WAC 458-20-13601
Manufacturers and processors for
hire -- Sales and use tax exemption for machinery and equipment. (1) Introduction. This section explains the retail sales and
use tax exemption provided by RCW 82.08.02565 and 82.12.02565
for sales to or use by manufacturers or processors for hire of
machinery and equipment (M&E) used directly in a manufacturing
operation or research and development operation. This section
explains the requirements that must be met to substantiate a
claim of exemption. For information regarding the distressed
area sales and use tax deferral refer to WAC 458-20-24001 and
chapter 82.60 RCW. For the high technology business sales and
use tax deferral refer to chapter 82.63 RCW.
(2) Definitions. For purposes of the manufacturing
machinery and equipment tax exemption the following
definitions will apply.
(a) "Cogeneration" means the simultaneous generation of
electrical energy and low-grade heat from the same fuel. See
RCW 82.08.02565.
(b) "Device" means an item that is not attached to the
building or site. Examples of devices are: Forklifts,
chainsaws, air compressors, clamps, free standing shelving,
software, ladders, wheelbarrows, and pulleys.
(c) "Industrial fixture" means an item attached to a
building or to land. Fixtures become part of the real estate
to which they are attached and upon attachment are classified
as real property, not personal property. Examples of
"industrial fixtures" are fuel oil lines, boilers, craneways,
and certain concrete slabs.
(d) "Machinery and equipment" means industrial fixtures,
devices, and support facilities, and tangible personal
property that becomes an ingredient or component thereof,
including repair parts and replacement parts. "Machinery and
equipment" includes pollution control equipment installed and
used in a qualifying operation to prevent air pollution, water
pollution, or contamination that might otherwise result from
the operation. "M&E" means "machinery and equipment."
(e) "Manufacturer" has the same meaning as provided in
chapter 82.04 RCW.
(f) "Manufacturing" has the same meaning as "to
manufacture" in chapter 82.04 RCW.
(g) "Manufacturing operation" means the manufacturing of
articles, substances, or commodities for sale as tangible
personal property. A manufacturing operation begins at the
point where the raw materials enter the manufacturing site and
ends at the point where the processed material leaves the
manufacturing site. The operation includes storage of raw
materials at the site, the storage of in-process materials at
the site, and the storage of the processed material at the
site. The manufacturing operation is defined in terms of a
process occurring at a location. To be eligible as a
qualifying use of M&E, the use must take place within the
manufacturing operation, unless specifically exempted by law. Storage of raw material or other tangible personal property,
packaging of tangible personal property, and other activities
that potentially qualify under the "used directly" criteria,
and that do not constitute manufacturing in and of themselves,
are not within the scope of the exemption unless they take
place at a manufacturing site. The statute specifically
allows testing to occur away from the site.
The term "manufacturing operation" also includes that
portion of a cogeneration project that is used to generate
power for consumption within the manufacturing site of which
the cogeneration project is an integral part. The term does
not include the production of electricity by a light and power
business as defined in RCW 82.16.010 or the preparation of
food products on the premises of a person selling food
products at retail.
(i) Neither duration or temporary nature of the
manufacturing activity nor mobility of the equipment determine
whether a manufacturing operation exists. For example,
operations using portable saw mills or rock crushing equipment
are considered "manufacturing operations" if the activity in
which the person is engaged is manufacturing. Rock crushing
equipment that deposits material onto a roadway is not used in
a manufacturing operation because this is a part of the
constructing activity, not a manufacturing activity. Likewise, a concrete mixer used at a construction site is not
used in a manufacturing operation because the activity is
constructing, not manufacturing. Other portable equipment
used in nonmanufacturing activities, such as continuous gutter
trucks or trucks designed to deliver and combine aggregate, or
specialized carpentry tools, do not qualify for the same
reasons.
(ii) Manufacturing tangible personal property for sale
can occur in stages, taking place at more than one
manufacturing site. For example, if a taxpayer processes pulp
from wood at one site, and transfers the resulting pulp to
another site that further manufactures the product into paper,
two separate manufacturing operations exist. The end product
of the manufacturing activity must result in an article,
substance, or commodity for sale.
(h) "Processor for hire" has the same meaning as used in
chapter 82.04 RCW and as explained in WAC 458-20-136
Manufacturing, processing for hire, fabricating.
(i) "Qualifying operation" means a manufacturing
operation, a research and development operation, or a testing
operation.
