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 Tennessee Business Tax 

  Manual 
  
         December 2023 



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Contents 
Chapter 1: Introduction ......................................................................................................... 10 

History .............................................................................................................................................. 10 

Tennessee Works Tax Reform Act of 2023 ................................................................................. 11 

1. Filing and Licensing Thresholds ....................................................................................... 11 

2. Deemed Location for Contractors ................................................................................... 11 

3. Classification 5A Tax Rate ................................................................................................. 12 

4. Manufacturing Exemption ................................................................................................ 12 

Brief Business Tax Overview ......................................................................................................... 12 

Nature of the Business Tax ........................................................................................................... 13 

1. State-Level and Municipal-Level Taxes ........................................................................... 13 

Application ...................................................................................................................................... 15 

1. Doing Business ................................................................................................................... 15 

2. Imposition ........................................................................................................................... 15 

3. Business Tax Classifications ............................................................................................. 15 

4. Retailer vs. Wholesaler ...................................................................................................... 16 

Chapter 2: Who is Subject to Tennessee Business Tax? ..................................................... 17 

Historical Context ........................................................................................................................... 17 

1. Pre-2014 Tax Periods ........................................................................................................ 17 

2. Periods Beginning on or after January 1, 2014 .............................................................. 18 

Present Law ..................................................................................................................................... 19 

1. Substantial Nexus .............................................................................................................. 20 

2. Activities Engaged in this State ........................................................................................ 22 

3. Nexus in Tennessee – Other Tennessee Taxes ............................................................. 23 

4. Establishing a Location, Outlet, or Other Place of Business ........................................ 25 

Chapter 3: Registration and Licensing ................................................................................. 28 

Registration ..................................................................................................................................... 28 

1. In-State Businesses ............................................................................................................ 28 

2. Out-of-State Businesses .................................................................................................... 29 

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Business License ............................................................................................................................. 29 

1. Standard Business License ............................................................................................... 30 

2. Minimal Activity License .................................................................................................... 31 

3. Transferring Licenses ........................................................................................................ 31 

4. Contractors ......................................................................................................................... 31 

Closing a Business .......................................................................................................................... 32 

1. Successor Liability .............................................................................................................. 33 

Chapter 4: Determining Gross Sales .................................................................................... 35 

Gross Sales ...................................................................................................................................... 35 

Taxable Sales .................................................................................................................................. 35 

1. Casual and Isolated Sales ................................................................................................. 36 

2. Sales of Services ................................................................................................................. 37 

3. Sales of Intangible Personal Property ............................................................................. 40 

4. Installation Sales ................................................................................................................ 41 

5. Sales to Employees ............................................................................................................ 42 

6. Installment and Credit Sales ............................................................................................ 42 

7. Lay-Away Sales ................................................................................................................... 42 

8. Sales of Electricity by Electric Vehicle Charging Stations .............................................. 43 

Sales Price ....................................................................................................................................... 43 

1. Exclusions ........................................................................................................................... 43 

2. Expenses Passed Through to the Customer .................................................................. 44 

Reporting Methods ........................................................................................................................ 45 

Chapter 5: Classifications ...................................................................................................... 46 

Classifications Generally ................................................................................................................ 46 

1. Classification 1.................................................................................................................... 46 

2. Classification 2.................................................................................................................... 47 

3. Classification 3.................................................................................................................... 47 

4. Classification 4.................................................................................................................... 50 

5. Classification 5.................................................................................................................... 51 

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6. Antique Malls, Flea Markets, Gun Shows, Etc. ............................................................... 51 

7. Transient Vendors ............................................................................................................. 52 

8. Miscellaneous Industry Specific Classifications ............................................................. 52 

Retailer vs. Wholesaler .................................................................................................................. 59 

1. Retail Sales .......................................................................................................................... 60 

2. Wholesale Sales ................................................................................................................. 61 

3. Sales for Resale .................................................................................................................. 62 

4. Wholesaler to Wholesaler Sales ....................................................................................... 63 

Retailer to Retailer Sales ............................................................................................................ 64 

Tax Rates ......................................................................................................................................... 64 

Wholesaler/Retailer Certificate ..................................................................................................... 66 

Chapter 6: Filing Requirements ............................................................................................ 67 

Filing the Return ............................................................................................................................. 67 

1. Payments ............................................................................................................................ 67 

2. Electronic Filing .................................................................................................................. 67 

3. State-Level and Municipal-Level Filings .......................................................................... 68 

4. Consolidated Returns ........................................................................................................ 69 

5. Single-Member LLC Filing ................................................................................................. 71 

Filing Period ..................................................................................................................................... 72 

Filing Due Dates .............................................................................................................................. 72 

1. Due Dates ........................................................................................................................... 72 

2. Filing Extension .................................................................................................................. 73 

3. Estimated Assessment ...................................................................................................... 74 

Final Returns ................................................................................................................................... 74 

1. Filing Requirements for Final Returns............................................................................. 74 

2. Tax Clearance ..................................................................................................................... 75 

3. Events Not Resulting in a Final Return ............................................................................ 76 

Overpayments ................................................................................................................................ 77 

Penalties .......................................................................................................................................... 77 

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1. Penalties and Penalty Rates ............................................................................................. 77 

2. Penalty Waivers .................................................................................................................. 78 

Interest ............................................................................................................................................. 80 

Assessments ................................................................................................................................... 81 

1. Assessment Following an Audit ....................................................................................... 81 

2. Estimated Assessment ...................................................................................................... 81 

Statutes of Limitations ................................................................................................................... 82 

1. Assessments ....................................................................................................................... 82 

2. Refunds ............................................................................................................................... 82 

3. Extensions ........................................................................................................................... 83 

Record Maintenance and Retention ............................................................................................ 83 

Chapter 7: Sourcing and Distribution .................................................................................. 85 

Sourcing ........................................................................................................................................... 85 
1. In-State Taxpayers other than Video Programmers, Mobile Telecommunications 
Providers, and Classification 4 Contractors ............................................................................ 85 
2. Out-of-State Taxpayers other than Video Programmers, Mobile 
Telecommunications Providers, and Classification 4 Contractors ....................................... 85 
3. Taxpayers with both In-State and Out-of-State Locations other than Classification 4 
Contractors .................................................................................................................................. 86 

4. Contractors ......................................................................................................................... 86 

5. Video Programmers .......................................................................................................... 87 

6. Mobile Telecommunications Service Providers ............................................................. 88 

Distributions .................................................................................................................................... 89 

1. In-state Taxpayer Distributions ........................................................................................ 89 

2. Municipal-Level Business Tax Collections from In-state Taxpayers ........................... 89 

3. Fees Levied Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710 ............................................................ 90 

4. Taxpayers Without Licenses or Locations ...................................................................... 90 

5. Audited Taxpayers ............................................................................................................. 90 

Chapter 8: Exemptions and Exclusions ................................................................................ 91 

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Exempt Sales of Services ............................................................................................................... 91 

1.  Medical, Dental, and Allied Health Services ................................................................... 92 

2.  Legal Services ..................................................................................................................... 93 

3.  Educational Services .......................................................................................................... 93 

4.  Services Rendered by Nonprofit Membership Organizations ..................................... 94 

5.  Domestic Services Provided in Private Households ...................................................... 95 

6.  Nonprofit Educational and Research Agencies ............................................................. 95 

7.  Services by Religious and Charitable Organizations ..................................................... 96 

8.  Accounting, Auditing, and Bookkeeping Services .......................................................... 96 

9.  Public Utilities ..................................................................................................................... 97 

10. Banking and Related Functions ....................................................................................... 99           

11. Insurance  Services .......................................................................................................... 101 

12. Operators of Residential and Nonresidential Buildings ............................................ 101                             

13. Lessors of Real Property ................................................................................................. 102     

14. Veterinary Services .......................................................................................................... 102 

15. Architecture, Engineering, and Land Surveying Services ........................................... 103                             

16. Services Provided by Farmers to Other Farmers ........................................................ 104                         

Other Miscellaneous Exemptions .............................................................................................. 104 

1.  Services Sold for a Lump Sum ........................................................................................ 104 

2.  Services for Affiliated Entities ......................................................................................... 105 

3.  Internet Services ............................................................................................................... 105 

Taxable Sales by Providers of Exempt Services ....................................................................... 105 

Persons/Entities ............................................................................................................................ 106 

1.  Persons with Taxable Sales < $100,000 ........................................................................ 107 

2.  Radio and Televisions Stations ....................................................................................... 108 

3.  Providers of Direct-to-Home Satellite Services ............................................................ 108 

4.  Publishers or Printers of Newspapers and other Periodicals .................................... 108 

5.  Qualified Blind Persons and Disabled Veterans .......................................................... 109 

6.  Manufacturers .................................................................................................................. 110 

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7.  Persons Making Casual and Isolated Sales ................................................................... 117 

8.  Taxpayers Responsible for Other Privilege Taxes ....................................................... 118 

9.  School Bus Operators and Drivers ................................................................................ 118 

Exempt Sales ................................................................................................................................. 119 

1.  Qualified Amusement Activities ..................................................................................... 119 

2.  Agricultural Sales ............................................................................................................. 119 

3.  Sales of Intangibles .......................................................................................................... 120 

4.  Wholesaler to Wholesaler ............................................................................................... 120 

5.  Sales or Rentals of Real Property .................................................................................. 121 

6.  Short-Term Rentals of Real Property ............................................................................ 121 

7.  Sales of Items Donated to Religious and Charitable Institutions .............................. 123 

8.  Freight & Delivery Charges ............................................................................................. 123 

Exclusions ...................................................................................................................................... 123 

Chapter 9: Deductions ......................................................................................................... 125 

Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 125 

1.  Cash Discounts ................................................................................................................. 125 

2.  Returned Items ................................................................................................................ 125 

3.  Trade-In Allowances ........................................................................................................ 126 

4.  Repossessed Goods ........................................................................................................ 126 

5.  Subcontractor Payments ................................................................................................ 128 

6.  Sales of Services Delivered to a Location Outside Tennessee ................................... 130 

7.  Sales of Tangible Personal Property in Interstate Commerce ................................... 131 

8.  School to Student Sales ................................................................................................... 132 

9.  Bad Debts .......................................................................................................................... 132 

10. Miscellaneous Federal and State Excise Taxes ............................................................ 133                   

11. Accommodation Sales ..................................................................................................... 134 

12. Patronage Dividends ....................................................................................................... 135 

13. Public Warehousing and Storage – Leases ................................................................... 135 

14. Motor Vehicle Rentals – Refundable Deposits ............................................................. 135                   

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15. Funeral Directors – Cash Advances ............................................................................... 135 

Chapter 10: Credits .............................................................................................................. 136 

Overview ........................................................................................................................................ 136 

Personal Property Taxes ............................................................................................................. 136 

1.  Personal Property Taxes Assessed During Audit ........................................................ 137 

2.  Taxes Paid on Property Leased or Rented ................................................................... 137 

3.  Providers of Video Programming Services ................................................................... 138 

4.  Special School District Taxes .......................................................................................... 138 

5.  Property Transferred to a Government Entity ............................................................. 138 

Privilege Taxes .............................................................................................................................. 139 

Chapter 11: Industry-Specific Guidance ............................................................................ 140 

Contractors ................................................................................................................................... 140 

1.  Overview ........................................................................................................................... 140 

2.  Reporting Sales and Progress Payments ...................................................................... 140 

3.  Deemed Location ............................................................................................................. 140 

4.  In-State Contractors ........................................................................................................ 141 

5.  Out-of-State Contractors ................................................................................................ 145 

6.  Subcontractors ................................................................................................................. 147 

7.  Speculative Builders ........................................................................................................ 148 

Agriculture ..................................................................................................................................... 149 

1.  Agricultural Commodity Brokers ................................................................................... 149 

2.  Agricultural Exemptions .................................................................................................. 149 

Mobile Telecommunications Providers ..................................................................................... 150 

1.  Registration and Reporting ............................................................................................. 150 

2.  Sales of Phones and Accessories from Outside the State .......................................... 151 

3.  Personal Property Tax Credit ......................................................................................... 151 

4.  Sales of Internet Access .................................................................................................. 152 

Performance Entities ................................................................................................................... 152 

1.  In-state Performance Entities ......................................................................................... 152 

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 2. Out-of-State Performance Entities ................................................................................ 153 

 3. Are Touring Artists Transient Vendors? ........................................................................ 153 

 Traveling Photographers ............................................................................................................. 153 

 Lottery Commissions ................................................................................................................... 154 

 Funeral Directors .......................................................................................................................... 154 

 1. Unit Price ........................................................................................................................... 154 

 2. Itemization ........................................................................................................................ 155 

 3. Cash Advances ................................................................................................................. 155 

 Cemeteries and Memorial Gardens ........................................................................................... 156 

 Municipal Airports ........................................................................................................................ 156 

 Leased Departments.................................................................................................................... 156 

 Commission Agents ..................................................................................................................... 157 

 Vending Machines ........................................................................................................................ 157 

 Antique Malls, Flea Markets, Craft Shows, Antique Shows, Gun Shows, and Auto Shows . 157 

 1. Fee in Lieu of Business Tax ............................................................................................. 158 

 2. Businesses Selling Antiques at Least 5 Days Per Week .............................................. 159 

 Transient Vendors ........................................................................................................................ 159 

 1. Temporary Premises ....................................................................................................... 159 

 2. Transient Vendor License Fee ........................................................................................ 160 

 3. Transient Vendors and Business Tax ............................................................................ 160 

 Food Trucks ................................................................................................................................... 161 
 
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Chapter 1: Introduction  

History 

The Tennessee General Assembly passed the “Business Tax Act of 1971” (the “Act”) as a 
replacement to a local property tax (commonly referred to as an “ad valorem tax”) imposed 
on business inventories. However, the Tennessee State Constitution required that inventory 
be “taxed according to its value,” and thus, Tennessee courts ruled that the Act could not be 
applied in lieu of the ad valorem tax but instead had to be applied in addition to the ad 
valorem tax.  
 
Because this was not the intent of the General Assembly, in 1971, the General Assembly 
held a Limited Constitutional Convention to amend Article II, Section 28 of the Tennessee 
State Constitution. This amendment stated the General Assembly “may levy a gross receipts 
tax on merchants and businesses in lieu of ad valorem taxes on the inventories of 
merchandise held by such merchants and businesses.” The amendment became effective in 
1973.  
 
As described by the Tennessee Court of Appeals in 1979, the General Assembly desired this 
shift from a local ad valorem tax to a gross receipts tax, in part, because of following tax 
disparity: 
 
       It is our opinion that one of the purposes of the Constitutional Amendment of 1973 
       was to prevent repressive taxation whereby unsold inventories of merchants, who 
       most likely had to borrow funds at substantial interest rates to obtain those 
       inventories, would be taxed on an ad valorem basis while such inventories 
       remained unsold in these merchants' hands... 1

The Act eliminated this disparity by allowing merchants to pay the business tax (a tax on 
gross sales) in lieu of the ad valorem tax. At the time of enactment, the business tax was 
comprised of two parts – a county-level tax and a city-level tax. In its original form, the 
appropriate local governmental body had to adopt the tax. Additionally, the local 
governmental body administered the tax and remitted a portion of the tax collected to the 
Department of Revenue (the “Department”).   
 
Beginning January 1, 2010, in accordance with Public Chapter 530, 2009 Acts, the 
Department assumed responsibility for administering and collecting the business tax. All 
businesses subject to the tax were to file tax returns with, and remit the tax to, the 

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Department. However, the general structure of the tax remained the same under the 2009 
amendment.   
 
Effective January 1, 2014, in accordance with Public Chapter 313, 2013 Acts the structure of 
the business tax changed. Significantly, Public Chapter 313 changed the county tax to a 
uniform state-level tax. While the Department still distributes the state-level tax to the 
counties where a taxpayer performs business, counties no longer adopt or impose the tax. 
Local municipalities, however, still must adopt a municipal-level tax. 
 
In 2016, the Revenue Modernization Act (the “RMA”) made a substantial change to the 
business tax statutes by codifying substantial nexus (see Chapter 2 of this Manual for more 
information). After passage of the RMA, the Department updated sixteen different business 
tax rules and regulations, including three rules repealed in their entirety.   

