IRS publication page 510
Click “Sports Fishing
Equipment” below to determine how much your sport adds to ObamaCare
5. Manufacturers
Taxes
Table of Contents
- Importer.
- Use considered sale.
- Lease considered sale.
- Bonus goods.
- Taxable Event
- Exemptions
- Sport Fishing Equipment
- Bows, Quivers, Broadheads, and
Points
- Arrow Shafts
- Coal
- Taxable Tires
- Gas Guzzler Tax
- Vaccines
The following discussion of manufacturers taxes applies to the tax on:
·
Sport fishing equipment;
·
Fishing rods and fishing poles;
·
Electric outboard motors;
·
Fishing tackle boxes;
·
Bows, quivers, broadheads, and points;
·
Arrow shafts;
·
Coal;
·
Taxable tires;
·
Gas guzzler automobiles; and
·
Vaccines.
Manufacturer. The term “manufacturer”
includes a producer or importer. A manufacturer is any person who produces a
taxable article from new or raw material, or from scrap, salvage, or junk
material, by processing or changing the form of an article or by combining or
assembling two or more articles. If you furnish the materials and keep title to
those materials and to the finished article, you are considered the
manufacturer even though another person actually manufactures the taxable
article.
A
manufacturer who sells a taxable article in knockdown (unassembled) condition
is liable for the tax. The person who buys these component parts and assembles
a taxable article may also be liable for tax as a further manufacturer depending
on the labor, material, and overhead required to assemble the completed article
if the article is assembled for business use.
Importer. An importer is a person who brings a taxable article into the United States , or withdraws a taxable article
from a customs bonded warehouse for sale or use in the United States .
Use
considered sale. A manufacturer
who uses a taxable article is liable for the tax in the same manner as if it
were sold.
Lease
considered sale.
The lease of an article (including any renewal or extension of the
lease) by the manufacturer is generally considered a taxable sale. However, for
the gas guzzler tax, only the first lease (excluding any renewal or extension)
of the automobile by the manufacturer is considered a sale.
Manufacturers taxes
based on sale price.
The manufacturers taxes imposed on the sale of sport fishing
equipment, electric outboard motors, and bows are based on the sale price of
the article. The taxes imposed on coal are based either on the sale price or
the weight.
The
price for which an article is sold includes the total consideration paid for
the article, whether that consideration is in the form of money, services, or
other things. However, you include certain charges made when a taxable article
is sold and you exclude others. To figure the price on which you base the tax,
use the following rules.
1.
Include both the following
charges in the price.
a.
Any charge for coverings or containers (regardless of
their nature).
b.
Any charge incident to placing the article in a condition
packed ready for shipment.
2.
Exclude all the following amounts
from the price.
a.
The manufacturers excise tax, whether or not it is stated
as a separate charge.
b.
The transportation charges pursuant to the sale. The cost of transportation of goods to a warehouse before
their bona fide sale is not excludable.
c.
Delivery, insurance, installation, retail dealer
preparation charges, and other charges you incur in placing the article in the
hands of the purchaser under a bona fide sale.
e.
Local advertising charges. A charge
made separately when the article is sold and that qualifies as a charge for “local advertising” may, within certain limits, be excluded
from the sale price.
f.
Charges for warranty paid at the purchaser's option. However, a charge for a warranty of an article that the
manufacturer requires the purchaser to pay to obtain the article is included in
the sale price on which the tax is figured.
Bonus
goods. Allocate the
sale price if you give free nontaxable goods with the purchase of taxable
merchandise. Figure the tax only on the sale price attributable to the taxable
articles.
A manufacturer sells a quantity of taxable articles and gives the purchaser
certain nontaxable articles as a bonus. The sale price of the shipment is
$1,500. The normal sale price is $2,000: $1,500 for the taxable articles and
$500 for the nontaxable articles. Since the taxable items represent 75% of the
normal sale price, the tax is based on 75% of the actual sale price, or $1,125 (75%
of $1,500). The remaining $375 is allocated to the nontaxable articles.
as far as i know, the taxes received from fishing equipment sales are deposited into the Federal Sport Fishing Account of the Aquatic Resources Trust Fund and does not fund obamacare at all.
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