WAC 458-20-148
Barber and beauty shops.
Business and Occupation Tax Barber and beauty shops are subject to the business and
occupation tax as follows:
Retailing. Taxable under the retailing classification
upon charges for styling of wigs or hairpieces and upon the
gross proceeds of sales of shoe shines and of packaged
cosmetics, etc., sold apart from the rendition of personal
services.
Service and other business activities. Taxable under the
service and other business activities classification upon the
gross income from charges for the rendition of personal
services, such as hair cutting, shaving, shampooing, tinting,
bleaching, setting and the like.
Retail Sales Tax Barber and beauty shops primarily render personal
services as to hair cutting, shaving, shampooing, tinting,
bleaching, setting and the like and, therefore are not
required to collect the retail sales tax from the customers
paying for such services. Sales by supply houses to barber
and beauty shops of such articles of equipment as clippers,
razors, barber chairs, hair waving machines, etc., and of such
supplies as soaps, hair tonics, lotions, cosmetics, dyes,
etc., which are used incidentally in the rendering of such
personal services are taxable retail sales upon which the
retail sales tax must be collected. Shops must collect retail
sales tax upon sales and charges shown as taxable under
retailing above.
Sales by barber and beauty shops of packaged cosmetics,
hair tonics, lotions and like articles are taxable retail
sales when sold apart from the rendition of personal services
and are subject to the retail sales tax. Sales of such
articles by supply houses to barber and beauty shops are sales
for resale and are not taxable under the retail sales tax.
Barber shops operating shoe shine stands are required to
collect the retail sales tax upon the charges made for shoe
shines rendered to customers. Sales by supply houses of shoe
polish, dyes, cleaners, etc., which are resold in rendering a
shoe shine service are sales for resale and not taxable under
the retail sales tax. However, sales to shoe shine stands of
brushes, chairs and other equipment which are not resold in
rendering such services are taxable retail sales and the
retail sales tax must be collected thereon.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 83-07-034 (Order ET
83-17), § 458-20-148, filed 3/15/83; Order ET 70-3, §
458-20-148 (Rule 148), filed 5/29/70, effective 7/1/70.]