(j) "Research and development operation" means engaging
in research and development as defined in RCW 82.63.010 by a
manufacturer or processor for hire. RCW 82.63.010 defines
"research and development" to mean: Activities performed to
discover technological information, and technical and
nonroutine activities concerned with translating technological
information into new or improved products, processes,
techniques, formulas, inventions, or software. The term
includes exploration of a new use for an existing drug,
device, or biological product if the new use requires separate
licensing by the Federal Food and Drug Administration under
chapter 21, C.F.R., as amended. The term does not include
adaptation or duplication of existing products where the
products are not substantially improved by application of the
technology, nor does the term include surveys and studies,
social science and humanities research, market research or
testing, quality control, sale promotion and service, computer
software developed for internal use, and research in areas
such as improved style, taste, and seasonal design.
(k) "Sale" has the same meaning as "sale" in chapter 82.08 RCW, which includes by reference RCW 82.04.040. RCW 82.04.040 includes by reference the definition of "retail
sale" in RCW 82.04.050. "Sale" includes renting or leasing,
conditional sale contracts, leases with option to purchase,
and any contract under which possession of the property is
given to the purchaser but title is retained by the vendor as
security for the payment of the purchase price.
(l) "Site" means the location at which the manufacturing
or testing takes place.
(m) "Support facility" means a part of a building, or a
structure or improvement, used to contain or steady an
industrial fixture or device. A support facility must be
specially designed and necessary for the proper functioning of
the industrial fixture or device and must perform a function
beyond being a building or a structure or an improvement. It
must have a function relative to an industrial fixture or a
device. To determine if some portion of a building is a
support facility, the parts of the building are examined. For
example, a highly specialized structure, like a vibration
reduction slab under a microchip clean room, is a support
facility. Without the slab, the delicate instruments in the
clean room would not function properly. The ceiling and walls
of the clean room are not support facilities if they only
serve to define the space and do not have a function relative
to an industrial fixture or a device.
(n) "Tangible personal property" has its ordinary
meaning.
(o) "Testing" means activities performed to establish or
determine the properties, qualities, and limitations of
tangible personal property.
(p) "Testing operation" means the testing of tangible
personal property for a manufacturer or processor for hire. A
testing operation begins at the point where the tangible
personal property enters the testing site and ends at the
point where the tangible personal property leaves the testing
site. The term also includes that portion of a cogeneration
project that is used to generate power for consumption within
the site of which the cogeneration project is an integral
part. The term does not include the production of electricity
by a light and power business as defined in RCW 82.16.010 or
the preparation of food products on the premises of a person
selling food products at retail. The testing operation is
defined in terms of a process occurring at a location. To be
eligible as a qualifying use of M&E, the use must take place
within the testing operation, unless specifically excepted by
law.
(3) Sales and use tax exemption. The M&E exemption
provides a retail sales and use tax exemption for machinery
and equipment used directly in a manufacturing operation or
research and development operation. Sales of or charges made
for labor and services rendered in respect to installing,
repairing, cleaning, altering, or improving qualifying
machinery and equipment are also exempt from sales tax. However, because the exemption is limited to items with a
useful life of one year or more, some charges for repair,
labor, services, and replacement parts may not be eligible for
the exemption. In the case of labor and service charges that
cover both qualifying and nonqualifying repair and replacement
parts, the labor and services charges are presumed to be
exempt. If all of the parts are nonqualifying, the labor and
service charge is not exempt, unless the parts are incidental
to the service being performed, such as cleaning, calibrating,
and adjusting qualifying machinery and equipment.
The exemption may be taken for qualifying machinery and
equipment used directly in a testing operation by a person
engaged in testing for a manufacturer or processor for hire.
Sellers remain subject to the retailing B&O tax on all
sales of machinery and equipment to consumers if delivery is
made within the state of Washington, notwithstanding that the
sale may qualify for an exemption from the retail sales tax.
(a) Sales tax. The purchaser must provide the seller
with an exemption certificate. The exemption certificate must
be completed in its entirety. The seller must retain a copy
of the certificate as a part of its records. This certificate
may be issued for each purchase or in blanket form certifying
all future purchases as being exempt from sales tax. Blanket
certificates are valid for as long as the buyer and seller
have a recurring business relationship. A "recurring business
relationship" means at least one sale transaction within a
period of twelve consecutive months. RCW 82.08.050 (7)(c).
The form must contain the following information:
(i) Name, address, and registration number of the buyer;
(ii) Name of the seller;
(iii) Name and title of the authorized agent of the
buyer/user;
(iv) Authorized signature;
(v) Date; and
(vi) Whether the form is a single use or blanket-use
form.