Tennessee Works Tax Reform Act of 2023 

On May 11, 2023, the Tennessee Works Tax Reform Act of 2023 (the “Act”), Public Chapter 
377 (2023), was signed into law. This legislation introduces substantive changes to 
Tennessee business tax law. The following section provides an overview of the business tax 
provisions contained in this legislation, including their effective dates. Additional information 
on these provisions can be found in the relevant sections of this manual, as indicated below. 

 1. Filing and Licensing Thresholds 

For tax years ending on or after December 31, 2023, the Act raises the filing threshold from 
$10,000 to $100,000 and changes the business licensing thresholds. The Act also changes 
how business tax is distributed to the local jurisdictions to hold said jurisdictions harmless 
from the decrease in revenue resulting from the increased filing threshold. These changes 
are reflected throughout the manual. 
 
     Audit Tip: The amount reported on Schedule A, Line 1: Total Gross Sales (i.e., 
     total sales) should be used to determine if the taxpayer meets the $100,000 
     threshold.  
                                                                                                
 2. Deemed Location for Contractors 

For tax years ending on or after December 31, 2023, the Act raises the “deemed location” 
threshold for contractors from $50,000 to $100,000. This change is reflected on several 
pages in the manual. 

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  3. Classification 5A Tax Rate 

The Act lowers the tax rate for Classification 5A taxpayers from 3/10 of 1% to 1/10 of 1% for 
tax years ending on or after December 31, 2023.This change is reflected on page 63 of the 
manual. 

  4. Manufacturing Exemption 

Effective May 11, 2023, the Act changes the application of the manufacturing exemption. 
Under the Act, to qualify for the manufacturing exemption the sales of manufactured 
products may be made from the manufacturing location or a storage or warehouse facility 
that is located within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing location. 
 
Additionally, the Act provides that both in-state and out-of-state manufacturers may qualify 
for the manufacturing exemption. This change is reflected on page 109. 

Brief Business Tax Overview 

The business tax statutes are found in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-701 through Tenn. Code Ann. 
§ 67-4-730  2and the business tax rules and regulations are found in TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R.
1320-4-5-.01 through TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-4-5-.61.   3

The business tax is a privilege tax on the privilege of doing business by making sales of 
tangible personal property and services within Tennessee and its local jurisdictions. While 
anyone doing business in the state is subject to the state-level business tax, unless 
specifically exempt, each municipality must adopt the tax to impose it within its city limits. 
 
The business tax applies to a taxpayer’s gross sales (see Chapter 4 for more information on 
what constitutes “gross sales”). Taxpayers multiply the gross sales derived from taxable sales 
per location by the appropriate state and local tax rates to calculate the amount of tax owed 
per location. There are several different business tax rates. The rates are determined based 
on the taxpayer’s “dominant business activity” (see Chapter 5 for more information on 
Classifications) and whether the taxpayer is a wholesaler or a retailer (see Chapter 5 for 
more information on retailer/wholesalers).  
 
In general, all sales of tangible personal property and services made in Tennessee will be 
subject to the business tax. However, there are several exceptions and exemptions 
discussed throughout this Manual. 

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Nature of the Business Tax 

As stated above, the Tennessee business tax is imposed on the privilege of doing business in 
the state of Tennessee. Unlike sales tax, which principally applies to retail sales of tangible 
personal property and certain specifically listed services, business tax applies to all taxable, 
non-exempt sales of services and sales of tangible personal property. Business tax applies at 
both the retail and wholesale sales. Businesses may invoice the business tax as a separate 
item and pass it on to its customer, though this amount is included in the sales tax and 
business tax base.  4

 1. State-Level and Municipal-Level Taxes 

Business tax is comprised of two separate but complementary taxes: a state-level tax and a 
municipal-level tax. Generally, every entity making sales of tangible personal property and/or 
services in Tennessee is subject to the state-level tax. 5Entities may be subject to the 

municipal-level tax if they have a business location in a municipality that has enacted the tax. 
The sections below provide a high-level overview of when a business is subject to business 
tax (see Chapter 2 of this Manual for a more detailed discussion of when a business is 
subject to business tax by having “nexus” with the state and Chapter 7 for a more detailed 
discussion on how the tax revenue is distributed). 

State-Level Tax 

Every person doing business in Tennessee with a physical location or place of business in the 
state is subject to the state-level business tax unless specifically exempt. For business tax 
purposes, “person” is defined as an “individual, firm, partnership, joint venture, association, 
corporation, estate, trust, business trust, receiver, syndicate, or other group or combination 
acting as a unit.” 6The term “person” does not include the United States of America, the State 

of Tennessee, or any political subdivision of the two; electric membership cooperatives or 
utility districts. 7

A person without a physical location or place of business in Tennessee will be subject to the 
state-level business tax if that person has substantial nexus (see pg. 19) in the state and 
performs any of the following activities: 

       Sells tangible personal property that is shipped or delivered to a location in this 
        state;  

       Sells a service that is delivered to a location in this state (see Chapter 4 for more 
        information on services); 

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    Leases tangible personal property that is located in this state; or 

    Makes sales as a natural gas marketer to customers located within this state through 
     the presence in this state of the seller's property, pipeline capacity, or through the 
     presence in this state of the seller's representatives acting on behalf of the seller to 
     solicit orders, provide customer service, or conduct other activities in furtherance of 
     such sales in this state. 8

Municipal-Level Tax 

Each municipality, by passing a resolution or ordinance, may elect to levy the municipal-level 
business tax on any business activity conducted within its borders. 9 Currently, 215 

municipalities impose the business tax. Unlike with the state-level business tax, a person 
must have a physical location, place of business, or other location 10in a municipality to be 

subject to the municipal-level business tax. If a taxpayer’s business is located in a 
municipality that has enacted business tax, the taxpayer is required to pay both the state-
level and municipal-level business tax.  
 
Please see Chapter 11 for special rules that apply to cable, telecom, and other specific 
industries. The taxpayer should contact the municipality or the county assessor if there is 
any question that the business may not be inside city limits. 
 
A list of cities imposing business tax is available HERE on the Department’s website.  
 
If a taxpayer’s business location is not included on the list, the taxpayer may still be subject 
to municipal-level business tax. Many areas in Tennessee are governed by and/or part of 
adjoining incorporated cities. For example, Antioch, Tennessee is not a city on the list, 
however it is part of Metropolitan Nashville, and the Nashville city business tax is due.  
 
Additionally, a county may have a multi-tiered, municipal-level business tax system. For 
example, Davidson County has a general services district and an urban services district. The 
city of Nashville is part of the Davidson County urban services district. Taxpayers can 
determine if their business is part of an urban services district if they are located in the 
urban services district for property tax purposes. 

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Application 

 1. Doing Business 

Business tax is a privilege tax levied upon the privilege of doing business in the state of 
Tennessee. Business is defined as “any activity engaged in by any person, or caused to be 
engaged in by the person, with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage, either direct or 
indirect.”   11

Business does not include:  

   Occasional and isolated sales (see Chapter 4) by someone not normally engaged in 
    the business of selling the type of property being sold; 12or  

   Utilization of a property management company to manage vacation lodging for 
    overnight property rentals by an individual property owner. However, business tax 
    still applies to the rental of the property. The property management company would 
    be responsible for filing. See the section titled Sales or Rentals of Real Property in 
    Chapter 8 of this manual for more information .

However, business does include any other activity of the individual property owner that is 
subject to the business tax. 

 2. Imposition 

Business tax is imposed on a business’s gross sales of tangible personal property and 
services. The vocations, occupations, businesses, or business activities listed in Tenn. Code 
Ann. §§ 67-4-708(1)-(5) are taxable privileges subject to Tennessee’s state-level business tax. 
Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-708(1)-(4) detail the taxable privileges subject to Tennessee’s 
municipal-level business tax. 
 
For information on vocations, occupations, businesses, or activities subject to business tax, 
please see Chapter 5 of this Manual. For more information on sales and services that are 
excluded from business tax and exempted sales, services, or entities, please see Chapter 8 
of this Manual. 

 3. Business Tax Classifications 

An entity’s business tax classification determines the rate of tax that will apply. Businesses 
choose their classification for each of their locations based on the “dominant business 

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activity” of the location. “Dominant business activity” is the activity that produces the most 
taxable income for the business location. 13

There are five major business tax classifications as well as a separate category for antique 
malls, flea markets, transient vendors, and the like. Some classifications have subcategories 
that are discussed in more detail in Chapter 5. Business tax classifications are found in Tenn. 
Code Ann. § 67-4-708. Only one classification is allowed per business location. 
 
The business tax classifications each contain several business activities that businesses must 
choose to categorize as their dominant business activity. As the classifications increase in 
number from Classification 1 up to Classification 5, the types of business activities change in 
character from activities that meet basic needs such as the provision of food for home 
preparation in Classification 1 to the relatively small subset of industrial loan and thrift 
companies in Classification 5.  
 
Businesses engaged in the business activity of selling tangible personal property that is not 
listed in any other section of Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708 file under Classification 2. 14

Businesses engaged in the sale of services not otherwise specified file under Classification 
3. 15

A detailed analysis of the business tax classifications is available in Chapter 5 of this Manual.  

  4. Retailer vs. Wholesaler  

Businesses must also determine if they are primarily engaged in the business of making 
retail sales or wholesale sales. The determination of whether a business is a retailer or 
wholesaler is made on a location-by-location basis. This is important because the business 
tax rate differs for retailers and wholesalers at a given location. Generally, a business is a 
retailer if at least 50% of taxable gross sales are retail sales and a wholesaler if more than 
50% of taxable gross sales are wholesale sales. 16For more information on retailers and 

wholesalers, please see Chapter 5 of this Manual.  

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Chapter 2: Who is Subject to Tennessee Business Tax?  

Historical Context 

As covered in Chapter 1, the Tennessee business tax has undergone numerous statutory 
changes to adapt to modern business practices and e-commerce. One of the most important 
changes is to the application of “nexus,” which describes the connection that must be 
present before a taxing jurisdiction has the right to impose a tax on a business. An entity 
must have some contact or connection with a state before the state may constitutionally levy 
a tax. The question becomes, at what point is that connection sufficient to subject a person 
to taxation in the state?   

 1. Pre-2014 Tax Periods  

For periods beginning on or before January 1, 2014, Tennessee law provided that making 
sales by engaging in any vocation, occupation, business, or business activity listed in the 
business tax statutes is a privilege on which each county or incorporated municipality, or 
both, may levy a privilege tax.17  
 
Furthermore, TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.28(1) (2000) (“Rule 28”) stated that the 
business tax applies to each place, location, or outlet in the state from which business is 
carried on.  
 
Therefore, the Tennessee business tax applied to a person who made sales or performed 
services at a place of business or other location in Tennessee. 
 
During this period, the Department considered a taxpayer that did not have a physical place 
of business in Tennessee, but that operated through a warehouse or other location in 
Tennessee, whether or not the warehouse or other location is owned by the taxpayer, to 
have a business location where its sales were sourced. This was based on TENN  . COMP  . R.   &
REGS. 1320-04-05-.14 (“Rule 14”). Rule 14 states that: 
 
      “[S]ales of tangible personal property and services by a licensed wholesaler or 
       retailer from a central warehouse or other distribution point other than his principal 
       place of business shall be subject to the appropriate wholesale or retail tax, and 
       persons making such sales shall be liable for the business tax for that location.”  
 
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Accordingly, the Department imposed business tax on sales of tangible personal property 
made from a warehouse or other location in Tennessee at which a taxpayer maintained the 
tangible personal property sold.  
 
The Department also utilized the “sufficient local incidence” test. The United States Supreme 
Court coined the term “sufficient local incident” to illustrate when a business’s in-state 
activity rose to the level to contribute to the establishment and maintenance of an in-state 
market. This level of activity was sufficient to satisfy U.S. Constitutional requirements.   18

In Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. King, 678 S.W.2d 19 (Tenn. 1984), the Tennessee Supreme 
Court established as the relevant question of whether a taxpayer is subject to the business 
tax as whether there is a “sufficient local incident” upon which to base the tax. It concluded 
that a taxpayer who had marketing offices within the state and technical engineers 
performing work within the state had “sufficient local incident” to Tennessee such that its 
receipts from its sales to Tennessee customers were subject to business tax.  
 
In Boeing Equipment Holding Company v. Tennessee State Board of Equalization, 1987 WL 15202 
(Tenn. Ct. App., August 7, 1987), the Tennessee Court of Appeals found an out-of-state 
taxpayer subject to business tax even though it had no offices or employees in Tennessee. 
To take advantage of an ad valorem tax exemption for inventories located in the state, the 
taxpayer argued it was subject to business tax based on the presence of tangible personal 
property leased to persons in Tennessee. The court found the taxpayer had a “sufficient 
local incident” based on the taxpayer owning property in Tennessee and receiving income 
from leases on that property. It concluded that the taxpayer “engaged in the ‘local business 
of renting [property] located in this state.’”  19

The Westinghouse andBoeing casesboth suggested that a taxpayer need not have an office or 
physical business location in Tennessee to be subject to business tax.  

   2. Periods Beginning on or after January 1, 2014 

The Tennessee General Assembly clarified the application of the business tax as applied to 
out-of-state businesses with the “Uniformity and Small Business Relief Act of 2013” (the 
“Act”).  
 
Effective for periods beginning on or after January 1, 2014, the law was amended to state the 
following: 
 
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       [T]he making of sales by engaging in any vocation, occupation, business, or business 
       activity listed described, or referred to in § 67-4-708(1)-(5)” (the classifications section 
       of the business tax statute) is subject to the state-level business tax.  20

      [T]he making of sales by engaging in any vocation, occupation, business, or business 
       activity listed, described, or referred to in § 67-4-708(1)-(4)” (the classifications section 
       of the business tax statute) is subject to the municipal-level business tax. 21

The Act also added that: 
 
      [A]ny person engaged in any vocation, occupation, business, or business activity 
       listed, described, or referred to in § 67-4-708(1)-(5) without establishing a physical 
       location, outlet, or other place of business in the state” is subject to the state-level 
       business tax butexempt from the municipal-level business tax.  22

      For purposes of the state-level business tax, to be engaged in business in this state 
       includes performing a service that is received by a customer in this state.  23

      Thus, for periods beginning after January 1, 2014, a taxpayer need not have a 
       location in Tennessee to be subject to the state-level business tax but must have a 
       physical location to be subject to the municipal-level business tax.  

Present Law              

A business entity located in the state will be subject to the state-level business tax if its gross 
receipts sourced to all of its locations within a county are $100,000 or more, and it is not 
specifically exempt from business tax. 2425 An entity is also subject to the municipal-level 
business tax if it is in a municipality that has enacted the tax and its gross receipts sourced 
to its locations within the municipality are $100,000 or more. 26(See Chapter 7 for more 

information on sourcing). Please note, there are provisions that apply to 
telecommunications and cable providers, vending machine operators, and overnight lodging 
rentals. These provisions are discussed later in this Manual. 
 
        Audit Tip: The amount reported on Schedule A, Line 1: Total Gross Sales (i.e., 
        total sales) should be used to determine if the taxpayer meets the $100,000 
        threshold.  
                                                                                                     
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A business entity that is located outside of the state will be subject to the state-level business 
tax if it has: 
 
    Substantial nexus with the state;  
      
    Is engaged in this state in one of the activities listed under Tenn. Code Ann.§ 67-4-
     717(a); and  
 
    Its gross receipts within a county are $100,000 or more.  
 
As stated in Chapter 1, the business tax is comprised of a state-level tax and a municipal-
level tax. Out-of-state business entities are exempt from the municipal-level business tax.  
 
