Photographers - North Carolina Department of Revenue
Transcription
Photographers - North Carolina Department of Revenue
Photos h andd Photographers h h Revised 3.3.2015 The NC Department Th D t t off R Revenue provides id thi this iinformation f ti as a courtesy to help keep you informed. As tax laws change, the application of the information provided may change as well. This information is general and summary in nature, and should not be construed as advice for your specific situation. If you would like to obtain specific p tax advice which is bindingg on the Department, p , you y may follow the procedure for requesting a letter ruling, which is located at www.dornc.com. 2 • Business Registration • Photos and Photographers • Sales S l & Use U T Tax Obli Obligations i • • • • Privilege Tax Withholding Tax Record keeping p g Resources 3 For the updates in h latest l d North Carolina Tax Law that mayy effect yyou and yyour business, please sign up for E-Alerts at: http://www dornc com/el http://www.dornc.com/el ectronic/taxupdates.html 4 5 Business Registration • Complete Form NC-BR, Business Registration Application for Income Tax Withholding, Sales and Use Tax, and Machinery and Equipment Tax • Register using one of the following methods: • Register R O Online l • Go to http://www.dornc.com/electronic/registration/index.html • Use Web Fill Fill-In In Form • Go to http://www.dornc.com/downloads/sales.html > NC-BR>web fill-in to enter information online and print a completed form to mail to the Department • Fill out Paper Form • Order online at http://www.dornc.com/forms/order.html ; or” • Pick up Form NC-BR from one of our service centers 6 Business Registration Online Benefits: • Free • Easy step-by-step instructions • Receive account number in minutes http://www.dornc.com/electronic/registration/index.html 7 Business Registration • Business Registration Application for Income Tax Wi hh ldi SSales Withholding, l andd U Use T Tax, andd M Machinery hi andd Equipment Tax 8 Business Registration Form NC-BR Sales and Use Tax Section, and Machinery and Equipment Tax Section 9 Understanding Sales & Use Tax Obligations 10 Sales and Use Tax • Every person engaged in business in North Carolina is required to collect and pay sales or use tax on retail sales or leases of tangible personal property and certain digital property not specifically exempt by law. • Some services are also taxable. 11 Sales and Use Tax • Use taxes are due by businesses on tangible personal property and certain digital g property p p y ppurchased or leased inside or outside this State that is stored, used, or consumed in North Carolina. Use tax is due on taxable services sourced to North Carolina. – For example: A restaurant in N.C. buys an oven from a Virginia vendor. The Virginia vendor ships the oven to the restaurant in N.C. N C and does not charge tax tax. The restaurant in N.C. owes use tax. The vendor is not obligated to charge N.C. sales tax if he does not have a physical presence in this state. • Use Tax rates are the same as sales tax rates • Taxpayer can claim a credit for sales or use tax due and paid to another state if other state allows a similar credit to NC. • Businesses report use tax on Form E-500, Sales and Use Tax Return • Businesses not registered to remit sales and use tax must register by completing Form NC-BR, Business Registration Application for Income Tax Withholding, Sales and Use Tax, and Machinery and Equipment Tax. 12 Sales and Use Tax Tax Rates: • General state rate: 4.75 % • • • • • • Sales and purchases of tangible personal property not subject to a preferential rate. Receipts from leases/rentals of tangible personal property Receipts p from rentals of hotel/motel rooms, lodgings, g g etc. Receipts from laundries, dry cleaning Receipts from satellite digital audio radio service Certain digital property that is delivered or accessed electronically, electronically is not considered tangible personal property, and would be taxable under Article 5 if sold in a tangible medium. 13 Sales and Use Tax Local and transit rates of sales and use tax as of October 1, 2014: 2% - 72 counties 2.25% - Alexander, Buncombe, Cabarrus, Catawba, Cumberland, Davidson, Duplin, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Harnett, Haywood, Hertford, Lee, Martin, Montgomery New Hanover Montgomery, Hanover, Onslow Onslow, Pitt Pitt, Randolph Randolph, Robeson Robeson, Rowan Rowan, Sampson Sampson, Surry, and Wilkes 2.5% -Mecklenburg County (2% local rate and 0.5% transit rate of sales and use tax) 2.75% - Durham & Orange Counties (2.25% local rate and 0.5% transit rate of sales and use tax) 14 ¾ Sales of frames, films and other articles by photographers, photo finishers or others to users or consumers are subject to the 4.75% 4 75% general State and applicable local and transit rates of sales or use tax. • Gross receipts G i from f sales l off photographs h h iincluding l di allll charges h ffor ddeveloping l i or printing by commercial or portrait photographers or others are subject to the 4.75% general State and applicable local and transit rates of sales or use tax. Taxable gross receipts include sitting fees charged to a customer who ultimately purchases photographs or other tangible personal property. 