A copy of a M&E certificate form may be obtained from the
department of revenue (department) on the internet at
http://www.dor.wa.gov/, or by contacting the department's
taxpayer services division at:
Department of Revenue
Taxpayer Services
P.O. Box 47478
Olympia, WA 98504-7478
1-800-647-7706
(b) Use tax. The use tax complements the retail sales
tax by imposing a tax of like amount upon the use within this
state as a consumer of any tangible personal property
purchased at retail, where the user has not paid retail sales
tax with respect to the purchase of the property used. (See
also chapter 82.12 RCW and WAC 458-20-178 Use tax.) If the
seller fails to collect the appropriate retail sales tax, the
purchaser is required to pay the retail sales tax (commonly
referred to as "deferred sales tax") or the use tax directly
to the department unless the purchase and/or use is exempt
from the retail sales and/or use tax. A qualifying person
using eligible machinery and equipment in Washington in a
qualifying manner is exempt from the use tax. If an item of
machinery and equipment that was eligible for use tax or sales
tax exemption fails to overcome the majority use threshold or
is totally put to use in a nonqualifying manner, use tax is
due on the fair market value at the time the item was put to
nonqualifying use. See subsection (9) of this section for an
explanation of the majority use threshold.
(4) Who may take the exemption. The exemption may be
taken by a manufacturer or processor for hire who manufactures
articles, substances, or commodities for sale as tangible
personal property, and who, for the item in question, meets
the used directly test and overcomes the majority use
threshold. (See subsection (8) of this section for a
discussion of the "used directly" criteria and see subsection
(9) of this section for an explanation of the majority use
threshold.) However, for research and development operations,
there is no requirement that the operation produce tangible
personal property for sale. A processor for hire who does not
sell tangible personal property is eligible for the exemption
if the processor for hire manufactures articles, substances,
or commodities that will be sold by the manufacturer. For
example, a person who is a processor for hire but who is
manufacturing with regard to tangible personal property that
will be used by the manufacturer, rather than sold by the
manufacturer, is not eligible. See WAC 458-20-136 and RCW 82.04.110 for more information. Persons who engage in testing
for manufacturers or processors for hire are eligible for the
exemption. To be eligible for the exemption, the taxpayer
need not be a manufacturer or processor for hire in the state
of Washington, but must meet the Washington definition of
manufacturer.
(5) What is eligible for the exemption. Machinery and
equipment used directly in a qualifying operation by a
qualifying person is eligible for the exemption, subject to
overcoming the majority use threshold.
There are three classes of eligible machinery and
equipment: Industrial fixtures, devices, and support
facilities. Also eligible is tangible personal property that
becomes an ingredient or component of the machinery and
equipment, including repair parts and replacement parts. "Machinery and equipment" also includes pollution control
equipment installed and used in a qualifying operation to
prevent air pollution, water pollution, or contamination that
might otherwise result from the operation.
(6) What is not eligible for the exemption. In addition
to items that are not eligible because they do not meet the
used directly test or fail to overcome the majority use
threshold, there are four categories of items that are
statutorily excluded from eligibility. The following property
is not eligible for the M&E exemption:
(a) Hand-powered tools. Screw drivers, hammers, clamps,
tape measures, and wrenches are examples of hand-powered
tools. Electric powered, including cordless tools, are not
hand-powered tools, nor are calipers, plugs used in measuring,
or calculators.
(b) Property with a useful life of less than one year. All eligible machinery and equipment must satisfy the useful
life criteria, including repair parts and replacement parts. For example, items such as blades and bits are generally not
eligible for the exemption because, while they may become
component parts of eligible machinery and equipment, they
generally have a useful life of less than one year. Blades
generally having a useful life of one year or more, such as
certain sawmill blades, are eligible. See subsection (7) of
this section for thresholds to determine useful life.
(c) Buildings, other than machinery and equipment that is
permanently affixed to or becomes a physical part of a
building. Buildings provide work space for people or shelter
machinery and equipment or tangible personal property. The
building itself is not eligible, however some of its
components might be eligible for the exemption. The
industrial fixtures and support facilities that become affixed
to or part of the building might be eligible. The subsequent
real property status of industrial fixtures and support
facilities does not affect eligibility for the exemption.
(d) Building fixtures that are not integral to the
manufacturing operation, testing operation, or research and
development operation that are permanently affixed to and
become a physical part of a building, such as utility systems
for heating, ventilation, air conditioning, communications,
plumbing, or electrical. Examples of nonqualifying fixtures
are: Fire sprinklers, building electrical systems, or
washroom fixtures. Fixtures that are integral to the
manufacturing operation might be eligible, depending on
whether the item meets the other requirements for eligibility,
such as the used directly test.