      While the business tax is comprised of a municipal-level and state-level tax, 
      the county in which a business is located is relevant for sourcing and nexus 
      purposes.  
                                                                                                    
  1. Substantial Nexus  

A business must have substantial nexus with this state to be subject to the business tax. The 
Revenue Modernization Act (“the RMA”) codified the substantial nexus standard in 2015. It 
became effective for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2016. Substantial nexus is: 
 
    Any direct or indirect connection of the taxpayer to this state such that the taxpayer 
     can be required under the Constitution of the United States to remit the tax imposed 
     under this part.” 27Such connections include, but are not limited to, the following: 

       The business is organized or commercially domiciled in Tennessee; 
         
       The business owns or uses its capital in Tennessee; 
 
       The business has systematic and continuous business activity in Tennessee that 
        has produced gross receipts attributable to customers in Tennessee;  
 
       The business has a “bright-line presence” in Tennessee, which applies when any 
        of the following metrics are met:  
      
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   o         Total Tennessee business receipts during the tax period exceed the 
             lesser of $500,000 or 25% of the business’s total receipts everywhere 
             during the tax period; 
              
   o         The business’s average value of real and tangible personal property 
             owned or rented and used in Tennessee during the tax period exceeds 
             the lesser of $50,000 or 25% of the average value of all the business’s 
             total real and tangible personal property; or 
 
   o         The total amount of compensation paid by the business in Tennessee 
             during the tax period exceeds $50,000 or 25% of the business’s total 
             compensation pay by the business. 28

   Businesses formed and operating in Tennessee will always have nexus in this 
   state.  The question of nexus applies to out-of-state businesses with a limited 
   connection to the state.  
                                                                                               
Foreign entities must have effectively connected income with a United States trade or 
business, as determined by the Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”), to have substantial nexus in 
this state. If a business treated as a foreign corporation under the IRC has no effectively 
connected income, it also does not have substantial nexus in Tennessee.   
 
Effective for tax periods beginning January 1, 2016, the RMA’s substantial nexus standard 
expands the number of businesses that might have nexus in Tennessee. Businesses that 
would have been subject to the business tax before the RMA (and the substantial nexus 
definition) will continue to be subject to the tax even if they do not meet any of the bright-
line tests. However, under the substantial nexus definition, some out-of-state businesses 
that previously were not subject to business tax may now be subject to the tax. In other 
words, the nexus provisions in existence pre-RMA are still in effect, RMA simply expanded 
upon those provisions.   
 
   It is  not required  that a taxpayer  have bright-line presence to  have 
   substantial nexus with Tennessee. A taxpayer may have substantial nexus 
   with Tennessee  with lesser amounts of property, payroll, and receipts in 
   Tennessee if it has any connection with the state that requires it to remit tax 
   under the  United States Constitution, such as performing services in the 
   State.    
                                                                                               
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                                     29
Sales Facilitated Through a Marketplace  

The sales and use tax marketplace facilitator legislation established in Public Chapter 759 
(2020) does not affect the nexus requirements for business tax. 
 
Those taxpayers considered marketplace sellers for sales and use tax purposes should 
include receipts from sales facilitated through a marketplace when determining whether 
they have substantial nexus for business tax purposes. A marketplace facilitator is 
considered the retailer of sales facilitated through its marketplace solely for sales and use 
tax purposes. 

Marketplace facilitators should include only the commissions or third-party fees and sales of 
their own goods or services in their gross receipts for business tax purposes. 

 2. Activities Engaged in this State 

In addition to having substantial nexus, a business must also be engaged in one of the 
activities in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a) before being subject to the business tax. This 
section states that a business “engaged in this state” in any “vocation, occupation, business, 
or business activity set forth as taxable under § 67-4-708(1)-(5), the classifications section of 
the business tax statute, with or without establishing a physical location, outlet, or other 
place of business in the state, shall be subject to the tax.” The phrase "engaged in this state" 
shall include, but not be limited to, any of the following: 
 
   The sale of tangible personal property that is shipped or delivered to a location in 
    this state; 
     
   The sale of a service that is delivered to a location in this state; or 
     
   The leasing of tangible personal property that is located in this state.  30

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3. Nexus in Tennessee Other Tennessee Taxes 

As mentioned above, nexus describes a connection that must be present before a taxing 
jurisdiction has the right to impose a tax on an entity’s activity. Determining whether a 
taxpayer has nexus in Tennessee for business tax is a different process than the 
determination of whether a taxpayer has nexus for Tennessee sales and use tax and 
franchise and excise tax. However, all businesses located in this state have nexus for sales 
and use tax, franchise and excise tax, and business tax. 

Sales and Use Tax 

Out-of-state dealers engaged in the following activities are considered to have nexus in this 
state: 

      Use of employees, agents, or independent contractors to solicit sales in Tennessee; 
        
      Use of third parties in Tennessee to conduct substantial business activities in 
       Tennessee; 
        
      Maintaining inventory in Tennessee and using in-state independent contractors to 
       fulfill Tennessee retail sales of that inventory; 
        
      In-state promotional activity by company personnel, including participation in trade 
       shows; 
        
      Physical Tennessee business presence of a subsidiary that is acting as an agent of 
       the out-of-state dealer or that is conducting activities in Tennessee on behalf of such 
       a dealer (e.g., a retail store that takes returns of purchases made online from 
       parent); 
        
      Use of company-owned trucks or use of contract-carriers acting as an agent for the 
       seller; 
        
      Maintaining a store, office, warehouse, showroom, or other place of business in 
       Tennessee; 
        
      Leasing or renting tangible personal property in Tennessee; 
        
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   Repairing, installing, or assembling tangible personal property in Tennessee or the 
    use of an agent or independent contractor to perform those services in Tennessee; 
     
   Providing telecommunication services to subscribers located in Tennessee; 
     
   Providing any taxable service in Tennessee; and 
     
   Use of an in-state party to route customers to the out-of-state dealer (commonly 
    known as “click-through nexus”). 
     
Pursuant to the Wayfair decision, out-of-state dealers with no physical presence in 
Tennessee that make sales that exceed $100,000 to customers in this state during the 
previous tax year also have substantial nexus in Tennessee for sales and use tax purposes. 
 
For more information on sales and use tax nexus requirements, see the Department’s Sales 
and Use Tax Manual. 

Franchise and Excise Tax 

A taxpayer without a physical presence in the state may have substantial nexus in the state 
for franchise and excise tax purposes if it meets the bright-line presence definition of 
substantial nexus. A taxpayer meets the bright-line presence standard for substantial nexus 
for franchise and excise tax if a taxpayer has: 
 
   At least $50,000 of property or payroll in the state; 
     
   At least $500,000 of receipts in the state; or  
     
   At least 25% of its total property, payroll, or receipts in Tennessee. 
 
A taxpayer that does not meet the bright-line presence standards may also have substantial 
nexus in the state if its contact with the state is sufficient. For example: 
  
   A business engaged in systematic and continuous business activity in the state that 
    has produced receipts attributable to Tennessee customers will have substantial 
    nexus with the state. 
 
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For more information on nexus for franchise and excise tax, see the Department’s Franchise 
and Excise Tax Manual. 

    4. Establishing a Location, Outlet, or Other Place of Business 

All persons that are subject to the state-level business tax and have a physical location, 
outlet, or other place of business within a municipality in this state shall also be subject to 
the municipal-level business tax. Persons that do not have a physical location, outlet, or 
other place of business within a municipality in this state shall not be subject to the 
municipal-level business tax.  31

Persons engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property or services from a 
central warehouse or distribution point other than their principal place of business are liable 
for business tax at that location. 32For example: 

      A furniture store is principally located in Nashville, Tennessee. The Nashville location 
       is advertised on its website, the taxpayer lists this address on its registration 
       documents, and this is where the showroom is located. The business also has a 
       warehouse located in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. As new furniture models are 
       introduced, the taxpayer occasionally holds “warehouse sales” whereby the 
       warehouse is opened to the public to display and sell the overstock merchandise. 
       The taxpayer, therefore, should register and pay business tax for its Murfreesboro 
       location as well.  
        
In the case of an audit, auditors will consider several factors when determining whether a 
taxpayer has established a location, outlet, or other place of business in Tennessee 
including: 
 
      The amount of time a person has engaged in business in Tennessee; 
        
      The regularity in which a person engages in business in Tennessee; 
 
      Whether the business holds itself out as having a location in Tennessee; 
 
      Taxable receipts generated within a jurisdiction; 
 
      Whether or not employees of a business are located in this state;  
 
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  Whether or not the business has Tennessee payroll receipts in its franchise and 
   excise tax apportionment factor; 
 
  Whether the business intends to operate at a location in Tennessee on a more than 
   temporary basis; and  
 
  Whether or not a taxpayer leases or owns property in Tennessee. 
 
This is not an exhaustive list of factors. Each business is unique; thus, an auditor may use 
other facts or circumstances to determine whether a seller of tangible personal property or 
a service provider has established a location. For example: 
 
  A California information technology (“IT”) consultancy firm (“CA IT Company”) enters a 
   2-year contract with a Memphis, Tennessee business. The contract is valued at 
   $5,000,000 dollars and the CA IT Company will have a team of 20 consultants 
   working full-time from the Memphis business’s headquarters. The consultants will 
   have designated parking spaces, designated office spaces, security access to the 
   headquarters building, and access to the internet network. The CA IT Company has 
   information on its website that it’s performing work in numerous states and cities, 
   including Memphis, Tennessee. Under these circumstances, the California IT 
   Company has likely established a business location in Memphis, Tennessee and 
   should register and pay both state-level and municipal-level Tennessee business tax. 

Remote Employee Home Office  

Generally, an employee’s home office does not constitute a business location for purposes 
of determining whether a business is subject to municipal-level business tax in a given 
jurisdiction. However, compensation paid to such employee is included when determining 
whether an out-of-state business has substantial nexus in Tennessee. 
 
As discussed in section 1 of this chapter, out-of-state businesses must have substantial 
nexus in Tennessee to be subject to the state-level business tax. One way to have substantial 
nexus is if the business has a “bright-line presence” in Tennessee, which applies when any of 
the following metrics are met:  
    
    Total Tennessee business receipts during the tax period exceed the lesser of 
     $500,000 or 25% of the business’s total receipts everywhere during the tax 
     period; 

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  The business’s average value of real and tangible personal property owned or 
   rented and used in Tennessee during the tax period exceeds the lesser of 
   $50,000 or 25% of the average value of all the business’s total real and tangible 
   personal property; or 
 
  The total amount of compensation paid by the business in Tennessee during the 
   tax period exceeds $50,000 or 25% of the business’s total compensation pay by 
   the business. 33

Therefore, if an out-of-state business pays an in-state employee more than $50,000 in 
compensation, the out-of-state business will have substantial nexus in Tennessee and is 
subject to the state-level business tax. However, if the business’s only physical precense in 
the state is an employee’s home office, such office does not constitute a physical location for 
business tax purposes, which means the business is not subject to municipal-level business 
tax in the jurisdiction in which the employee’s home office is located. In this circumstance, 
the business should register with the Department as an out-of-state business and pay state-
level business tax on its Tennessee gross receipts.  
 
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Chapter 3: Registration and Licensing 

Registration           

Every person subject to state-level and/or municipal-level business tax must register with the 
Department of Revenue (the “Department”) before engaging in business in the state.  34

The Department registers businesses under one consolidated business tax account. For 
businesses with multiple locations, the Department will register each business location, both 
in state and out-of-state (if applicable) by assigning separate profile identifications under the 
consolidated account to reflect business tax activity at each location. Providing information 
for each location is necessary to account for variations in dominant business activity and to 
ensure the proper distribution of funds to cities and counties. For example, a business set 
up as an LLC may have multiple subsidiaries that each have different dominant business 
activities. Taxpayers may review this account information by logging into their Tennessee 
Taxpayer Access Point (“TNTAP”) account.  35

Taxpayers may have both in state and out-of-state locations with taxable receipts. Please see 
Chapter 7 for more information on sourcing sales receipts.  

 1. In-State Businesses 

Businesses with a Tennessee location may register for business tax directly with the 
Department or through the county clerk in the county where the business is located. 
Businesses located in a city that has enacted the municipal-level business tax may register 
directly with the Department or through the appropriate city official.  36

When a taxpayer registers directly with the Department, the taxpayer does not have to 
communicate with the county clerk to alert the county clerk of the registration. The county 
clerk receives the data transmitted by the taxpayer when the taxpayer registers with the 
Department. The same is true when a taxpayer registers through TNTAP, or with the county 
clerk. Upon registration, both the county clerk and the Department receive the taxpayer’s 
registration information.  
 
Industrial loan and thrift companies located in Tennessee must register directly with the 
Department. 37Industrial loan and thrift companies are not required to obtain a business 
license or register with a city or county.   38

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Businesses may register with the Department through TNTAP. 

Multiple In-State Locations  

Businesses with multiple locations must register and remit tax for each location. 39As stated 

above, the taxpayer will have one consolidated account with a specific identifier for each 
individual location. If the business is not located in Tennessee, it must register directly with 
the Department. Taxpayers who extend operations into other counties or cities without 
establishing an office, headquarters, or other place of business generally do not have to 
register in such counties. 40Please see Chapter 2 for more information on activities or actions 

the Department considers when determining if a business has established a location. 

   2. Out-of-State Businesses  

Businesses that do not have a Tennessee location but are still subject to the business tax 
must register directly with the Department through TNTAP.  

Business License  

In addition to registering, generally every in-state business subject to state-level or 
municipal-level business tax must also obtain a business license before engaging in business 
in this state. 41Businesses meeting specific gross sales thresholds may forego obtaining a 

standard business license in favor of a minimal activity license.  
 
Businesses must display each respective business license at each of their locations. 42The 

licenses vary based upon gross sales thresholds per jurisdiction, which are as follows: 
 
       Standard business license: $100,000 or more in gross sales; 
         
       Minimal activity license: More than  $3,000 but less than $100,000 in gross sales; and  
 
       Businesses with  $3,000 or less in gross sales do not have to obtain a business 
        license. Either a minimal activity license or a standard license may be obtained.   
 
Businesses choosing to have a standard business license must file a business tax return with 
the Department and remit tax for that location. The minimum tax is $22 for each location - 
$44 if located in a city as both city and state tax are due. 
 
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           The Department does not issue business licenses. These licenses are issued 
           by the appropriate county clerk or city official. Businesses must contact their 
           local county clerks and city officials if there are issues in obtaining a business 
           license. 
                                                                                                
   1. Standard Business License  

Taxpayers with $100,000 or more in Tennessee gross sales must apply for a standard 
business license. Each standard business license is $15. Each license is valid for 1 year and 
expires 30 days after the due date of the taxpayer’s return. When the taxpayer files the 
return and pays the business tax due, the county clerk and/or appropriate city official will 
automatically renew the license at no additional cost.   

How to Obtain a Standard Business License  

In-State Businesses  
 
Businesses obtain a standard business license from the county clerk of the county in which 
the business is located. Businesses located in a municipality that has enacted the municipal-
level business tax must also obtain a standard business license from the appropriate city 
official.  
 
Multiple In-State Locations 
 
A business with multiple locations is required to get a standard business license by 
registering with the county and/or city for each location. Businesses with multiple locations 
that fall within the minimum activity license range must also obtain such a license for each 
location. 43Each minimum activity license is subject to the $15 fee.  

Out-of-State Businesses  
 
Although out-of-state businesses must register with the Department and pay the state-level 
business tax, business licenses are generally not required nor issued by the state. If a 
business license is not required, the out-of-state business is not required to pay a $15 fee. 
 
Out-of-state contractors with more than $100,000 in gross sales annually in a city or county 
must obtain a business license in that city or county. Please see the section on the following 
page titled Contractors.   
  
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    2. Minimal Activity License  

The General Assembly created the minimal activity license to ease the tax compliance 
burden on small businesses. A business is required to apply for a minimal activity license 
from the appropriate county and/or municipality for each location at which its gross sales 
are more than $3,000 but less than $100,000. 44Each time a business applies for a minimal 

activity license, it must pay a required $15 fee to each county and, if applicable, city. 
 
        Businesses with gross sales of $3,000 or less may obtain a minimal activity 
        license but are not required to do so. 
  
    3. Transferring Licenses  

Generally, businesses may not transfer their business license to a different taxpayer or to a 
different location owned by the same taxpayer. However, a taxpayer may transfer its 
business license to a different location within the same municipality one time per tax year 
without obtaining a new business license. The taxpayer must notify the appropriate county 
clerk and city official of this change at least 5 days prior to the last day of business at the 
prior location.   45

    4. Contractors 

Special registration and licensing rules apply to contractors. For business tax purposes, a 
contractor has a “deemed location” in a county and/or municipality based not only on 
domicile or physical location, but also where the contractor has taxable sales of more than 
$100,000 for work performed in the jurisdiction. 46

The contractor will need to correctly determine the jurisdiction of each job to correctly file as 
city and county, and districts for metropolitan governments. When the charges billed exceed 
$100,000 for work performed in a deemed location, during the tax period, the contractor is 
required to register for business tax and pay the one-time standard business license fee of 
$15 for that location to the county and municipality, if within a city’s limits. Taxable sales of 
more than $100,000 received during the tax period will be reported on the return for the 
deemed location. 
 