15 • Digital Di i l code d as defined d fi d pursuant to G.S. G S 105-164.3(7a) 105 164 3(7 ) is i a code d that h gives a purchaser of the code a right to receive an item by electronic delivery or electronic access. A digital code may be obtained by an electronic means or by a tangible means. means A digital code does not include a gift certificate or a gift card. • Delivered D li d or accessedd electronically l i ll means ddelivered li d to, received i d bby or obtained b i d bby the purchaser by means other than tangible storage media. Delivered electronically is delivery by download, email or other method while accessed electronically is delivery by online access generally accompanied by a password or digital code. 16 ¾ The andd applicable Th following f ll i digital di i l property is i subject bj to the h 4.75% 4 75% generall State S li bl local and transit rates of sales and use tax: (1) an audio work; (2) an audiovisual work; (3) a book, a magazine, a newspaper, a newsletter, a report, or another publication; (4) a photograph or a greeting card. card ¾ The 4.75% general State and applicable local and transit rates of sales and use tax applies li to digital di i l property that h is i delivered d li d or accessedd electronically, l i ll iis not considered tangible personal property, and would be taxable under Article 5, Sales and Use Tax, if sold in a tangible medium. The tax applies regardless of whether the purchaser of the item has the right to use it permanently or to use it without making continued payments. http://www.dornc.com/taxes/sales/impnotice_digital_property09.pdf 17 • • A purchaser receives digital property when the purchaser takes possession of the property or makes first use off the comes first. h property, whichever hi h fi (skip ( ki space)) A sale of digital property is sourced as follows: • (1) When a purchaser receives digital property at a business location of the seller, the sale is sourced to that business location. • (2) When a purchaser or purchaser’s donee receives digital property at a location specified by the purchaser and the location is not a business location of the seller, the sale is sourced to the location where the purchaser or purchaser’s donee receives the product. • (3) When (1) and (2) do not apply, apply the sale of digital property is sourced to the location indicated by an address for the purchaser that is available from the business records of the seller that are maintained in the ordinary course of the seller’s business when use of this address does not constitute bad faith. • (4) Wh When (1) (1), (2) (2), andd (3) ddo not apply, l the h sale l off di digital i l property iis sourcedd to the h llocation i indicated by an address for the purchaser obtained during the consummation of the sale, including the address of a purchaser’s payment instrument, if no other address is available, which use of this address does not constitute bad faith. • (5) When (1), (2), (3), and (4) of this subsection do not apply, including the circumstance in which the seller is without sufficient information to apply the rules, the location will be determined based on the address from which the digital good was first available for transmission by the seller. 18 ¾ Purchases by commercial or portrait photographers of items they use in their business are subject to the 4.75% general State and applicable l l andd transit local i rates off sales l andd use tax unless l exempt bby llaw. Examples are general office supplies like desks, chairs, pens, staples, paper clips, etc… ¾ Purchases by commercial or portrait photographers of machinery or machinery h parts or accessories usedd in the h manufacture f off photographs are exempt from sales and use tax and subject to the 1% pprivilege g tax with a maximum tax of $80.00 pper article. 