(7) The "useful life" threshold. RCW 82.08.02565 has a
per se exception for "property with a useful life of less than
one year." Property that meets this description is not
eligible for the M&E exemption. The useful life threshold
identifies items that do not qualify for the exemption, such
as supplies, consumables, and other classes of items that are
not expected or intended to last a year or more. For example,
tangible personal property that is acquired for a one-time use
and is discarded upon use, such as a mold or a form, has a
useful life of less than one year and is not eligible. If it
is clear from taxpayer records or practice that an item is
used for at least one year, the item is eligible, regardless
of the answers to the four threshold questions. A taxpayer
may work directly with the department to establish
recordkeeping methods that are tailored to the specific
circumstances of the taxpayer. The following steps should be
used in making a determination whether an item meets the
"useful life" threshold. The series of questions progress
from simple documentation to complex documentation. In order
to substantiate qualification under any step, a taxpayer must
maintain adequate records or be able to establish by
demonstrating through practice or routine that the threshold
is overcome. Catastrophic loss, damage, or destruction of an
item does not affect eligibility of machinery and equipment
that otherwise qualifies. Assuming the machinery and
equipment meets all of the other M&E requirements and does not
have a single one-time use or is not discarded during the
first year, useful life can be determined by answering the
following questions for an individual piece of machinery and
equipment:
(a) Is the machinery and equipment capitalized for either
federal tax purposes or accounting purposes?
- If the answer is "yes," it qualifies for the
exemption.
- If the answer is "no,"
(b) Is the machinery and equipment warranted by the
manufacturer to last at least one year?
- If the answer is "yes," it qualifies for the
exemption.
- If the answer is "no,"
(c) Is the machinery and equipment normally replaced at
intervals of one year or more, as established by industry or
business practice? (This is commonly based on the actual
experience of the person claiming the exemption.)
- If the answer is "yes," it qualifies for the
exemption.
- If the answer is "no,"
(d) Is the machinery and equipment expected at the time
of purchase to last at least one year, as established by
industry or business practice? (This is commonly based on the
actual experience of the person claiming the exemption.)
- If the answer is "yes," it qualifies for the
exemption.
- If the answer is "no," it does not qualify for the
exemption.
(8) The "used directly" criteria. Items that are not
used directly in a qualifying operation are not eligible for
the exemption. The statute provides eight descriptions of the
phrase "used directly." The manner in which a person uses an
item of machinery and equipment must match one of these
descriptions. If M&E is not "used directly" it is not
eligible for the exemption. Examples of items that are not
used directly in a qualifying operation are cafeteria
furniture, safety equipment not part of qualifying M&E,
packaging materials, shipping materials, or administrative
equipment. Machinery and equipment is "used directly" in a
manufacturing operation, testing operation, or research and
development operation, if the machinery and equipment meets
any one of the following criteria:
(a) Acts upon or interacts with an item of tangible
personal property. Examples of this are drill presses,
concrete mixers (agitators), ready-mix concrete trucks, hot
steel rolling machines, rock crushers, and band saws. Also
included is machinery and equipment used to repair, maintain,
or install tangible personal property. Computers qualify
under this criteria if:
(i) They direct or control machinery or equipment that
acts upon or interacts with tangible personal property; or
(ii) If they act upon or interact with an item of
tangible personal property.
(b) Conveys, transports, handles, or temporarily stores
an item of tangible personal property at the manufacturing
site or the testing site. Examples of this are wheelbarrows,
handcarts, storage racks, forklifts, tanks, vats, robotic
arms, piping, and concrete storage pads. Floor space in
buildings does not qualify under this criteria. Not eligible
under this criteria are items that are used to ship the
product or in which the product is packaged, as well as
materials used to brace or support an item during transport.
(c) Controls, guides, measures, verifies, aligns,
regulates, or tests tangible personal property at the site or
away from the site. Examples of "away from the site" are road
testing of trucks, air testing of planes, or water testing of
boats, with the machinery and equipment used off site in the
testing eligible under this criteria. Machinery and equipment
used to take readings or measurements is eligible under this
criteria.
(d) Provides physical support for or access to tangible
personal property. Examples of this are catwalks adjacent to
production equipment, scaffolding around tanks, braces under
vats, and ladders near controls. Machinery and equipment used
for access to the building or to provide a work space for
people or a space for tangible personal property or machinery
and equipment, such as stairways or doors, is not eligible
under this criteria.
(e) Produces power for or lubricates machinery and
equipment. A generator providing power to a sander is an
example of machinery and equipment that produces power for
machinery and equipment. An electrical generating plant that
provides power for a building is not eligible under this
criteria. Lubricating devices, such as hoses, oil guns,
pumps, and meters, whether or not attached to machinery and
equipment, are eligible under this criteria.