Taxable sales of $100,000 or less for compensation from contracts in a county and/or 
municipality other than the contractor’s place of domicile or location must be reported on 
the return for the county and/or municipality of domicile or location. 

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Therefore, all taxable receipts for work done in any county will be subject to the state tax. 
However, where those sales are sourced, and which county is apportioned the tax still 
depends on whether work is done in a deemed location.  
 
For example: 
 
    A Tennessee contractor who normally works in Wilson County is hired to repave I-24 
     between downtown Nashville and Clarksville and completes the work in one 
     calendar year. The contractor should register for business tax where the contractor 
     is receiving gross income prior to beginning work. In this case, the contractor should 
     register for business tax, obtain business licenses, and pay license fees in 
     Metropolitan Nashville, Davidson County, Cheatham County, the City of Pleasant 
     View, Robertson County, the City of Coopertown, Montgomery County, and the City 
     of Clarksville. The revenue should be allocated to these jurisdictions in a manner that 
     reflects the amount of work completed in each jurisdiction, e.g., revenue per number 
     of paved miles. 

Closing a Business  

Any person liable for any tax, penalty, or interest levied under the business tax who:  
 
    Sells the person’s business or stock of goods;  
      
    Changes the legal structure of the business (i.e., from sole proprietor to corporation, 
     corporation to limited liability company, etc.); or  
      
    Closes the business  
 
must file a final return and payment within15 days of selling or closing the business.   47

For example: 
 
    If a contractor finishes a job in a city with no prospect of another job in the same city 
     and would like to close the business tax account in that jurisdiction, the contractor 
     should notify the Department and file a final return. 
 
          A taxpayer who ceases business activity but does not properly terminate 
          will still be liable for the applicable minimal business tax.  
  
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Businesses holding a minimal activity license should contact the county clerk and city 
recorder’s office to advise them the business is no longer operational.  
 
Taxpayers closing their account should also contact the Department. Most account closures 
can be handled by calling the Department at (800) 342-1003 (Nashville-area and out-of-state: 
(615) 253-0600).  

 1. Successor Liability 

The person’s successor, successors, or assignees, if any, must withhold enough of the 
purchase money to cover the taxes, interest, and penalties due and unpaid until the former 
owner can produce a receipt from the Commissioner of Revenue showing that the taxes 
have been paid, or a certificate stating that no taxes, interest, or penalties are due. 48

If the purchaser of a business or stock of goods fails to withhold the purchase money as 
indicated, the purchaser will be personally liable for the payment of the taxes, interest, and 
penalties accruing and unpaid on account of the operation of the business by any former 
owner or operator. 49

The amount of the purchaser’s liability for payment of such taxes, interest, and penalties 
cannot exceed the amount of purchase money paid by the purchaser to the seller in good 
faith and for full and adequate consideration in money or money’s worth. 50

“Purchase money” includes cash paid, purchase money notes given by the purchaser to the 
seller, the cancellation of the seller’s indebtedness to the purchaser, the fair market value of 
property or other consideration given by the purchaser to the seller. It does not include 
indebtedness of the seller either taken or assumed by the purchaser when a tax lien has not 
been filed. 51

The purchaser shall have no liability for taxes, penalties, and interest if the Department of 
Revenue releases the former owner, owners, or assigns from the original liability for such 
taxes, interest, or penalty through payment of the amount due, and settlement with the 
Department. 52

For example: 
 
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- 34 -
  Assume that a purchaser receives, in good faith and without knowledge of any false 
   statement therein, an affidavit from the seller at the time of the purchase. The 
   affidavit states under oath the amount of such taxes, interest, and penalty due and 
   unpaid by the seller to the Department through the date of purchase, or a statement 
   from the seller that there are no due and unpaid taxes, interest, and penalty. The 
   purchaser in good faith withholds and sets aside from the purchase money to be 
   paid to the seller in an amount sufficient to pay the amount of taxes, penalty, and 
   interest shown to be unpaid by the seller’s affidavit. 
 
  If that purchaser tenders a copy of the seller’s affidavit by registered or certified mail 
   to the Department’s Collection Services Division, the purchaser will be released from 
   any liability, in excess of that which is shown on the affidavit, for taxes, penalty, and 
   interest unpaid by the previous owner, owners, or assigns.  
    
  That will not be the case, however, if the Commissioner notifies the purchaser of the 
   correct tax liability at the correct return address provided by the purchaser within 15 
   days of receipt of the affidavit. 
     
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Chapter 4: Determining Gross Sales 

Gross Sales 

The business tax is based on a business’s gross taxable sales (also referred to as “gross 
receipts”) per location. A business’s gross sales are comprised of all the business location’s 
sales without any deduction whatsoever of any kind or character, unless specifically 
provided by Tennessee law. 53Gross sales are multiplied by the appropriate classification 

rate to calculate the amount of tax owed per location. 

Generally, all sales of tangible personal property and services made in Tennessee will be 
subject to business tax. However, there are several specified exemptions and deductions. 
For more information on exemptions, see Chapter 8 of this Manual. For information on 
deductions, please see Chapter 9 of this Manual. 

Taxable Sales  

Sales include the furnishing of any things or services taxable under the Business Tax Act. 54

To qualify as a sale for business tax purposes, there must be a transfer of title and/or 
possession in exchange for consideration.  55

Qualifying transfers may include: 
 
     Exchanges;  
       
     Barters; 
 
     Leases or rentals; 
 
     Conditional transfers; 
 
     Fabrication where raw materials are furnished by the purchaser; 
 
     Furnishing, repairing, or servicing tangible personal property consumed on the 
      premises of the person furnishing, repairing, or servicing the tangible personal 
      property; and 
 
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   Transfers of possession of tangible personal property where the seller retains title as 
    security for payment of the price.  
     
Taxable sales do not include: 
 
   Sales specifically exempt or excluded under the Business Tax Act (see Chapter 8 for 
    more information on specific exemptions and exclusions). 
     
   Casual and isolated sales by persons who are not engaged in the business of selling 
    tangible personal property or furnishing any services subject to business tax. 56

   Sales of tangible personal property or services not normally sold by a wholesaler to a 
    retailer if property has been used by the wholesaler prior to sale. 57

   Transfers of tangible personal property from one wholesaler to another wholesaler 
    or from one retailer to another retailer where the amount paid by the transferee to 
    the transferor does not exceed the transferor's cost including freight in and storage 
    costs, and transportation costs incurred in the transfer from the transferor to the 
    transferee.  58

 1. Casual and Isolated Sales 

As mentioned above, casual and isolated sales are not subject to business tax. For business 
tax purposes, a sale is considered casual and isolated when the sale is made by persons who 
are not engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property or furnishing services 
subject to business tax.  
 
A sale is not considered a casual and isolated sale if the sale is of tangible personal property 
or taxable services and: 
 
   Purchased for resale by persons who hold themselves out as engaged in business 
    although sales may be few and infrequent; 
     
   Sold for use or consumption by a manufacturer, processor, wholesaler, or jobber 
    engaged in the business of distributing personal property or furnishing services 
    subject to business tax;  
 
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      Sold by persons regularly engaging in sales of tangible personal property at antique 
       malls, antique shows, flea markets, craft shows, gun shows, and auto shows; or  
 
      Sold regularly by gun shows, antique shows, craft shows, auto shows, flea markets, 
       or antique malls themselves. 59

    In Hermitage Memorial Gardens Mausoleum and Memorial Chapel, Inc. v. Dunn, 541 S.W.2d 
    147 (1976), the Tennessee Supreme Court analyzed the business tax liability of a 
    business that operated memorial gardens and cemeteries and derived more than half of 
    its revenue from the sale of burial lots, which is not subject to business tax. The Court 
    held that business tax statute does not limit the incidence of tax to those entities whose 
    dominant business activity is one of the activities enumerated in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
    708. 60Instead, all entities who make sales by engaging in any of the activities 

    enumerated in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708 are subject to tax regardless of whether their 
    primary business activities are taxable.61 It concluded that the mausoleum’s other sales 
    of tangible personal property and services were taxable and that the mausoleum owed 
    business tax on those sales. 62 

    2. Sales of Services 

Generally, each person making sales of services is subject to business tax as a Classification 
3 taxpayer (see Chapter 5 for an in-depth discussion of Classifications). 63Services include 

every activity, function, or work engaged in by a person for profit or monetary gain. 64 Please 
note, although sales of services are generally subject to business tax, there are 16 categories 
of services that are exempt from business tax that are discussed further in Chapters 5 and 8 
of this Manual.  

Sales of Services and Tangible Property 

Services do not include sales of tangible personal property. 65A person exempt from paying 

the tax on sales from services rendered is still liable for tax on the sales of tangible personal 
property. 66Persons engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property are liable 
for business tax even if they refer to their business transactions as services. 67For example: 

      In Auto Glass Co. of Memphis v. Gerregano, the Tennessee Court of Appeals 
       determined a company in the business of selling and installing automotive glass and 
       making repairs to damaged automotive glass should file under Classification 1(B) as 
       a person engaged in making sales of glass, for business tax purposes. 68Although the 

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       majority of the company’s sales transactions included glass (tangible personal 
       property) and installation of glass (a service), the Appellate Court determined 
       Classification 1(B) was the correct classification, rather than Classification 3, because 
       the sale of glass, not the installation, was the major source of the company’s taxable 
       gross sales.  69

Services for Affiliated Entities 

Services provided to an affiliated business entity at cost with no markup are not included 
in the definition of taxable services. 70As such, services provided by a taxpayer to an 

affiliated business entity are excluded from gross sales when calculating business tax. 
 
An affiliated entity is: 
 
      An entity in which the taxpayer has more than a 50% ownership interest; 
        
      An entity that has more than a 50% ownership interest in the taxpayer; or 
 
      An entity in which another entity with more than 50% of an ownership interest in the 
       taxpayer has more than a 50% ownership interest. 71

For example: 
 
      Corporation A is the taxpayer. LLC B owns 60% of Corporation A. LLC B also owns 
       over 50% of LLC C and D. Corporation A has no ownership interest in any of the LLCs. 
        
        o    Here, LLC B is an affiliated entity because LLC B owns more than 50% of 
             Corporation A. LLCs C and D are also affiliated entities because LLC B (a 
             person that has more than 50% ownership interest in the other LLC C and D) 
             has more than a 50% ownership in Corporation A. 

Sale of a Group of Services 

If exempt services are sold at the same time as taxable services and/or tangible personal 
property, the otherwise exempt services will only be exempt if they can be purchased 
separately and are separately itemized on the invoice. 
 
If a group of services is sold together for one lump sum, and the services are not individually 
sold, the services will be categorized under the Standard Industrial Classification Index of 

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1972 (“SIC”), including all supplements and amendments that most appropriately describes 
the group of services as a whole. The most recent amendment to the 1972 SIC was done in 
1987, thus the 1987 SIC should be used. For example: 
 
    A company offers a suite of services that includes bookkeeping, payroll, legal, 
     management billing, human resources, and public relations for a lump sum. A 
     customer cannot choose which individual services it will receive. The cost includes all 
     of the services together. Although legal services are exempt, the company’s services 
     will most closely fall under SIC Index number 8741, Management Services. 
      
If the SIC does not fall under one of the exempt service categories, then the lump sum for 
the group of services will be taxable. This is true even if some of the services offered in the 
group of services would be exempt if sold separately. Therefore, in the example above, 
because management services are not included in one of the exempt service categories, the 
lump sum for the suite of services is subject to the business tax.  
 
If services are sold together and cannot be purchased separately, they should be categorized 
together and only exempted if the entire group falls under one of the exempt service 
categories.  

Sales of Software 

For business tax purposes, sales of software are treated as sales of services. Sales of 
software are not considered sales of intangible (or tangible) personal property. 
 
The Department relies on the SIC Index to evaluate whether a service is exempt from 
business tax. 72Generally, the Department also considers the SIC Index to determine the 
Classification of a taxpayer’s business activities.  
 
Software creation and subsequent sales of that software are considered sales of services 
under the SIC Index. The 1987 SIC identifies businesses that provide “Computer 
Programming, Data Processing, and Other Computer Related Services” (Industry Group No. 
737) are part of Major Group 73, “Business Services.” 73

Industries in Group No. 737 include, in pertinent part: 
 
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   7371: Computer Programming Services, such as custom applications software 
    programing, custom computer programs or systems software development, and 
    custom software programming 
     
   7372: Prepackaged Software, including application software, games, and operating 
    systems 
 
   7373: Computer Integrated Systems Design, consisting of developing or modifying 
    computer software and packaging or bundling the software with computer hardware 
    to create and market an integrated system  

Sale of Services to State or Local Governments  

Services provided to Tennessee state and local governments should be classified as retail 
sales for Tennessee business tax purposes. Wholesale and retail sales of services subject to 
Tennessee business tax under Classification 3 of Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708 are taxable at 
different rates. As such, it is important to determine whether a taxpayer’s sales of services 
are wholesale or retail sales under Tennessee’s business tax statutes. For example: 
 
   A taxpayer that provides temporary staffing services to various businesses, such as 
    manufacturers and government agencies is classified as a Classification 3 service 
    provider. This taxpayer’s sales of staffing services to manufacturers would be 
    classified as wholesale sales, and its sale of staffing services sold to the government 
    agencies would be classified as retail sales. 

 3. Sales of Intangible Personal Property 

Taxpayers who buy and sell intangible personal property or real property as part of their 
normal business activities are not liable for business tax on these sales. 74

“Tangible personal property” is defined as “personal property that may be seen, weighed, 
measured, felt or touched, or is in any other manner perceptible to the senses.” 75The 

definition specifically excludes “stocks, bonds, notes, insurance or other obligations or 
securities.”  76

Examples of non-taxable intangibles include: 
 
   Royalties 
     
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      Franchise fees 
 
      Broadcast rights 
 
      Licensing of copyrights 
 
      Transfer of virtual currency 
 
      Renewable Identification Numbers (“RINs”) 77

 4. Installation Sales 

Charges for the installation of tangible personal property in connection with a sale of 
tangible personal property are subject to business tax if the property continues to be 
personal property after installation. 78

Property Ordinarily Removed 

Personal property is tangible personal property sold and attached to real property but 
ordinarily removed by the owner or tenant. 79

      Examples of personal property include: 
        
           o  Air conditioning window units; 
               
           o  Curtain and drapery rods; and 
 
           o  Gasoline pumps and tanks. 
 
The person making the sale of personal property is responsible for the tax regardless of 
whether the property is installed by the person selling the property or if another person 
acting on his behalf installs the personal property. 80

      Tax should be computed based on the dominant business activity of the person 
       making the sale of the personal property.  
        
      Taxpayers making charges for installing personal property apart from the sale of the 
       tangible personal property shall be taxed under Classification 4 of the business tax. 
       For example: 

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          o     A taxpayer purchases flooring and the installation of flooring from a home 
                improvement store. The home improvement store subcontracts with 
                individuals to install the flooring. When the home improvement store pays 
                business tax, the store may deduct the amounts paid to the subcontractors. 
                The subcontractors must be licensed, and the home improvement store 
                must provide the Department with the subcontractors' information on 
                Schedule C.  

Property Not Ordinarily Removed 

Charges made for installing tangible personal property which becomes a part of real 
property, and which is not ordinarily removed by the owner or tenant, such as plumbing, 
electrical wiring, etc., are be deemed to be made by a contractor, and the person installing 
such property should file and pay the business tax as a contractor. 
 
For more information on business tax for contractors, please see Chapter 11 of this Manual. 

    5. Sales to Employees 

Sales to employees are included in gross sales for business tax purposes. If no specific 
charge was made to the employee, then either the sales price or the cost of the property or 
service furnished is included in gross sales.   81

    6. Installment and Credit Sales 

Taxpayers making conditional, charge, or installment sales must report the total selling price 
of such sales and pay the appropriate business tax due in the reporting period in which the 
contracts of sale are entered. 82See Chapter 9 related to bad debts and repossessions. 

