A elects to consolidate at fifty per cent.
Group A later acquires consolidated elected taxpayer group B, which, at the
time of registration, elected to consolidate at eighty per cent. Since two
separate consolidated elected taxpayer groups cannot coexist under a single
common owner, A's fifty per cent threshold controls and group B is included in
its entirety. In contrast, if A had elected to consolidate at eighty per cent
and became B's common owner at sixty per cent, B would be required to file as a
combined taxpayer group with A as the common owner.
(3) Alternatively, if a combined taxpayer
group acquires a pre-existing consolidated elected taxpayer group, the common
ownership of the acquiring group, i.e. the combined taxpayer group, controls.
For example, group A did not elect to consolidate; instead, A owned and
controlled enough of its lower-tiered persons such that A filed as a combined
taxpayer group. When group A acquires group B, a consolidated elected taxpayer
group, the new taxpayer is a combined taxpayer group in accordance with A's
status. Please note that as a combined taxpayer group, such group may elect to
consolidate at any time pursuant to division (D) of section
5751.011 of the Revised
Code.
(D) Canceling an
election to consolidate.
Pursuant to division (A)(3)(b) of section
5751.011 of the Revised Code, a
taxpayer group must notify the commissioner if it elects to cancel its election
to consolidate before the final day in the eighth calendar quarter after the
election is made, not the due date of the return filed for the period including
that quarter. For taxpayers that elected to
consolidate during the semi-annual period from July 1, 2005 through December
31, 2005, the commissioner must be notified in writing that the group wishes to
cancel its election by June 30, 2007, not August 9, 2007 (the due date of that
return). The cancellation will be effective beginning the first day of
the quarter following the eighth quarter after the election is made. A form to
notify the commissioner of the desire to cancel an election may be obtained on
the department of taxation's website.