(f) Produces another item of tangible personal property
for use in the manufacturing operation, testing operation, or
research and development operation. Machinery and equipment
that makes dies, jigs, or molds, and printers that produce
camera-ready images are examples of this.
(g) Places tangible personal property in the container,
package, or wrapping in which the tangible personal property
is normally sold or transported.
(h) Is integral to research and development as defined in
RCW 82.63.010.
(9) The majority use threshold.
(a) Machinery and equipment both used directly in a
qualifying operation and used in a nonqualifying manner is
eligible for the exemption only if the qualifying use
satisfies the majority use requirement. Examples of
situations in which an item of machinery and equipment is used
for qualifying and nonqualifying purposes include: The use of
machinery and equipment in manufacturing and repair
activities, such as using a power saw to make cabinets in a
shop versus using it to make cabinets at a customer location;
the use of machinery and equipment in manufacturing and
constructing activities, such as using a forklift to move
finished sheet rock at the manufacturing site versus using it
to unload sheet rock at a customer location; and the use of
machinery and equipment in manufacturing and transportation
activities, such as using a mixer truck to make concrete at a
manufacturing site versus using it to deliver concrete to a
customer. Majority use can be expressed as a percentage, with
the minimum required amount of qualifying use being greater
than fifty percent compared to overall use. To determine
whether the majority use requirement has been satisfied, the
person claiming the exemption must retain records documenting
the measurement used to substantiate a claim for exemption or,
if time, value, or volume is not the basis for measurement, be
able to establish by demonstrating through practice or routine
that the requirement is satisfied. Majority use is measured
by looking at the use of an item during a calendar year using
any of the following:
(i) Time. Time is measured using hours, days, or other
unit of time, with qualifying use of the M&E the numerator,
and total time used the denominator. Suitable records for
time measurement include employee time sheets or equipment
time use logs.
(ii) Value. Value means the value to the person,
measured by revenue if the qualifying and nonqualifying uses
both produce revenue. Value is measured using gross revenue,
with revenue from qualifying use of the M&E the numerator, and
total revenue from use of the M&E the denominator. If there
is no revenue associated with the use of the M&E, such as
in-house accounting use of a computer system, the value basis
may not be used. Suitable records for value measurement
include taxpayer sales journals, ledgers, account books,
invoices, and other summary records.
(iii) Volume. Volume is measured using amount of
product, with volume from qualifying use of the M&E the
numerator and total volume from use of the M&E the
denominator. Suitable records for volume measurement include
production numbers, tonnage, and dimensions.
(iv) Other comparable measurement for comparison. The
department may agree to allow a taxpayer to use another
measure for comparison, provided that the method results in a
comparison between qualifying and nonqualifying uses. For
example, if work patterns or routines demonstrate typical
behavior, the taxpayer can satisfy the majority use test using
work site surveys as proof.
(b) Each piece of M&E does not require a separate record
if the taxpayer can establish that it is reasonable to bundle
M&E into classes. Classes may be created only from similar
pieces of machinery and equipment and only if the uses of the
pieces are the same. For example, forklifts of various sizes
and models can be bundled together if the forklifts are doing
the same work, as in moving wrapped product from the assembly
line to a storage area. An example of when not to bundle
classes of M&E for purposes of the majority use threshold is
the use of a computer that controls a machine through
numerical control versus use of a computer that creates a
camera ready page for printing.
(c) Typically, whether the majority use threshold is met
is decided on a case-by-case basis, looking at the specific
manufacturing operation in which the item is being used.
However, for purposes of applying the majority use threshold,
the department may develop industry-wide standards. For
instance, the aggregate industry uses concrete mixer trucks in
a consistent manner across the industry. Based on a
comparison of selling prices of the processed product picked
up by the customer at the manufacturing site and delivery
prices to a customer location, and taking into consideration
the qualifying activity (interacting with tangible personal
property) of the machinery and equipment compared to the
nonqualifying activity (delivering the product) of the
machinery and equipment, the department has determined that
concrete trucks qualify under the majority use threshold. Only in those limited instances where it is apparent that the
use of the concrete truck is atypical for the industry would
the taxpayer be required to provide recordkeeping on the use
of the truck in order to support the exemption.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300, 82.01.060(2),82.08.02565
, and 82.12.02565. 08-14-024, § 458-20-13601,
filed 6/20/08, effective 7/21/08. Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 00-11-096, § 458-20-13601, filed 5/17/00,
effective 6/17/00.]