    7. Lay-Away Sales 

Lay-away, lay-by or will-call sales are considered taxable sales for business tax purposes. 
Lay-away sales should be included in the business tax base for the taxable period in which 
the delivery of the property is made. 83If the property is returned to inventory because of 

nonpayment for the merchandise and any previously made payments are forfeited because 
the sale was not completed, the amounts forfeited should be included in the business tax 
base at that time. 84For example: 

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       Store A is a calendar year taxpayer (tax year ends 12/31). Store A makes a layaway 
        sale to a customer in October of 2018 for $500 worth of merchandise. Store A 
        receives $100 payments in October, November, and December of 2018 from the 
        customer. The customer makes no more payments, and the merchandise is returned 
        to inventory in March due to nonpayment in March of 2019.  
         
         o    The $300 in payments Store A received should be reported for business tax 
              during the 2019 tax year. 

 8. Sales of Electricity by Electric Vehicle Charging Stations 

Businesses that are engaged in selling electricity via electric vehicle charging stations should 
include these sales in their gross receipts for business tax purposes. These businesses are 
not subject to the utilities tax on their gross receipts. 

Sales Price 

For business tax purposes, “sales price” is defined as the total amount paid for the tangible 
personal property or services rendered without any deduction of the cost of property sold, 
cost of materials used, labor or services costs, or other expenses. 85Freight, delivery, or other 

like transportation charges are subject to business tax if title to the property being 
transported passes to the vendee at the destination point.  86

 1. Exclusions 

The following items are not included in the sales price  ifthey are separated on the taxpayer’s 
invoice or bill of sale or if they are billed separately to customers: 
 
       Finance charges; 
         
       Carrying charges; 
 
       Time price differential; 
 
       Interest from credit extended on sales of tangible personal property under 
        installment sales contracts, conditional sale contracts, or other contracts providing 
        deferred payments of the purchase price; and 87

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       Other charges where additional consideration is given by the purchaser for the 
        privilege of making deferred payments. 88

Sales price does not include: 
 
       Advertising costs paid by a seller to an auctioneer for purpose of advertising an 
        auction. These advertising costs are not included in the sales price when no portion 
        of the payment is retained as profit by the auctioneer, and when the payment has 
        been placed in escrow or a trust account by the auctioneers on behalf of the seller. 89

       Any amount reasonably allocated as a cost of providing a service when services are 
        sold to an affiliated business entity. 90

       Additional consideration received by a motor dealer from a lender for the sale or 
        assignment to the lender of a chattel lease or conditional sales contract. 91

       Freight or other transportation charges when title to the property being transported 
        passes to the customer at the point of origin. 92

 2. Expenses Passed Through to the Customer 

Expenses that are passed through the to the customer are not included in the sales price in 
limited circumstances. InAabakus, Inc. v. Huddleston, the Tennessee Court of Appeals 
examined the definition of sales price when addressing the business tax liability of a human 
resource support service. The Court concluded that the fees the agency earned providing 
personnel management services to small businesses were subject to business tax. The Court 
also held that expenses that simply passed through the agency were not subject to business 
tax because they were funds that the agency was required to pay over to third parties on its 
clients’ behalf and the agency was simply acting as a paying agent.   

Example 

Company A is a limited liability company with its principal place of business in Tennessee. 
Company A contracts with businesses (“customers”) to provide human resource vendor 
management services. Company A then contracts with third-party staffing agencies 
(“suppliers”) to meet its customers’ workforce needs. Company A compiles all the suppliers’ 
invoices for each customer and sends each customer a consolidated invoice. Customers pay 
the invoiced amount to Company A, and Company A pays suppliers on each customer’s 

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behalf. Company A receives an administrative fee typically equal to four percent of its 
customer’s consolidated invoice. 
 
       Company A is subject to Tennessee business tax on the administrative fees that it 
        retains as compensation.  
         
       Company A is not subject to Tennessee business tax on the amounts it receives from 
        customers that are transferred to suppliers and not ultimately retained by the 
        Company A. The invoice payments Company A receives, less Company A’s 
        administrative fees, are funds that Company A is required to pay over to third 
        parties, the suppliers, on its customers’ behalf for wages, payroll taxes, insurances, 
        and other employment related charges that are simply passed through Company A. 

Reporting Methods 

Wholesalers and retailers generally report business tax due on sales for the period in which 
the sale is made. 93However, contractors report business tax on a cash basis. TENN  . COMP  . R. 
& R  EGS. 1320-04-05-.09(2) states that progress payment charges billed pursuant to a contract 
and received by a contractor and any charges for renting or leasing equipment to others for 
use in constructing, or making improvements or additions, or repairing buildings or other 
structures on real property when the equipment is operated by the lessor are subject to 
business tax. 
 
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Chapter 5: Classifications  

Classifications Generally   

Businesses subject to Tennessee business tax must be classified to determine the correct 
amount of business tax due. Business tax rates vary based on the type of business and, in 
many cases, whether the business sells at wholesale or retail. 
 
Each taxpayer is classified by its “dominant business activity” pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 
67-4-708 on a per location basis. “[D]ominant business activity” is defined as “the business 
activity that is the major and principal source of taxable gross sales.” 94In other words, the 

business classification is based on the activity that generates the largest portion of a 
business’s taxable sales. 
 
A taxpayer’s classification determines its tax rate. 95There are five different classifications for 

taxable activities as well as a separate category for antique malls, flea markets, and the like. 
A taxpayer must choose only one classification per location. Taxpayers should look to the 
Standard Industrial Classification Index of 1987 (“SIC”) to aid in determining their business 
tax classification. 

  1. Classification 1 

Classification 1 activities are subdivided into five distinct groups:  96

        Classification 1(A) includes sales of food and beer for home preparation and 
         consumption (except for delicatessens and candy at retail) and food brokerage 
         services.  
          
        Classification 1(B) includes sales of lumber, building materials, tools, builders’ 
         hardware, paint and glass, electrical supplies, roofing materials, farm equipment, 
         plumbing, heating and air conditioning equipment, and other basic lines of 
         hardware, and sales by service station operators (except for sales under 
         Classification 1(D)).    
 
        Classification 1(C) includes sales of hay, grain, feed, fertilizer, seeds, bulbs, nursery 
         stock, and other farm, lawn, and garden supplies and tools. Products produced by 
         farmers sold directly from the farm are not included in Classification 1(C).  
          
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    Classification 1(D) includes sales of gasoline, diesel fuel, and motor oils at retail.  
 
    Classification 1(E) includes sales of gasoline and diesel fuel at wholesale. 

  2. Classification 2 

Classification 2 activities include the sale of:  97

    Motor vehicles  
      
    Clothing (excluding custom, made-to-order items) 
 
    Home furnishings (excluding antiques) 
  
    Prescription drugs 
  
    Prepared food, (e.g., cooked food meant to be consumed on or off the premises) 
  
    Coal, wood, ice, fuel oil, and liquefied petroleum gas 
  
    Cut flowers 
  
    Advertising specialties 
 
     This classification also includes a “catch-all” for the sale of any tangible 
     personal property that is not specifically classified. Therefore, taxpayers 
 
     selling products not listed in any other classification will be Classification 2. 
  
  3. Classification 3 

Classification 3 includes the sales of more specialized items of tangible personal property. 
These include, but are not limited to:  
 
    Delicatessens and candy 
       
    Made-to-order clothing, i.e., custom-made clothing 
 
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   Antique furniture, furnishings, and art objects 
 
   Artwork  
 
   Books, magazines, stationery (including office supplies and writing supplies), 
    accounting and legal forms, office forms and supplies, pens and pencils, school 
    supplies, and writing supplies 
 
   Sporting goods and equipment, bicycles, bicycle parts, and accessories 
 
   Jewelry 
 
   Tobacco products  
 
   Toys, games, and hobby kits 
 
   Cameras, film, and other photographic supplies  
 
   Fireworks  
 
   Hearing aids 
 
   Luggage 
 
   Artist paints and supplies 
 
   Non-prescription eye-ware 
 
   Pet food 
     
   Above-ground swimming pools (in-ground swimming pools are considered 
    improvements to real property) 
 
   Pawn shops 
 
For a complete list of items, please see Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3). 
 
    Classification 3 also includes the sale of services. 
 
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Sale of Services  

Unlike sales and use tax law, the sales of all services are subject to business tax unless 
specifically exempt. Classification 3 provides 16 different exempt services, which utilize the 
SIC descriptions to define the service, from business tax. 98Although discussed in more detail 

later in Chapter 8 of this Manual, below is a brief list of exempt services. 

Exempt Services  

Receipts derived from the sale of the following services are exempt from business tax:   
 
     Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping services; 
        
     Architecture; 
 
     Banks, building and loan associations, mortgage bankers, securities, brokers, 
      investment companies, and other similar organizations; 
 
     Camps and trailer parks where charges are made only for rental of real property. 
      Persons who rent trailers to transients or sell tangible personal property or make 
      separate charges for specific services furnished are not exempt;   
 
     Services performed by charitable and religious organizations;  
 
     Domestic services performed in private households; 
       
     Educational services offered by elementary and secondary schools, colleges, 
      universities, professional schools and junior colleges, library and information 
      centers, correspondence schools, vocational schools, and specialized non-degree 
      granting schools;  
 
     Services furnished by educational nonprofit research agencies; 
 
     Engineering;  
 
     Services furnished by insurance companies and holding companies; 
  
     Land surveying;   

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       Legal services; 
 
       Lessors of agricultural, forestry, mining, oil, public utility, and airport properties; 
 
       Medical, dental, and allied health services to human beings, except services of 
        persons engaged in making dentures and artificial teeth;  
  
       Nonprofit membership organization services that are for the promotion of the 
        interests of the members; 
 
       Operators of residential and non-residential buildings other than hotels, motels, and 
        rooming houses; 
  
       Public utilities as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101; and 
 
       Veterinary services. 
 
  No business license is needed, and no tax is due, unless the business is also making sales 
  of tangible personal property and/or other taxable services. Even if a taxpayer qualifies for 
  one of these exemptions, it still must register and pay business tax on any sales that do not 
  qualify for the exemption (e.g., a chiropractor that sells food  supplements and ergonomic 
  devices, etc.). 99

        Audit Note: Taxpayers should be aware that in the case of a business tax 
        audit, if the business sells a group of services for a lump sum, the taxpayer 
 
        is not allowed to segregate out nonexempt services. If the business sells the 
        services together and the services cannot be purchased separately, they 
 
        should be categorized together and only exempted if the entire group falls 
 
        under one of the exempt service categories.  
 
For more information on exempt services, please see Chapter 8 of this manual. 

     4. Classification 4 

Classification 4 activities include all persons contracting, performing a contract, or engaging 
in the following:  
 
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    Constructing or improving real property (e.g., constructing, building, erecting, 
     repairing, grading, excavating, drilling, exploring, testing, or adding to any building, 
     highway, street, sidewalk, bridge, culvert, sewer, irrigation or water system, drainage, 
     or dredging system); 
      
    Installing tangible personal property; 
 
    Providing exterminating services; 
  
    Selling livestock, poultry, or other farm products not exempted under Tenn. Code 
     Ann. § 67-4-712 (discussed in more detail in Chapter 8 of this Manual); and 
 
    Receiving commissions from the sale of farm products belonging to others.100  
 
Classification 4 does not include landscaping and lawn care services – these services fall 
under Classification 3. See the subsection titled Landscapers in the section titled 
Miscellaneous Industry Specific Classifications in this chapter. 

  5. Classification 5 

Classification 5 has two subparts: 
 
    Classification 5(A) includes industrial loan and thrift companies certified and licensed 
     under title 45, chapter 5. For a current listing of these companies, see the website for 
     the Department of Financial Institutions; and 
       
    Classification 5(B) includes natural gas marketers.101  

  6. Antique Malls, Flea Markets, Gun Shows, Etc. 

Antique malls, flea markets, craft shows, antique shows, gun shows, and auto shows are not 
included under one of the five specified classifications. Instead, any county and/or 
municipality may impose a fee on such businesses by resolution or ordinance. If the fee is 
imposed ($1per booth per day), it must be paid directly to and retained by the county or 
municipality.102 This fee is in lieu of any business tax that would have otherwise been due.  
 
The per day fee does not apply to a business that sells antiques at least five days a week 
from a permanent location.103 Such business will be subject to business tax as a 
Classification 3 vendor. This also applies to antique malls with separate booths but one 

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common cash register. Under these circumstances, only the mall operator is subject to the 
business tax on all receipts from that location. 

 7. Transient Vendors 

Transient vendors are also excluded from the business tax but are subject to a $50 fee paid 
directly to the county and/or municipality for each 14-day period they are licensed to sell 
their goods.104 For example: 
 
   A seller of tangible person property based in Kentucky comes to Nashville, 
    Tennessee for a weeklong trade show, where it will display and sell its merchandise. 
    The Kentucky seller will have to obtain a transient vendor license directly from the 
    local city recorder or county clerk and pay a $50 fee.  
 
Please see Chapter 11 for more in-depth analysis of transient vendors.  

 8. Miscellaneous Industry Specific Classifications  

Home Healthcare Providers  

Businesses engaged in home health services providing non-medical personal care services 
to seniors and other people with physical, intellectual, and developmental disabilities are 
Classification 3.  
 
Non-medical personal care services include, but are not limited to, homemaker services, 
monitoring for safety (including providing reminders to take prescription medication), 
companionship, grocery shopping, meal preparation, hospital sitter services, 24-hour care, 
light housekeeping, household laundry, bath and grooming assistance, and transportation. 

Landscapers  

Businesses engaged in landscaping activities such as planting, mulching, mowing, and the 
like are subject to business tax under Classification 3. However, businesses engaged in 
installing irrigation systems and hardscapes (such as patios, retaining walls, ponds, or other 
similar structures) are subject to business tax under Classification 4. Businesses engaged in 
both activities are classified based upon their dominant business activity.  

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Storage Unit Operators 

The rental of storage units is exempt under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(xii) as a service 
provided by an operator of a residential or nonresidential building, and as such, is not 
subject to the business tax. TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 1320-04-05-.41 further clarifies that the 
rental of real property is not taxable. 
 
However, if warehousing and storage services are provided, those services are subject to tax 
under Classification 3 (see the explanation below). Also, if the storage unit business sells 
tangible personal property, such as boxes, it should be registered and paying business tax 
on those sales, even if otherwise only leasing space. 

Warehousemen 

Warehousemen are subject to business tax as Classification 3 service providers. SIC Major 
Group 42 includes warehousing. Industry number 4226 is "special warehousing and storage, 
not elsewhere classified" and includes "warehousing and storage of special products, not 
elsewhere classified, such as household goods..." TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 1320-04-05-.38 
further clarifies that “warehousing and storage of any tangible personal property belonging 
to others for a charge or fee are rendering services and are taxable under the Business Tax 
Act.” Such services may involve activities such as handling, securing, and storing goods.  
 
Note that warehousing does not include the lease of designated space within a warehouse 
with no other services provided. 

Software Programmers and Consultants 

Software programmers and consultants are subject to business tax as Classification 3 service 
providers. Even though prewritten software is treated as tangible personal property for sales 
and use tax purposes, there is no provision in the business tax to deem it tangible personal 
property. (Custom software is separately and expressly subject to sales and use tax.)105 Thus, 
regardless of whether sales of software and services necessary to the sale of software are 
taxed as part of the sales price of tangible personal property for sales tax, software vendors 
would fall within Classification 3 for business tax as service providers. This is also consistent 
with their SIC Classification. 

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House Painters 

House Painters making improvements to real property are subject to business tax as 
Classification 4 service providers. 

Electrical Inspectors 

Electrical inspectors are subject to business tax as Classification 3 service providers. While 
Classification 4 includes references to testing in the SIC descriptions, SIC code 1731 
(electrical work) does not include electrical inspectors.  

Home Warranty Companies 

Services related to insurance provided by insurance carriers or insurance agents are exempt 
from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(xi). Home warranty companies 
offer extended warranties, or warranty insurance, on items of tangible personal property 
within a home. The SIC indicates that a seller of home warranties is considered an insurance 
carrier. Major Group 63 is described as “carriers of insurance of all types” and includes 
Industry Number 6351 Surety Insurance. One of the examples listed under 6351 is Warranty 
Insurance, Home. Therefore, sales of home warranties are services exempt from business 
tax. 