19 ¾ A sitting fee charged to a customer who does not purchase any photographs or other tangible personal property is not subject to sales or use tax. ¾ A copyright fee that entitles a purchaser the right to reproduce a photograph does not constitute part of the gross receipts from the sale of the photograph and is not subject to sales or use tax when the charge is separately stated on a customer’s invoice and in the vendor’s d ’ records. d ¾ Sales to commercial or portrait photographers of materials which become an ingredient or componentt partt off th the fifinished i h d picture i t iincluding l di mounts, t fframes andd paper are nott subject bj t to the tax. 20 F Form E-500. E 500 21 • Breakdown of county tax required if sales in more than one county or if filing online. – Form F E – 536 (S (Schedule h d l off County C t Sales S l andd U Use T Taxes)) g p has in-store pphoto • In JJanuaryy 2014,, XYZ Photographer sales of $500.00 and digital photo sales of $224.73. The store is located in Wake County (6.75%). The digital sales were emailed to the customer and were downloaded in Edgecombe county (7%). • Complete the monthly E-500 form and E-536 form for XYZ Photographer for the month of January 2014. 23 Make sure you provide your legal name,, address,, pperiod and ACCOUNT NUMBER for accurate processing. NOTE: ALL gross receipts should be reported. 24 Taxable purchases and receipts should be applicable b broken b k down d li bl tax rates. 25 Make sure you sign the return and provide d a working k contact number. b John Doe 26 Filing Frequencies • Quarterly: taxpayers who consistently owes less than $100 per month • Reports and payment are due by the last day of the first month after the quarter ends (April, July, October, January) • Monthly: taxpayers who consistently owes $100 but less than $20,000 per month • Reports and payment are due by the 20th of the following month • Monthly (with Prepayment): taxpayers who consistently owes at least $20 000 per month or more $20,000 • Reports and balance of tax owed are due by the 20th of the followingg month • Prepayment due on the 20th of each month • Taxpayer may choose to pay: • 65 percent of the amount of tax owed the previous month • 65 percent of the amount of tax owed for the same month in the preceding year • 65 percent of the average monthly amount of tax owed in preceding calendar year 27 28 http://www.dornc.com/electronic/salesanduse.html 29 P i il Privilege Tax T Privilege License Who Must File Privilege License ¾ A photographer, a canvasser for any p photographer, or an agent of a photographer in g p , g p g p transmitting photographs to be copied, enlarged, or colored. ¾ A licensed photographer having a located place of business in this State is liable for the license of business in this State is liable for the license tax on each agent or solicitor employed by the photographer for soliciting business. photographer for soliciting business. P i il Privilege License Li ¾ State privilege license taxes are imposed for the privilege of carrying on the business, exercising the privilege or doing the act named in Article 2, h d l Schedule B of the Revenue Laws of North Carolina. These privilege license taxes are in addition to license taxes are in addition to any regulatory or qualification requirements to engage in the practice of a profession business practice of a profession, business or trade. Privilege License Rates ¾ The privilege license tax is an annual tax and is due by July 1 of each year. The license tax is not prorated, instead, the full amount of the license tax is due when a person begins to engage in an activity for which a license is required at any ti time during the fiscal year, July 1 – d i th fi l J l 1 June 30. Licenses are J 30 Li renewable annually (Form B‐202A) by July 1 and no grace period is allowed before penalty accrues. ¾ Where any person, firm, or corporation is engaged in more than one business, trade, employment, or profession that is subject to State license taxes under the provisions of this subject to State license taxes under the provisions of this Article, such persons, firms, or corporations must pay the license tax prescribed in this Article for each separate business, trade, employment, or profession. Understanding Withholding Tax obligations 35 North Carolina General Statute 105-163.2 An employer shall deduct and withhold from the wages of each employee the State income taxes payable by the employee on the wages. 36 p y • Employer • An employer is any person or business for whom an individual performs any service as an employee. • Employee • Anyone y who performs p services for a person p or business if the person or business can control what will be done and how it will be done. If the employer-employee relationship exists, calling it something else or signing a contract does not change the status. 