WAC 458-20-226
Landscape and horticultural services. (1) Introduction. This rule provides tax reporting
instructions for persons who provide landscape and
horticultural services. This rule does not apply to
silvicultural activities or to horticultural services provided
to farmers. Silviculture means the commercial production of
timber and includes activities such as growing seed into
seedlings, planting, fertilizer and pesticide application,
pruning and thinning as provided to timber growers. Silvicultural activities are generally subject to the
extracting B&O tax classification or the service and other
business activities B&O tax classification. (See WAC 458-20-135 and 458-20-224.)
(2) Retail landscape and horticultural services.
Landscape and horticultural services which are retail sales
include:
(a) Grading, filling, leveling, planting, seeding,
sodding, removing, cutting, trimming, pruning, mulching,
aerating, applying chemicals, watering, and fertilizing to
establish, promote, or control the growth of trees, shrubs,
flowers, grass, ground cover and other flora for ornamentation
or other nonagricultural purposes.
(b) The sale or rental of landscaping materials and the
construction of sprinkling systems, walks, pools, fences,
trellises, rockeries, and retaining walls.
(c) Cultivating fruits, flowers, and vegetables for
consumers other than farmers.
(d) All tree trimming other than for farmers or persons
engaged in silviculture. This includes all trimming for size,
shape, aesthetics, removal of diseased branches, and removal
of limbs because they are too close to structures. It does
not include tree trimming performed for public and private
electric utilities or at the direction of electric utilities
to keep power lines, distribution lines, or equipment free of
tree branches or brush.
(3) Nonretail landscape and horticultural services.
Landscape and horticultural services which are not retail
sales include:
(a) Landscape design services performed by a landscape
architect separate from a contract for landscape maintenance.
(b) Planting trees for farmers.
(c) Thinning or planting of trees for persons who are
involved in the commercial production of timber. These are
silvicultural activities and silvicultural activities are not
considered to be horticultural or landscape maintenance
activities. (See WAC 458-20-135 and 458-20-209.)
(d) Landscape services performed for municipal
corporations or political subdivisions of the state on real
property owned by those entities if the real property is used
or held for public road purposes. (See WAC 458-20-171.)
(e) Horticultural services, including spraying and
fertilizing, performed for farmers for agricultural purposes. See WAC 458-20-209 for examples of horticultural services
performed for farmers.
(f) Pruning, trimming, repairing, removing, and clearing
of trees and brush near electric transmission or distribution
lines or equipment, if performed by or at the direction of an
electric utility. The removing and clearing of trees includes
the stump removal by grinding, digging, or any other means, if
performed by or at the direction of an electric utility. These are retail activities when not performed by or at the
direction of an electric utility.
(4) Business and occupation tax. The business and
occupation tax applies as follows.
(a) Retailing. The gross income from landscape and
horticultural services which are retail sales and which are
performed for consumers is taxable under the retailing
classification.
(b) Wholesaling. The gross income from services which
are retail sales and which are performed for other contractors
for resale is taxable under the wholesaling classification.
(c) Service. The gross income from horticultural
services provided to farmers is taxable under the service and
other activities classification. This tax classification also
applies to income received from pruning, tree trimming,
removing and clearing of trees and brush near electric lines,
if performed by or at the direction of an electric utility. Beginning July 1, 1998, income from services performed by
landscape architects is subject to this classification. (See
chapter 7, Laws of 1997.) For the period July 1, 1993, through
June 30, 1998, landscape architects who performed design
services were taxable under the selected business service tax
classification.
(d) Public road construction. Persons who perform
landscape services for municipal corporations or political
subdivisions of the state on real property owned by those
entities are taxable under the public road construction B&O
tax classification, but only if the real property is used or
held for public road purposes.
(e) Government contracting. This classification applies
to persons engaged in the business of constructing, repairing,
decorating, or improving new or existing buildings or other
structures for the United States, or a city or county housing
authority created under chapter 35.82 RCW. This
classification would include the construction or maintenance
of items such as walls, fences, walks, pools and other
structures. This classification does not include the planting
of lawns or trees or the cutting of grass or tree trimming
performed for these customers. These activities are subject
to the retailing classification.
(5) Retail sales and use tax. Landscape gardeners and
horticulturists, except horticulturists performing services
for farmers, must generally collect and report the retail
sales tax upon the full contract price when performing
landscaping or horticultural services for consumers. For
purposes of collecting the local option retail sales tax, the
sale takes place where the service is performed. See WAC 458-20-145. The retail sales tax does not apply to charges to
the United States for landscape services, including landscape
maintenance services, and sellers may take a deduction from
the retail sales tax classification in reporting those sales
which are taxable under the retailing B&O tax classification.
(a) Persons performing a landscaping or horticultural
service for a contractor for resale must provide a resale
certificate. See WAC 458-20-102.
(b) Landscape gardeners and horticulturists must pay the
retail sales tax to their vendors when purchasing tools,
equipment, and supplies which are not resold, either directly
or as a component part of the finished work. They must pay
deferred sales or use tax directly to the department upon the
value of any such property that was purchased or acquired
without payment of Washington retail sales tax.