Photographers 

Photographers are subject to business tax as Classification 3 service providers. Although 
customers may purchase photographs from the photographer upon completion of the 
service or may receive photographs on a disc from the photographer, it has been 
determined that the photographer is primarily offering a service. This is reiterated by the 
SIC, which categorizes photographers under Major Group 72 (Personal Services). 

Real Estate Management Companies 

If a taxpayer sells or manages real estate it owns, the taxpayer is not subject to business tax 
on sales or rental income.106 However, taxpayers selling and managing real estate for others 
are subject to business tax under Classification 3 as providers of taxable services. 
Management fees are also subject to tax. Managers of short-term rentals and overnight 
lodgings are liable for tax on the total amount collected for the rental.  
 
For information on property management companies, see the section titled Sales or Rentals 
of Real Property in Chapter 8 of this manual. 

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Farrier Suppliers 

The sales of farrier supplies (e.g., horseshoes) are subject to business tax as Classification 2, 
under the catch-all provision as taxpayers making sales of “[t]angible personal property not 
specifically listed or described elsewhere[.]”107  

Farriers 

Farriers are subject to business tax as Classification 3 service providers if the services the 
farriers provide are their dominant taxable business activity.  

Dentists 

Services performed by dentists are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
708(3)(C)(i). However, sales of tangible personal property by a dentist, such as electric 
toothbrushes, dental water jet oral irrigators (i.e., Waterpik), teeth whitening products, 
mouth wash, etc., are subject to business tax as Classification 2, under the catch-all 
provision. Note that the definition of tangible personal property excludes “any materials, 
substances or other items of any nature inserted or affixed to the human body by duly 
licensed physicians or dentists or otherwise dispensed by them in the treatment of 
patients.”108   

Radon Testing 

Radon testing is subject to business tax under Classification 3, service providers. While the 
Classification 4 description does have language that includes the word “testing” and 
“building,” radon testing is testing the air quality in the building, not the building itself.  

Music Lessons, Tutoring, Day Cares/Pre-Ks 

Individuals providing music lessons and private tutoring and day cares/pre-Ks are subject to 
business tax as Classification 3 service providers. 
 
There is an exemption for "[e]ducational services offered by elementary and secondary 
schools, colleges, universities, professional schools and junior colleges, library and 
information centers, correspondence schools, vocational schools and specialized nondegree 
granting schools."109  

Day cares and pre-Ks are not exempt because they are not elementary or secondary schools 
or one of the others listed. Likewise, individuals who provide instruction of some sort, e.g., 

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individual private tutors and individual piano teachers do not meet the definition of a school 
within the statute and are not an establishment within the SIC code. However, an actual 
music school would qualify for the exemption.   

Veterinarians 

Services furnished by persons engaged in the practice of veterinary medicine, dentistry or 
surgery are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(xiv). Sales of 
services involving the boarding and lodging of animals, if sold by veterinarians, are also 
exempt from business tax. However, veterinarians are liable for business tax on their sales 
of grooming services and their sales of animal food and medicine, collars, leashes, and any 
other tangible personal property sold by them. 
 
Veterinarians should determine their dominant taxable sales for classification purposes. If 
most of a veterinarian’s taxable sales are sales of pet food or grooming, they should pay 
business tax on all taxable sales as Classification 3 service providers. If most a veterinarian’s 
taxable sales are of animal medications, they should pay business tax on all taxable sales as 
Classification 2 sellers. 

Licensed Clinical Social Workers 

Psychotherapy services provided by licensed clinical social workers are exempt from 
business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as medical or allied health services. 
Sales of these services are classified under SIC Code 8049 as sales of exempt services 
provided by health practitioners not elsewhere classified. Licensed clinical social workers 
remain liable for business tax on taxable sales. 

Massage Therapists 

Massage services provided by licensed massage therapists are exempt from business tax 
under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as medical or allied health services. These sales 
would be treated by SIC code 8049 as sales of exempt services provided by health 
practitioners not elsewhere classified. However, like other medical service providers, 
massage therapists may become liable for business tax if they make other types of sales that 
do not fall within this exemption. 

Acupuncturists 

Acupuncturists are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as 
medical or allied health services. Such sales would be treated by SIC code 8049 as sales of 

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exempt services provided by health practitioners not elsewhere classified. However, like 
other medical service providers, acupuncturists may become liable for business tax if they 
make other types of sales that do not fall within this exemption. 

Botox Injections 

Botox injections are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as 
medical or allied health services. In general, Botox injections must be administered by a 
licensed medical professional. According to the state medical board, there is one exception 
to the rule. If the injections are administered in a doctor’s office under the supervision of a 
licensed doctor, they can be administered by anyone that the doctor has trained. However, 
because the second scenario must occur in a doctor’s office under a doctor’s supervision, 
either scenario would qualify as medical or allied health.110 

Electrolysis and Laser Spot/Scar Removal 

Electrolysis and laser spot/scar removal are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code 
Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as medical or allied health services. Electrolysis must be administered 
by an electrologist licensed by the Tennessee Electrolysis Health Department board, and 
laser spot/scar removal must be administered by a licensed medical professional. Such sales 
are treated under SIC code 8049 as sales of exempt services provided by health practitioners 
not elsewhere classified.  

Microdermabrasion 

There are different levels of microdermabrasion services. Estheticians can administer 
cosmetic microdermabrasion; in which case it is not an exempt medical or allied health 
service. Instead, such services are subject to business tax as Classification 3, service 
providers. 
 
However, licensed medical professionals administer medical grade microdermabrasion, 
which is administered in a doctor’s office and supervised by a doctor. When 
microdermabrasion is provided by a licensed medical profession or in a doctor’s office, it is 
exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as medical or allied 
health services. See also SIC code 8049. 

Chiropractors 

Chiropractors are exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i) as 
medical or allied health services. They are also specifically listed under SIC code 8041. Like 

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other medical service providers, chiropractors may become liable for business tax if they 
make other types of sales that do not fall within this exemption. 

Advertising Agencies 

The SIC defines advertising agencies and advertising consulting services as “establishments 
primarily engaged in preparing advertising (writing copy, artwork, graphics, or other creative 
work) and placing such advertising in periodicals, newspapers, radio and television, or other 
advertising media for clients on a contract or fee basis.” Services provided by advertising 
agencies are generally subject to business tax as Classification 3 sales of services. 

Advertising Agencies Purchasing Media on Behalf of Clients 
 
The amounts that an advertising agency receives for rendering services to plan, budget for, 
facilitate the purchase of, and verify media placement for the agency’s client are subject to 
business tax. Additionally, any commissions received by the advertising agency from the 
media outlet for facilitating sales of media placement to the agency’s client are also subject 
to business tax. 

However, any amounts that an advertising agency receives from a client that the agency 
uses to purchase media placement from a media outlet, including newspapers, magazines, 
billboards, television, radio, and online sites (e.g., social media ads, web banners, pop-up 
ads, links to webpages, etc.), are not subject to business tax. The media placement is not a 
cost of property sold, cost of materials used, labor or service costs, or other expenses of the 
advertising agency in providing its advertising materials or services.  

Therefore, the charge for the cost of the media placement is not part of the sales price of the 
advertising agency’s sale of its advertising services or tangible personal property. 
Additionally, the advertising agency does not hold itself out as a seller or provider of media 
placement. Instead, the media outlet is the provider of media placement and retains control 
of the media. 

Advertising agencies commonly negotiate to purchase media placement on behalf of their 
clients. Agencies may charge clients for services and the cost of the media placement in 
different ways. 
 
For example: 
 
  An agency may charge its client only the same amount for which the media 
   placement was purchased. For example, an agency purchases media placement 

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   from a media outlet for $1,000, and the agency charges its client $1,000 for the 
   media placement.  

  An agency may charge its client a lump sum service fee that includes charges for its 
   services to facilitate the purchase of the media placement and the cost of the media 
   placement. For example, an agency purchases media placement from a media outlet 
   for $1,000, and the agency charges its client a lump sum of $1,200 for the media 
   placement. The agency uses $1,000 of that amount to pay the media outlet and it 
   retains $200 as a service fee.  

  An agency may separately itemize its service fee and the cost of the media 
   placement in the amount that it charges its client. Using the same scenario as the 
   previous example, the invoice the agency gives its client has separate itemized 
   amounts for media placement for $1,000 and a service fee for $200.  

  A media outlet may charge the advertising agency a lump sum fee that includes the 
   cost of the media placement and a commission paid to the advertising agency. The 
   advertising agency then charges its client the same lump sum. Once paid over to the 
   media outlet, the media outlet will then pay the commission to the advertising 
   agency. For example, an agency charges its client a lump sum of $1,200 for the 
   media placement. The agency pays the entire $1,200 to the media outlet, and the 
   media outlet writes a commission check to the agency for $200.  

Regardless of which way an advertising agency charges its client for the media placement, 
the portion of the amount charged that the agency uses to pay the media outlet for the 
media placement is not subject to business tax. In other words, the net amount that the 
media outlet keeps is not taxable. In each of the examples above, the $1000 that the agency 
receives from its client for the cost of the media placement is not subject to business tax.111  

    To determine the amounts subject to business tax, an auditor may review 
    the agreements between advertising agencies, clients, and media outlets. 
 
Retailer vs. Wholesaler  

Classifications 1-3 each have separate rates for wholesalers and retailers.  If a business 
qualifies  as  a wholesaler, then it will be subject to the business tax at the wholesale rate 
for its classification  on  all  its  taxable  gross  sales.  Likewise,  if  a  business  qualifies  as  a 
retailer,  then it will be subject to the business tax at the retailer rate for its classification 
on all its  taxable gross sales.112   

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 1. Retail Sales  

A retail sale is any sale that is not a wholesale sale. In retail sales, the purchaser is generally 
the end-user of the product or service. For example: 
 
       ABC Company sells sporting goods equipment directly to end-users/consumers. 
        These sales are considered retail sales.  
         
Retail sales include sales to contractors because contractors are considered the end-user of 
the product. A retailer is any person whose taxable gross sales are at least 50% retail 
   113
sales.    Taxable gross sales refer to Tennessee sales, therefore, sales made in other states 
are disregarded in determining whether a business is a retailer. For example: 
 
       Acme Corporation (“Acme”) is located in Kentucky, where it has 10 retail stores. Acme 
        also has a distribution center located in Tennessee, where it sells exclusively to Bravo 
        Corporation (“Bravo”), a related business. Bravo has 5 retail stores in Tennessee. 
        Acme generates 70% of its total gross receipts from retail sales in Kentucky, and 30% 
        of its gross receipts from wholesale sales in Tennessee. Although more than 50% of 
        its total sales are retail sales, such retail sales are not taxable gross sales for 
        Tennessee business tax purposes and thus do not apply when determining whether 
        Acme is a retailer or wholesaler. In this case, Acme is a Tennessee wholesaler and 
        subject to business tax on its sales to Bravo.  
         
Taxpayers should carefully note who their customers are and how the customers use the 
products or services sold. For example, sales of materials and supplies to contractors and 
most sales of industrial materials and supplies to manufacturers, are retail sales.  

Packaging  

TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.10 makes it clear that sales of returnable packaging to 
everyone (“to either retailers or to anyone else”) are retail sales. However, the rule, when 
addressing sales of nonreturnable packaging, states only those sales to retailers are retail 
sales. Therefore, sales of nonreturnable packaging to anyone other than retailers are 
wholesale sales.   

Sale of Services to Federal, State, Local Governments, or Non-Profit Entities 

Services provided to the federal government, Tennessee state and local governments, or 
non-profit entities should be classified as retail sales for Tennessee business tax purposes.  

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   2. Wholesale Sales  

  A wholesale sale includes the following:114 
   
        A sale to a retailer for resale; 
          
        A sale of industrial materials for future processing that become component parts 
         of  a  product that is for resale;  
          
            o      For example, a Tennessee aluminum smelter sells ingots (pieces of metal) 
                   to a Tennessee auto parts maker. 
 
        Sales  of tangible  personal  property  to  the  State  or  other  government  agencies 
         or  to  other  institutions  exempt  from  paying  sales  and  use  tax  under  Tenn. 
         Code  Ann.  §  67-6-322 (sales of services to governmental or exempt agencies or 
         institutions are  sales at retail); or 
 
        A sale by a franchised motor vehicle dealer to a manufacturer or distributor of 
         motor  vehicles  or  an  obligor  under  an  extended  service  contract  of  parts  or 
         repair  services, or both, necessary for repairs performed by the dealer under the 
         manufacturer’s, distributor’s, or obligor’s warranty, and includes a manufacturer 
         or distributor of the motor vehicle. 
          
A wholesaler is any person whose taxable gross sales are more than 50% wholesale 
sales.115 An example of a wholesale sale is as follows: 
 
      Paper manufacturer sells its paper to a business-to-business office products 
       company. The business-to-business office products company sells the paper directly 
       to businesses that use the paper in daily operations. Because the business-to-
       business office product company is reselling to end-users, the office products 
       company is a retailer. As such, the sale to a retailer for resale is a wholesale sale.  
 
As stated above in the Retail Sales section, taxpayers must carefully document and retain 
such documentation when determining if they qualify as a wholesaler for business tax 
purposes. Such documentation includes, most importantly, the business tax 
wholesaler/retailer certificate (discussed below). Taxpayers should also retain other 
certificates that may be relevant to the transaction/purchaser including sale for resale 

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exemption certificates, industrial machinery exemption certificates, and nonprofit 
exemption certificates.116  

Packaging  

There is a special regulation that applies to sales of packaging. All sales of returnable 
packaging, regardless of the purchaser, are retail sales. Additionally, all sales of 
nonreturnable packaging to retailers are retail sales. However, all sales of packaging 
materials to anyone other than a retailer (i.e., manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, 
resellers) are wholesale sales.117 

 3. Sales for Resale 

The term “resale” is defined as “a subsequent, bona fide sale of the property, services, or 
taxable item by the purchaser,” and a “sale for resale” is defined as “the sale of the property, 
services, or taxable item intended for subsequent resale by the purchaser.”118 Sales for 
resale may be taxable depending on the underlying facts of the transaction. 
 
The price charged by the vendor for tangible personal property or services or the quality of 
such property or services is immaterial in determining whether a sale is one for resale.119 
The determinative factor is the customer’s treatment of his purchase.120 
 
Sales for resale include: 

   Sales of tangible personal property or taxable services made by a dealer to an out-of-
    state vendor who directs that the dealer act as the out-of-state vendor’s agent to 
    deliver or ship tangible personal property or taxable services to the out-of-state 
    vendor’s customer, who is a user or customer;121 

   Sales where a supplier of materials, supplies, equipment, and services makes 
    tangible personal property or services available for further processing as a 
    component part of a product to legitimate dealer engaged in and reselling or leasing 
    such property or services to a user or consumer;122 and 

   Sales to a manufacturer or processor for future processing, manufacture, or 
    conversion into articles of tangible personal property for resale where such 
    industrial materials become a component part of the finished product.123  

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When Sales for Resale are Considered Wholesale Sales 

Sales of tangible personal property and services to a retailer who may make further 
distributions from a central warehouse or other distribution point to others for resale are 
considered wholesale sales.  

 4. Wholesaler to Wholesaler Sales   

Sales made by one wholesaler to another wholesaler (or sales by one retailer to another 
retailer at cost) are excluded from the definition of sale and thus are not subject to the 
business tax.124 This exemption applies even if the sale includes a markup. 
 
Taxpayers, therefore, must determine if their customer is a wholesaler or retailer. 

Examples 

   Paper manufacturer sells its paper to a business-to-business stationery company, a 
    paper distributor. The business-to-business stationery company sells the paper 
    directly to businesses, retail stores or printers, that offer the stationery to end-users. 
    Because the business-to-business stationery company is reselling to a reseller, they 
    are making a wholesaler-to- wholesaler sale and the transaction between the paper 
    manufacturer and the business-to-business stationery company, a paper distributor, 
    is not subject to business tax.  
     