37 G.S. 105-163.1(13) The term wages generally has the same meaning for NC as it does in Section 3401 of the Internal Revenue Code, except that it does not include the amount an employer l pays an employee l ffor reimbursement of ordinary and necessary business expenses. expenses 38 p y must furnish the employer p y with a signed g • An employee North Carolina Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate, Form NC-4 EZ or Form NC-4. The federal f form W-4 W 4 cannott be b usedd as a substitute. b tit t A nonresident id t alien must use form NC-4 NRA in lieu of Form NC-4 or Form NC-4 EZ. • If the employee fails to furnish the certificate, the employer must withhold tax as if the employee is single with zero withholding allowances. 39 • Used to U d by b an employer l t determine the proper amount of North Carolina state income tax withholding from an employee’s pay. 40 41 • Depending on your North Carolina deductions and North Carolina tax credits you may elect to use the NC-4 EZ. • Use form NC-4 EZ • If you plan l to claim l i the h N N.C. C standard d d ddeduction. d i • • • • $15,000 for married filing jointly or qualifying widow(er) $12,000 for head of household $7 500 for single $7,500 $7,500 married filing separate • Plan to claim no tax credits or only the credit for children. Please refer to the NC-4 Part II Schedule 4 of Allowance Worksheet for more information. • Prefer not to complete the NC-4 • Qualify to claim exempt status 42 NC-4 EZ or NC-4 • If the NC-4 EZ does not apply to your specific situation, you may need to fill out the NC-4 to determine your number of allowances. Note: NC-4 EZ will suffice for most p y employees. http://www.dornc.com/downloads/nc4ez.pdf 43 NC-4 NRA • Since nonresident aliens generally are not eligible to take the standard d d ddeduction, d i they h hhave to enter an additional amount of income tax to be withheld for each payment period on line 2 of Form NC-4 NRA. 44 g Bracket Tables • Wage • Percentage Method • Annualized Wages Method • There IS NOT an established “%” % rate for computing withholding. Exceptions: 4% for personal services, 5.8% for supplemental wages, and 5.8% for lottery winnings. 45 • NC-30 provides • withholding ithh ldi amounts t • detailed information on q and withholdingg requirements filing and paying 46 Frequency Quarterly(NC-5) Monthly(NC-5) Tax Withheld Per Month $0.00 - $249.99 $250.00 - $1,999.99 Due Date Last day of the first month after the qquarter ends 15th of the following month Exception: December due date is January 31st of following year Semiweekly(NC-5P) $2,000 or more Same as Federal dates 47 48 49 • XYZ Enterprise will be filling out its NC-5 for the monthh off January. J The Th business b has h one employee l whose salary is $2,970.00 per month. The employee’s l ’ ffiling l status is marriedd withh 1 allowance. ll Please complete the form. 50 51 52 53 • Provide each employee a copy of the completed W‐2 or 1099 statement by January 31. • File the Annual Reconciliation Statement (NC‐3) (NC 3) and the Department and the Department’ss copy of each copy of each W‐2 and 1099 statement by February 28 with DOR. 54 NC-3 55 • CD-ROM, DP43 & DP40 • NC-57 NC 57 Computer C PPrintout • Paper documents • North Carolina DOES participate in the combined federal/state filing of 1099. However, the employer must get permission from the IRS. 56 Recommendations 57 Keep records for three years • All books and records (receipts, invoices, cancelled checks, etc.) to substantiate income and deductions claimed for anyy business. • All records (receipts, invoices, cancelled checks, etc.) to substantiate itemized deductions. • Any other information relevant to your Federal or State returns. returns • A retailer’s records must include records of the retailer’s gross income, gross sales, net taxable sales and all items purchased for resale. Examples of documents containing this information include (this is not an inclusive list): • • • • General Ledger Sales Invoices Purchase Invoices Cash register tapes • • • • • Receipt books COMPLETE Bank Statements C Canceled l d checks h k Credit card statements Account statements 58 p for at least seven yyears. Records should be kept • • • • • Names Addresses Security numbers of employees or payees receiving payments Withholding allowance certificates Amounts and dates of wages and other payments and records of the amount withheld • Copies or records of all reports or returns filed • Records of all payments made to DOR. 59 p y must be able to substantiate all information on • Taxpayers returns. • Documentation should be maintained in an orderlyy manner in an effort to substantiate income, expenses, deductions and/or credits claimed on any returned filed with the Department. • Documentation should be organized, summarized, and groupedd in an easy to ffollow ll manner. 60 • • • • • www.dornc.com YouTube T Taxpayer A i Assistance andd C Collection ll i C Center: 1-877-252-3052 Service Centers across the state • • • • • • • • • • • Asheville Charlotte Durham Elizabeth City Fayetteville Greensboro Greenville Hickory Raleigh Wilmington Winston-Salem 61