(c) Plants, shrubs, trees, sod, seed, chemicals,
fertilizer, peat moss, sprinkler systems, rocks, building
materials and any other tangible personal property which
becomes a part of the finished work may be purchased for
resale, except items used in providing horticultural services
for farmers and items used in performing public road
construction, government contracting, or services for timber
growers.
(d) Retail sales tax or use tax is due with respect to
items purchased by horticulturists for use in performing
services for farmers. (See also WAC 458-20-209.)
(e) Retail sales tax or use tax is due with respect to
items purchased for use in performing services for timber
growers or which are taxable as either public road
construction or government contracting. This includes items
such as sod, seed, trees, building materials, fertilizers,
spray materials, etc.
(f) The retail sales tax does not apply to the charge
made by persons performing tree trimming near electric
transmission or distribution lines, but only if the work is
performed at the direction of an electric utility. Persons
performing these services must pay retail sales or use tax on
all materials, supplies, tools, and equipment used in
performing the service.
(6) Examples. The following examples identify a number
of facts and then state a conclusion. These examples should
be used only as a general guide. The tax results of other
situations must be determined after a review of all facts and
circumstances.
(a) John Doe, a landscaper, was hired by a city to
maintain the landscaping around the buildings at the city's
municipal golf courses. He must collect and report the retail
sales tax and pay retailing B&O tax on the full contract
amount.
(b) John Doe purchased several plants, some fertilizer,
and insect spray to use in landscaping the golf course. He
also purchased some solvent and mineral oil to clean and
maintain some of his landscaping tools. His purchases of the
plants, fertilizer and insect spray are purchases for resale. He must pay retail sales tax to his vendors on his purchases
of the solvent and mineral oil.
(c) Landscaping company provides complete landscaping
services including landscape design by a licensed landscape
architect, installation, and maintenance. Landscaping charged
Jane Smith two hundred dollars for a landscaping plan for her
new home. She planned to purchase the plants and do the
landscaping work herself. Landscaping must report B&O tax on
the charge for the design service at the service and other
activities classification rate.
(d) Landscaping company entered into a contract to
landscape the yard for a client's new home. The company must
collect and report retail sales tax and pay retailing B&O on
the full contract amount, even though part of Landscaping's
services included drawing a landscaping plan.
(e) Landscaping company entered into a two-phase contract
with a county. Phase one required the company to plant trees
and shrubs and put in a sprinkling system as part of a public
road project. The sprinkler system is located in the public
road right of way. The contract provided Landscaping would
receive five hundred thousand dollars for phase one of the
project. Phase two provided that Landscaping would maintain
the trees and shrubs for a period of five years. The contract
provided for payments of four thousand dollars per month plus
costs for fertilizer and spray for maintaining the planted
strips.
(i) Phase one is part of public road construction and
Landscaping is taxable under the public road construction
classification upon the five hundred thousand dollars received
for phase one. The company must pay sales tax when purchasing
the trees and shrubs and materials for the sprinkling system
for use in phase one of the project. See WAC 458-20-171 for
the tax liability for public road construction.
(ii) Phase two for the maintenance of the completed
project is also public road construction. This is not a
retail sale because the work is performed for a municipal
corporation or political subdivision of the state on land
owned by that entity and which is being used for public road
purposes. See RCW 82.04.190.
Landscaping will owe B&O tax under the public road
construction classification and must pay retail sales or use
tax on any items used in performing this work, including
purchases of fertilizers, chemicals and other materials.
(f) John Doe operates a tree trimming business and has a
contract with a public utility district (PUD) to trim trees
along the PUD's power lines. Some of these trees are on
private property with the PUD obtaining the permission of the
owners to trim the trees. Some trees are also located on land
for which the PUD has an easement, including along public road
right of ways. This tree trimming is not a retail sale, but
taxable under the service and other activities classification.
This includes trimming performed along the road right of way.
The property on the road right of way is not owned by the PUD
for whom the work is being performed. The easement is not for
use as a public road and as such the tree trimming is not
public road construction.
(g) John Doe provides a tree trimming service to his
residential customers. The tree trimming is performed at the
direction of the residential customer to remove diseased
limbs, limbs too close to the house, limbs which are a safety
hazard because of their proximity to power lines, and limbs
which are objectionable to the desired shape of the tree. All
of this tree trimming is a retail activity, regardless of the
specific reason for cutting the limbs.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 99-09-013, §
458-20-226, filed 4/13/99, effective 5/14/99. Statutory
Authority: RCW 82.32.300 and to implement RCW 82.04.050. 96-05-080, § 458-20-226, filed 2/21/96, effective 3/23/96. Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300 and 82.04.050 (3)(e). 94-23-053, § 458-20-226, filed 11/10/94, effective 12/11/94. Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 83-08-026 (Order ET
83-1), § 458-20-226, filed 3/30/83; Order ET 70-3, §
458-20-226 (Rule 226), filed 5/29/70, effective 7/1/70.]