Chris Head
- Republican
- Senator
- District 3
Sales and transient occupancy taxes; accommodations intermediaries. Changes the process by which sales and transient occupancy taxes are collected from accommodations sales involving accommodations intermediaries. Under current law, accommodations intermediaries remit these taxes to the Department of Taxation or a locality, or a hotel, depending on the circumstances. The bill requires accommodations intermediaries to collect such taxes and remit them to the Department of Taxation or a locality, as applicable. The bill also provides that in a transaction involving multiple parties that may be considered accommodations intermediaries, such parties may agree that one party shall be responsible for collecting and remitting the taxes. In such event, the party agreeing to collect and remit such taxes shall be the sole party liable for the tax. Accommodations intermediaries shall submit to localities certain information on accommodations facilitated by the intermediary on a monthly basis. The bill also broadens the definition of accommodations intermediary. The bill directs the Department of Taxation to publish guidelines on implementation of the bill by August 1, 2022, and to convene a work group to examine the processes used to collect local transient occupancy taxes and make recommendations for improvements. The substantive provisions of the bill have a delayed effective date of October 1, 2022.
Sales and transient occupancy taxes; accommodations intermediaries. Changes the process by which sales and transient occupancy taxes are collected from accommodations sales involving accommodations intermediaries. Under current law, accommodations intermediaries remit these taxes to the Department of Taxation or a locality, or a hotel, depending on the circumstances. The bill requires accommodations intermediaries to collect such taxes and remit them to the Department of Taxation or a locality, as applicable. The bill also provides that in a transaction involving multiple parties that may be considered accommodations intermediaries, such parties may agree that one party shall be responsible for collecting and remitting the taxes. In such event, the party agreeing to collect and remit such taxes shall be the sole party liable for the tax. Accommodations intermediaries shall submit to localities certain information on accommodations facilitated by the intermediary on a monthly basis. The bill also broadens the definition of accommodations intermediary. The bill directs the Department of Taxation to publish guidelines on implementation of the bill by August 1, 2022, and to convene a work group to examine the processes used to collect local transient occupancy taxes and make recommendations for improvements. The substantive provisions of the bill have a delayed effective date of October 1, 2022.
Sales and transient occupancy taxes; accommodations intermediaries. Changes the process by which sales and transient occupancy taxes are collected from accommodations sales involving accommodations intermediaries. Under current law, accommodations intermediaries remit these taxes to the Department of Taxation or a locality, or a hotel, depending on the circumstances. The bill requires accommodations intermediaries to collect such taxes and remit them to the Department of Taxation or a locality, as applicable. The bill also provides that in a transaction involving multiple parties that may be considered accommodations intermediaries, such parties may agree that one party shall be responsible for collecting and remitting the taxes. In such event, the party agreeing to collect and remit such taxes shall be the sole party liable for the tax. The bill also broadens the definition of accommodations intermediary. The bill directs the Department of Taxation to publish guidelines on implementation of the bill by August 1, 2022. The substantive provisions of the bill have a delayed effective date of October 1, 2022.
Approved by Governor-Chapter 7 (effective 10/1/22)
Impact statement from TAX (HB518ER)
Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on February 24, 2022
Enrolled
Signed by President
Signed by Speaker
VOTE: Adoption (98-Y 0-N)
Senate amendments agreed to by House (98-Y 0-N)
Read third time
Passed Senate with amendments (40-Y 0-N)
Engrossed by Senate as amended
Committee amendments agreed to
Reading of amendments waived
Read third time
Constitutional reading dispensed (39-Y 0-N)
Reported from Finance and Appropriations with amendments (16-Y 0-N)
Impact statement from TAX (HB518H1)
Constitutional reading dispensed
Referred to Committee on Finance and Appropriations
Read third time and passed House BLOCK VOTE (98-Y 0-N)
VOTE: Block Vote Passage #2 (99-Y 0-N)
Passed House BLOCK VOTE (99-Y 0-N)
Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House
VOTE: Block Vote Passage (98-Y 0-N)
Read second time
Engrossed by House - committee substitute HB518H1
Committee substitute agreed to 22105919D-H1
Read first time
Committee substitute printed 22105919D-H1
Reported from Finance with substitute (21-Y 0-N)
House committee, floor amendments and substitutes offered
Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute (7-Y 2-N)
House subcommittee amendments and substitutes offered
Assigned Finance sub: Subcommittee #2
Impact statement from TAX (HB518)
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22103938D
Referred to Committee on Finance
Bill Text Versions | Format |
---|---|
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/12/22 22103938D | PDF HTML |
Committee substitute printed 22105919D-H1 | PDF HTML |
HB518ER | PDF HTML |
CHAP0007 | PDF HTML |
Document | Format |
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Fiscal Impact Statement: HB518FER161.PDF | |
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB518FH1161.PDF | |
Fiscal Impact Statement: HB518F161.PDF | |
Amendment: HB518ASE | HTML |
Amendment: HB518AS | HTML |
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