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  • InsideTrack
  • May 04, 2016

    On Tax Law: Fewer Nonprofits Will Owe Sales Tax, Under New Law

    Fewer nonprofits will owe sales tax when they provide valuable services across Wisconsin thanks to Assembly Bill 553.

    Robert A. Mathers

    charity carwashMay 4, 2016 – As winter turns to spring and the summer breezes begin to bring tourists into Wisconsin, various nonprofit enterprises, like churches and chambers of commerce, are holding their various festivities and enjoying the great Wisconsin outdoors.

    While sales tax could not be further from most people’s mind, Wisconsin’s taxation of occasional sales by these entities has been turning into an expensive and unforeseen misfortune. On April 15th, Gov. Scott Walker signed into law Assembly Bill 553, which rescues nonprofits by relaxing the sales tax exemptions for occasional sales by nonprofit organizations.

    This legislation is significant in that it increases the threshold for sales tax exemptions, meaning that fewer nonprofits will owe sales tax when they provide valuable services across Wisconsin. Here is a summary of the changes:

    • Under current law, if a nonprofit sells an aggregate of over $25,000 and those sales occur more than 20 days during the year, it is liable for sales tax. The new bill relaxes these measurements to 75 days and $75,000 in sales.

    • Also under current law, if a nonprofit sells admission to an event where the entertainment cost is more than $500, the admissions are taxable. The new law increases the eligible entertainment expense to $10,000.

    For example, a local Wisconsin tax exempt entity that charged admission to attend a golf outing where a jazz band was playing during the reception would be subject to the tax for the admissions to the event if the band was paid $600. Under the new law, the admissions would no longer be subject to a sales tax.

    Robert A. MathersRobert A. Mathers (William Mitchell 1990) is a shareholder in the Milwaukee and Oshkosh offices of von Briesen & Roper S.C. He provides legal and business advisory services with a focus on closely-held businesses, estate planning, and private wealth. Reach him by email or by phone at (920) 232-4855.

    As another example, a church that arranged for volunteers to volunteer time to provide $35,000 of fund raising for 18 pie sales during the year and then also sold T-shirts three times a year to its member’s affinity groups, would have to pay sales tax on the amount over $25,000, in this case, $10,000. Under the new law, these sales would be exempt from the sales tax.

    Wisconsin legislators are to be commended for addressing a problem that was getting out of hand for many tax exempt entities. Under the old law the definition of “entertainment” was being expanded by the Wisconsin Department of Revenue to include not only musicians and artists, but also to include the presence of doughnuts and coffee at an event. This created a trap for nonprofits seeking to carry-out their tax exempt mission in that they faced an unforeseen expense, resulting in not only a tax, but also penalties and interest being assessed on these “sales.” Under the new law, our nonprofit contributors to Wisconsin tourism will be able to reduce not only the cost of providing these services to our residents and guests, but they will also enjoy lower compliance and administrative costs associated with an outdated statute.

    Unfortunately, the new occasional sales tax law is not effective until 2017, so affected nonprofit organizations should plan around the old law in 2016.


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