   Wholesaler A sells products (100%) to Wholesaler B who sells these products to 
    retailers (70%) and consumers (30%). Because Wholesaler B’s sales are 70% 
    wholesale sales to retailers and 30% sales to consumers, Wholesaler B would a 
    wholesaler for business tax purposes and 100% of the sales from Wholesaler A to 
    Wholesaler B would be exempt.  

                  125
Eisai, Inc. v. Gerregano  

Eisai, Inc. is a New Jersey-based pharmaceutical company that develops and sells drugs for 
neurological and oncology treatment (“Products”). Eisai stored the Products in a warehouse 
in Tennessee and sold these Products to Tennessee distributors who then sold the Products 
to clinics, hospital pharmacies, and like customers. The Products were then used by medical 
professionals to treat patients. The Department determined that the company’s sales to the 
distributors were taxable wholesale sales because the distributors were considered retailers 
because the medical professionals the distributors sold to were deemed the end-users of 
the drugs under Business Tax Rule 20.126  

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Eisai disputed the Department’s position. The Tennessee Court of Appeals determined the 
sales were exempt wholesaler-to-wholesaler sales stating that the Department’s argument 
that the medical professionals were the end-users of the drugs under Rule 20 conflicted with 
the intent of Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(23)127, which was to make the patient, not the 
medical provider, the end-user of the drug.  

Retailer to Retailer Sales  

Retailer to retailer sales are generally subject to business tax. However, transfers of tangible 
personal property from a retailer to another retailer for consideration that does not exceed 
the cost of the tangible personal property including freight and storage costs, and 
transportation costs incurred are not defined as sales and are not subject to business tax.128 
These types of sales are often accommodation sales. For example: 
 
    A customer at a car dealership in Nashville wants a black car with black interior. The 
     Nashville dealership only has a white car with black interior. However, the dealership 
     finds the car at a Memphis dealership. The Memphis dealership sells the car to the 
     Nashville dealership at cost plus transportation. Both dealerships are retailers, but 
     because the sale was made at cost plus transportation, it is not considered a sale for 
     business tax purposes.  

Tax Rates  

Each person subject to the business tax as a Classification 1-4 or 5B taxpayer must pay at 
least $22  per year per location. If the taxpayer does not have a location within the state, it 
must pay a  minimum tax of $22 for all its activity in the state. This minimum tax applies 
to every person registered in the state, even if no business activity is carried on.  
 
      Contractors are required to have a registration in the jurisdiction of their 
      domicile. If all a contractor’s sales in other jurisdictions in this state exceed 
      the $100,000 threshold amount and the contractor had no sales in its 
      domicile jurisdiction, then the contractor must pay the minimum $22 tax in 
      its domicile. 
                                                                                                 
Each taxpayer must pay business tax according to its classification at the rates below:129 
 
     Classification 1A, 1B, 1C retailer – 1/10 of 1% (0.001); 

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  Classification 1A wholesaler – 1/40 of 1% (0.00025); 
 
  Classification 1B and 1C wholesaler – 3/80 of 1% (0.000375); 
 
  Classification 1D retailer – 1/20 of 1% (0.0005); 
 
  Classification 1E wholesaler – 1/32 of 1% (0.0003125); 
 
  Classification 2 retailer – 3/20 of 1% (0.0015); 
 
  Classification 2 wholesaler – 3/80 of 1% (0.000375); 
 
  Classification 3 retailer – 3/16 of 1% (0.001875); 
 
  Classification 3 wholesaler – 3/80 of 1% (0.000375); 
 
  Classification 4 –  1/10 of 1 % (of the compensation under the contract or of the 
   gross  commissions, margins, or fees) (0.001); 
 
  Classification 5A – 1/10 of 1%130 of gross income of the business (interest income, 
   earned  discounts, earned lease rentals, commission fees, past due charges, 
   contract  earnings, collection charges, loan service fees, late fee income) (0.001); 
   and 
    
  Classification 5B – 1/50 of 1% (0.0002). 
 
 If the taxpayer is an operator of coin-operated  machines,  it  is  required  to  pay  a 
 minimum  tax  of  $22  only  for  its  principal  place  of business.  Each Class 5A taxpayer 
 must pay a minimum tax of $450 per year but  will not  be required to pay any more than 
 $1,500 per year.131 

Municipal-Level Tax Rate 

Any municipality that elects to levy the municipal-level business tax after January 1, 2014, or 
that  elects to change the rate of the tax must do so at the same rates listed above. 
However, if a  municipality  elected  to  levy  the  municipality  business  tax  prior  to  this 
date,  then  it  may  continue to levy the tax at its existing rate.132 See the Department’s 

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website for a current list of municipalities that levy a municipal level business tax. 

Wholesaler/Retailer Certificate 

To aid in administration, effective January 1, 2023, the Department will make available to 
each business tax taxpayer a certificate that indicates whether the taxpayer reported the 
tax due at a specific location at the wholesaler rate or the retailer rate.133 The certificates 
will be made available annually to taxpayers through the Department’s TNTAP portal 
upon filing their business tax return. The certificate is effective from the original due date 
of the customer's underlying return until the due date of the customer's next return. 
 
When selling a good or service, the vendor can request this certificate from the purchaser, 
and the vendor can rely upon this certificate to determine its business tax liability. A 
vendor that receives a certificate from a customer shall not owe additional tax, nor be 
refunded tax, based on a retroactive change in the customer's status as a wholesaler or 
retailer for the period covered by the certificate. Please note, however, that this certificate 
does not provide a safe harbor against transactions the vendor knows should be classified 
as either a wholesale sale or a retail sale. For example: 
 
  A company is in the business of selling office supplies, including pens and printer 
   paper, to other businesses (i.e., business-to-business sales). It sells pens and 
   printer paper to the corporate headquarters of a globally known sporting goods 
   wholesaler. The sporting goods wholesaler provides the company with its 
   wholesaler certificate. It is obvious that a sporting goods wholesaler is not going to 
   resale the pens and printer paper, but instead, the corporate headquarters is going 
   to use those items in its business. The sale, therefore, is a retail sale. The office 
   supply company cannot rely on the wholesale certificate and classify the sale as a 
   wholesale sale when it is clear to the office supply company that it is a retail sale.  
     
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Chapter 6: Filing Requirements 

Filing the Return 

Every person making sales in Tennessee by engaging in any vocation, occupation, business, 
or business activity listed in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(1)-(5) is subject to business tax and 
must file an annual return, Form BUS 428. Tennessee has a consolidated filing requirement 
for business tax purposes. This means that every location of the taxpayer should be included 
on the same return. 

 1. Payments 

Taxpayers subject to business tax must file their returns and tax payments together. Failure 
to remit the required tax payment with the return will cause the tax to become delinquent. 

Minimum Business Tax 

All entities registered to do business in Tennessee under a standard business license must 
pay at least the minimum business tax.  
 
   The minimum tax for taxpayers in Classifications 1 through 4 is $22.  
     
   The minimum tax for taxpayers in Classification 5A is $450, and the maximum tax for 
    taxpayers in classification 5A is $1,500.   
 
   For coin-operated vending machines, only the principal place of business is subject 
    to the minimum tax. 

 2. Electronic Filing 

Business tax returns must be filed electronically through the Tennessee Taxpayer Access 
Point (“TNTAP”), and the appropriate taxes must be paid to the Department of Revenue (the 
“Department”).134 
 
To file a business tax return online, follow the steps below: 
 
   Login to TNTAP. 
     
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   Select the “Business Tax” link. (Note: If you do not see your account, you can gain access 
    to your account by contacting the Department's Taxpayer Services Division 
     
   Click “File Return.” 
     
   Upload a CSV file on this first screen. If you do not use CSV files, click “Next.” 
 
   Upload any supporting documents. Click “Next.” 
 
   You will see all locations available to file along with their respective city and county.  
 
   Select the location ID and enter gross sales at that location. 
 
   Note: If you are a Class 4, or Class 3 cable provider, your location may only be for the 
    city tax and you will enter your sales on line 7, not line 1. 
 
   Enter in your sales for all locations and then click “Next.”  
 
   Finally, make a payment and submit your return. 

 3. State-Level and Municipal-Level Filings 

Taxpayers Subject to State-Level Business Tax 

Taxpayers subject to the state business tax must file a return with the Department.  
 
Taxpayers Subject to Both State and Municipal-Level Business Tax 

Taxpayers with a location within the limits of a Tennessee municipality that has enacted the 
municipal-level business tax must file two returns for that location—one return for the 
municipal-level business tax and one return for the state-level business tax. 
 
Taxpayers with locations outside of the limits of any Tennessee city, or inside the limits of a 
city that has not enacted business tax, must file one business tax return for that location for 
the state-level tax. 
 
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Taxpayers with No Physical Location in Tennessee 

Taxpayers who enter Tennessee to conduct business activities but who do not have a 
physical location, outlet, or other place of business in Tennessee, and who generate gross 
sales of $100,000 or more in any Tennessee county, must file a business tax return for the 
gross receipts received in counties where gross receipts were $100,000 or more.135 

 4. Consolidated Returns 

Taxpayers with multiple business locations file a consolidated business tax return for all 
business locations. The consolidated return is a return that is filed under one account, 
regardless of how many locations the business has in Tennessee. 
 
When a taxpayer files a consolidated tax return, each location’s return information must be 
complete before the return is submitted. Taxpayers can choose to have one person submit 
the return on behalf of all locations, or taxpayers can identify different employees or tax 
professionals to report the information for each individual location in TNTAP. 
 
After all locations are reported, someone must submit the return on behalf of all locations. 
Otherwise, the return will not be submitted to the Department. Any person authorized to 
enter location filing details may also complete the final submission step for the business. All 
locations must be complete without errors to submit the return. Ideally, the last person to 
complete their location details should also complete the final submission. If the final 
submission is after the due date, the entire balance (sum of all locations) is subject to 
penalty and interest. 

Filing Example for a Business with Multiple Locations 

To have multiple individuals file for different locations for a single business in TNTAP, use the 
following steps. These steps can be repeated regardless of the number of locations a 
business has.  

The business in this example has 3 locations. Each location is filed by a different person: 
TNTAP User 1 is responsible for filing location 1; TNTAP User 2 is responsible for filing 
location 2; and TNTAP User 3 is responsible for filing location 3.  

   TNTAP User 1: 

     o         Log into TNTAP. 

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   o Go to the account and select the period you wish to file. 

   o Select the Location ID hyperlink for location 1. 

   o Enter the location 1 filing details. 

   o Select the “Save Draft” button. 

   o Select the “Finish Later” button, and then enter your password as 
     confirmation. At this point the location details for location 1 are saved. 

 TNTAP User 2: 

   o Log into TNTAP. 

   o Since TNTAP User 1 has entered details to this return, you need to edit the 
     existing saved return. To do so, select the “Submissions” Tab, and then in the 
     “Draft Submissions” section select the return hyperlink. 

   o In the “I Want To” section, select the “Edit Submission” hyperlink. 

   o Select the Location ID hyperlink for location 2. 

   o Enter the location 2 filing details. 

   o Select the “Save Draft” button. 

   o Select the “Finish Later” button, and then enter your password as 
     confirmation. At this point the location details for location 2 are saved. 

 TNTAP User 3: 

   o Log into TNTAP. 

   o Since TNTAP User 2 has entered details to this return, you need to edit the 
     existing saved return. To do so, select the “Submissions” Tab, and then in the 
     “Draft Submissions” section select the return hyperlink. 

   o In the “I Want To” section, select the “Edit Submission” hyperlink. 

   o Select the Location ID hyperlink for location 3. 

   o Enter the location 3 filing details. 

   o Select the “Save Draft” button. 

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    o Select the “Finish Later” button, and then enter your password as 
      confirmation. At this point the location details for location 3 are saved. 

  Final Submission Step: 

    o Now that all the location details are entered, the return is ready to be 
      submitted. 

    o Select the “Next” button. 

    o The summary of all locations is displayed. Select the “Submit” button. 

    o Enter your password to act as your signature. 

    o The confirmation page is displayed. The return has been successfully 
      submitted. 

5. Single-Member LLC Filing 

Single-member limited liability companies (“SMLLC”) are treated the same for local and state 
tax purposes as they are treated for federal income tax purposes. When an SMLLC is 
disregarded for federal income tax purposes, and its single member is a corporation, the 
SMLLC is disregarded for business tax purposes.  

Tennessee law requires that persons conducting business in this state report business tax 
on a location-by-location basis. Persons with multiple Tennessee locations must register for 
business tax for each individual location. 

SMLLCs making taxable sales from a Tennessee location may register their locations under 
the consolidated business tax account of its corporate single member for the purposes of 
filing returns and remitting taxes. If a corporate single member and an SMLLC are making 
sales from the same location, then only one business tax account is required. 

An SMLLC may also register separately from its corporate single member. However, while 
the SMLLC files returns and remits tax under its own accounts, the corporate single member 
is ultimately responsible for the tax, and the tax liability is determined on the basis that the 
SMLLC is a division of its corporate single member. 

Additionally, the SMLLC must obtain the appropriate business license(s) (see Chapter 3 for 
more information on when to acquire a business license).  

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        If an auditor discovers a SMLLC that is not properly registered for business 
        tax, the auditor may properly register the SMLLC prior to completing the 
        audit. 
                                                                                                
Filing Period 

The filing period for the business tax return is based on the taxpayer’s fiscal year. Unlike a 
calendar year return, a fiscal year return covers 12 consecutive months. The fiscal year 
begins on the first day of any month other than January and ends on the last day of the 12 th
month following (e.g., July 1 stthrough June 30 thof the next calendar year). A company with a 
fiscal year that begins on January 1 stand ends on December 31 stoperates on a calendar year 

basis. 

If a due date for a return falls on Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday, the due date is 
automatically extended until the next business day.136 Tennessee law states that whenever 
the due date for filing the return occurs on a weekend or a legal holiday for federal tax 
purposes, the Commissioner of Revenue may extend the due date to the next business day.  

For example: 

      Typically, calendar year tax returns are due on April 15. For the tax period ending 
       December 31, 2017 (calendar year 2017), April 15, 2018, fell on a Sunday. Therefore, 
       the calendar year 2017 returns were considered timely if they were filed on or before 
       Monday, April 16, 2018, which was the next business day following the weekend. 

Filing Due Dates 

   1. Due Dates 

Business tax returns are due on the 15 thday of the fourth month following the end of the 

taxpayer’s fiscal year.137 For example: 
 
      Businesses whose fiscal year ends on December 31 must file and pay their business 
       taxes on or before April 15 thof the following year. 

An electronic return is considered timely filed if it was: 
  
      Transmitted on or before the due date; 
        
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   Transmitted on or before the due date and subsequently accepted; or 
 
   Rejected by the Department because of a validation rule, corrected by the taxpayer, 
    and retransmitted within a ten-day grace period or “perfection period.”  
 
The perfection period is a period of ten calendar days.138 The perfection period begins on 
the day after the date of first transmission of an electronic return that is rejected by the 
Commissioner.139 Another perfection period occurs after the rejection of a return for failure 
to meet a validation test.140 

 2. Filing Extension 

The Department may, upon a showing of good cause, grant one extension, of not more than 
30 days, for a person liable for the business tax to file that person’s tax return and pay the 
tax shown to be due.  
 
Requests for such extensions:  
 
   Must be made in writing;  
     
   Must state why the extension is desired; 
 
   Must be signed; and  
 
   Must be submitted before the delinquent date of the return and tax. 
 
Interest, as provided in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-801, will be added to the amount of tax due, 
beginning from the statutory due date until the date the tax is paid. No penalty will be 
assessed if the return is made, and the full amount of taxes are paid on or before the 
extended due date.  
 
Any return and payment made after the extended due date will be subject to penalty and 
interest from the original statutory due date without regard to the period allowed by the 
extension. 
 
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  3. Estimated Assessment 

If a taxpayer has an open business tax account, it must file a return even if it did not 
have any gross receipts for the tax period. If a taxpayer does not file a return: 
 
    An estimated assessment as a delinquency will be posted to the taxpayer’s TNTAP 
     account; and  
      
    A notice will be sent to the taxpayer.  
 
The estimated tax assessment is based on the best information available to the Department, 
and the taxpayer bears the burden of showing by clear and cogent evidence that the 
assessment is incorrect.141 This is typically accomplished by filing a completed return for the 
tax period in question. If unresolved (i.e., the taxpayer continues to fail to file a return), the 
assessment will go to the Collection Services Division for collection. 
 
      If a taxpayer receives an estimated assessment, they should log into their 
      TNTAP account and file a return and pay the applicable tax, even if they are 
      reporting $0 sales. This will resolve the estimated assessment.  
                                                                                                    
Final Returns 

A true final return is the last return filed by an entity that no longer has business or financial 
activity in the state. Not all returns marked as final by taxpayers are true final returns.  
 
Taxpayers registered for business tax and holding a standard business license received from 
a city recorder or county clerk are legally obligated to file a final return and pay business tax 
to the Tennessee Department within 15 days after the close of business. This obligation 
stands regardless of the amount of income earned during the tax year. Even if no income 
was earned, minimum tax amounts must be paid. Taxpayers that close one or more, but 
not all, of their business locations are not required to file a final return. 

  1. Filing Requirements for Final Returns 

A final return must be filed by a taxpayer within 15 days after selling or quitting its business. 
A final return must also be filed, and a new license obtained, if a taxpayer changes its 
business location within a municipality more than once in a fiscal year. Until a final return is 

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filed, the taxpayer will be required to continue to file yearly returns and pay at least the 
minimum tax for that location.142 
 
If a taxpayer closes a location but has other locations remaining in business, it must close 
the location in TNTAP. The taxpayer will report any tax amounts owed by the closed location 
on its regularly filed annual return. 

Closing a TNTAP Account 

To close a TNTAP account, taxpayers must submit a “Close Account” request by completing 
the following steps: 
 
   Log in to TNTAP. 
     
   Select the hyperlink for your business tax account. 
 
   Select the hyperlink for “Close Account” under the “I Want To” section and indicate 
    which location(s) are closing and when the locations are closing. 
     
If a taxpayer’s business is not registered for business tax but had a minimal activity business 
license, the taxpayer is not required to file a return or pay taxes to the Department. 
However, these taxpayers must contact the county clerk or city recorder to ensure the 
proper authority is aware the taxpayer’s business has closed. 
 
If a business is subject to real and/or personal property tax, taxpayers must contact local 
county or city property tax assessor’s offices for instructions on paying final property taxes 
for their businesses. 

 2. Tax Clearance 

Certificate of Tax Clearance 

A Certificate of Tax Clearance declares that all tax returns administered by the Department 
have been filed and all liabilities have been paid. Certificates of Tax Clearance are issued to 
both terminating and ongoing businesses.  
 
The Department may grant Certificates of Tax Clearance for terminations, withdrawals, 
reinstatements, rescissions, authorizations, and good standing. Businesses often request a 

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Certificate of Tax Clearance to confirm they are in good standing with the Department to 
complete a large business transaction involving another entity.  
 
To receive a Certificate of Tax Clearance when shutting down a business, a business must file 
all returns to date and a final business tax return through the date of liquidation or the date 
the business ceased operations in Tennessee. Furthermore, all outstanding business tax 
payments must be made.  
 
A checked “final” box on a return is deemed a request for tax clearance for termination and 
withdrawal. When the Department receives a return marked final, the Department may: 
 
    Automatically issue a Certificate of Tax Clearance; 
      
    Automatically issue a Certificate of Tax Clearance denial letter that explains any 
     shortcomings and instructs the business to call the Department’s Taxpayer Services 
     Division to get the matter resolved so the tax clearance can be issued; or 
 
    Position the taxpayer for an audit. 
 
The Department’s Taxpayer Services Division issues the certificate after the Department 
reviews the account and determines all tax liabilities are satisfied. The Department mails the 
certificate to the business’s mailing address, unless otherwise specified. The clearance is 
valid for 45 days from the date of issuance. 

      Please remember to contact the Secretary of State to properly dissolve the 
      business. The Secretary of State will deny the dissolution or withdrawal 
      documents if the clearance is not received. The same Certificate of Tax 
      Clearance may be issued for several reasons and does not automatically 
      signify that business has terminated.                                                      
  
  3. Events Not Resulting in a Final Return 

Taxable entities incorporated, domesticated, qualified, or otherwise registered to do 
business in this state but that are inactive in this state, or whose charter, domestication 
qualification, or other registration is forfeited, revoked, or suspended without the entity 
being properly dissolved, surrendered, withdrawn, cancelled, or otherwise properly 
terminated are not relieved from filing a return and paying the business tax.143 
 
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Overpayments 

When a taxpayer has multiple tax type accounts, an overpayment to one tax type account 
may be used to pay/offset a tax liability on another account. Taxpayers should notify the 
Department if they do not consent to this payment reallocation. Please note, however, that it 
is not the Department’s responsibility to allocate payments to various accounts to avoid 
penalties or interest from accruing.  
 
The received date of the overpayment should be the date the overpayment occurred (when 
the return was filed creating the overpayment or when the payment was received 
overpaying the tax liability). The overpayment may be used to pay/offset any tax liability 
before payment of the computed penalty and/or interest liability. Overpayments may also 
be considered payments when an auditor computes penalties and interest.  

Penalties 

A penalty is imposed for the late filing of a tax return and for late payment of taxes owed to 
the state. When a taxpayer fails to submit a timely return and penalties and/or interest are 
applied, the penalties and interest become part of the tax due. The Commissioner of 
Revenue may for good cause waive the payment of penalty on any tax due.   144 

 1. Penalties and Penalty Rates 

Delinquency Penalty – Filing or Paying Late 

If a taxpayer does not file its return, files late, or does not timely pay the tax due, a 
delinquency penalty will be assessed. The penalty is computed at a rate of 5% per month, or 
any portion of a month, from the due date until the date taxes are paid.  
 
   The maximum penalty is 25% of the tax amount due. 
     
   The minimum penalty is $15, regardless of the amount of tax due.  

Negligence Penalty 

Taxpayers are expected to file returns with all required schedules and disclosures and pay 
the applicable tax based on Tennessee law. Failure to do so may result in the Department 
assessing a penalty if the Department determines such failure is due to negligence. 

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Negligence includes, but is not limited to, any failure to make a reasonable attempt to 
comply with the law. 
 
A taxpayer’s failure to report and pay the total amount of taxes due may result in the 
imposition of a penalty in the amount of 10% of the underpayment, if the Department 
determines such failure is due to negligence.145  

Fraud Penalty  

Fraud includes any deceitful practice or willful device resorted to with the intent to evade the 
tax.146 If the Department determines a failure to report and pay tax is due to fraud, a penalty 
of 100% of the underpayment will be imposed against the taxpayer. Imposition of this 
penalty is in lieu of all other penalties imposed by the Department, except penalties for 
dishonored check or money order payments and penalties imposed in accordance with the 
Tax Enforcement Procedures Act.147  

    2. Penalty Waivers 

The Commissioner is authorized to waive, in whole or in part, penalties that are not the 
result of gross negligence or willful disregard of the law, if such penalties fall within any of 
the good and reasonable causes for waiver set forth in the law.148 Thus, the Commissioner 
does not have the authority to waive properly imposed fraud penalties. Interest may not 
be waived under any circumstances, as specifically provided in Tennessee law.149 
 
If a taxpayer fails to pay the full amount of tax due, the following circumstances would be 
good and reasonable causes for the waiver of penalty:150 
 
      The taxpayer incurred a deficiency because of the taxpayer’s good faith reliance on 
       the incorrect interpretation of a law or regulation that was, at the time, unclear and 
       misleading. 
        
      The taxpayer incurred a deficiency because the taxpayer relied on factual, but not 
       legal, misrepresentations made by business associates of the taxpayer, of which the 
       taxpayer had no reason to doubt or question. 
 
      The taxpayer incurred a deficiency because the taxpayer made a factual mistake, but 
       after discovering the mistake, voluntarily and without demand from the Department, 
       remitted the amount of the deficiency plus accrued interest. 
 
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If the taxpayer’s late filing and payment of tax is no more than 30 days after the due date, 
the following circumstances would be good and reasonable causes for the waiver of the 
penalty:151 
 
  The return was timely mailed but was not timely received or not received at all, and 
   the taxpayer provides evidence that it was mailed as required.     152 
    
  The delinquency was caused by an intervening providential cause that occurred 
   before the filing and payment due date, such as a disabling injury, illness, or death of 
   the taxpayer, a member of the taxpayer’s immediate family, or the exclusive 
   preparer of the taxpayer’s returns. 
    
  The delinquency was caused by the unavoidable absence of the taxpayer or the 
   exclusive preparer of the taxpayer’s returns. 
 
  The delinquency was caused by the destruction by fire or other casualty of the 
   taxpayer’s place of business or business records. 
    
  The taxpayer proves that it requested the proper tax forms from the Department in 
   a timely manner, but they were not sent to the taxpayer in time for the taxpayer to 
   complete and file the return by the due date. 
 
  The taxpayer proves that the taxpayer personally visited an office of the Department 
   before the filing due date to get information or assistance to properly complete a tax 
   return, but through no fault of the taxpayer, was unable to get information or help. 
    
  The delinquency was caused by the taxpayer’s failure to include payment with its 
   timely filed return, if the taxpayer promptly provides payment when notified by the 
   Department and satisfactorily demonstrates that the payment omission was due to 
   an inadvertent oversight or error. 
    
  The delinquency is discovered only when the taxpayer voluntarily pays the tax, but 
   the Department is legally unable to enforce collection (e.g., the collection would be 
   barred by the statute of limitations or the lack of jurisdiction). 
    
  The taxpayer timely filed and paid the tax for at least the two-year period preceding 
   the due date of the delinquent return and payment, and the delinquency was not 
   caused by a willful disregard of the law or gross negligence. 

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The Department may also waive a penalty for good and reasonable cause, even if the cause 
for the deficiency/delinquency does not match one of the above circumstances. But to do so, 
the taxpayer must show it acted in a reasonably prudent manner. The taxpayer must also show 
that the deficiency/delinquency was not caused by a willful disregard of the law or gross 
negligence.153 
 
Any taxpayer that believes it has good and reasonable cause for waiver of any penalty 
assessed should petition the Commissioner in writing by selecting the “Petition for Penalty 
Waiver” in their TNTAP account. A Petition for Waiver of Penalty Form is also available on the 
Department’s website under the General Forms section. 

Interest 

Interest applies to any taxes not paid by the date required by law, even if the Department 
grants a filing extension. The Department calculates the interest rate each July 1 stusing a 

statutorily imposed formula.154  
 
         The Department is prohibited by law to waive interest. Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-
         1-803(a)(2) states that the Commissioner’s authority to waive penalties may 
         under no circumstances extend to interest. 

All delinquent or deficient tax payments, either administered or collected by the 
Commissioner, begin accruing interest from the date delinquent or deficient until paid.155  
 
      For tax periods prior to the date of assessment, interest accrues at the prevailing 
       rate in effect on the date of the tax assessment, regardless of the tax period 
       involved. 
        
      For periods subsequent to the date of assessment, interest accrues at the prevailing 
       rate in effect on the date of the accrual of such interest. 
        
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Assessments 

 1. Assessment Following an Audit 

The Audit Division will issue the taxpayer a Notice of Proposed Assessment if an auditor, 
after reviewing the taxpayer’s books and records, determines the taxpayer underpaid 
business tax. Taxpayers can work with the Audit Division to resolve issues in the assessment. 
Taxpayers also have the right to request an informal conference with the Commissioner, or 
the Commissioner’s designee, to discuss proposed assessments.156 The Notice of Proposed 
Assessment becomes a Final Assessment on the 31 stday after the assessment was issued, 

unless the taxpayer requests an informal conference.   
 
A taxpayer wishing to contest the Final Assessment without making a payment must file suit 
in chancery court within 90 days. However, if the taxpayer requests an informal conference 
within 30 days of the date of the Notice of Proposed Assessment, the 90-day period is halted 
until the conference decision is issued.157 The 90 days continues after the decision is issued 
(please note: the 90 days does not restart, thus if the taxpayer requested a conference on 
day 30, the day after the conference decision is issued will be day 31 for the 90-day count). 

     The Department has published the Taxpayers’ Bill of Rights and information 
     about the informal conference process on the Department’s website. 
                                                                                                 
 2. Estimated Assessment 

If a taxpayer fails to file a business tax return or files a false or fraudulent return, the 
Department may issue a Notice of Proposed Assessment based upon the best information 
available to the Department. This type of assessment is commonly referred to as an 
estimated assessment.  
 
The assessment may be made at any time and is not barred by the statute of limitations.158     
Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1501(c) provides that the tax assessed under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-
1501(b) may be collected within the period of limitations provided for in Tenn. Code Ann. § 
67-1-1429. Therefore, the Commissioner has six years from the date that any assessment is 
made to collect a levy or begin a court proceeding to collect such an assessment. For 
example: 
 
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    If the Department assessed a taxpayer for business tax on June 30, 2020, the 
     Department would have until June 30, 2026, to collect or make a levy or begin court 
     proceedings to collect the assessment. 

Statutes of Limitations 

 1. Assessments 

The statute of limitations for a business tax assessment is three years from December 31 stof 

the year in which the return was filed. This means the Department may only assess 
additional tax within this period. Assessments may be made at any time if a return is not 
filed, or if a false or fraudulent return is filed with the intent to evade taxation.159 

 2. Refunds 

The statute of limitations for refund claims is three years from December 31 stof the year in 

which the payment was made. If a taxpayer makes business tax payments and fails to claim 
the payments on its return, it will lose the right to claim those payments after three years 
from December 31 stof the year in which the tax return was filed. 160 
 
Refund Determinations 

The Department must decide on a refund claim within six months of the receipt of the claim. 
If the Department does not decide within six months following the receipt of the claim, the 
claim is deemed denied. If the Department denies the claim for refund, the taxpayer may 
request an informal conference or file a lawsuit for refund in chancery court within one year 
from the date that the claim for refund was filed.161 

The following are examples of barred refund claims: 
 
   A taxpayer filed its 2014 business tax return with payment of $3,000 on April 15, 
     2015. The return and the payment became barred after December 31, 2018. 
 
    On March 20, 2018, a taxpayer made a payment of $10,000 for the 2017 tax period. 
     However, the 2017 return was not filed until April 15, 2021. On the return, the 
     taxpayer computed a tax liability of $100.00 and requested a refund of $9,900. The 
     overpayment of $9,900 qualifies for a refund, because the return/request was made 
     within 3 years of December 31 in the year in which the payment was made. 

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      Using the same facts as directly above, except taxpayer does not file the 2017 
       return on April 15, 2021 – instead, it files the return and requests the refund on 
       April 15, 2022. In this case, the refund would be barred because the return 
       requesting the refund was filed beyond the 3-year period.  
 
For purposes of the statute of limitations, the Department considers extension payments to 
have been made as of the statutory due date or extended due date of the return. 

 3. Extensions 

The Department may enter into a written agreement with the taxpayer to extend the 
statutory period of limitations upon assessment of taxes payable to, or refundable by, the 
Department. The Department will provide the taxpayer with a standardized form when 
extending the statute of limitations during an audit. The waiver form extends both the 
period for making assessments and the period for requesting refunds. 
 
The taxpayer and the appropriate Department official must sign the waiver agreement 
before it will be considered a fully executed agreement. Both parties must sign the extension 
form before the statute of limitations period has expired. The form cannot be ‘back-dated’ 
and signed after the expiration of the statute by either party. Audits will have to be adjusted 
for expired periods if the waiver is not signed by both parties before the expiration of the 
statute of limitations. Taxpayers should make a copy of the signed form before returning the 
form to the auditor. 

Record Maintenance and Retention 

Any return, if it is open under the statute of limitations, is subject to either a field audit or an 
office audit. Taxpayers must establish and maintain records that show the gross amount of 
Tennessee sales tax liability and the amount of gross receipts subject to business tax. The 
Department has the authority to request these records to determine the correct amount of 
a business’s tax liability.162 
 
If a taxpayer keeps electronic records, it must provide the records to the Department in a 
standard record format upon request. The Department will use the best information 
available if a taxpayer does not maintain appropriate records.163 
 
Taxpayers must keep records of business transactions for  a minimum  of  three  years from 

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December  31  of  the  year  in  which  the  associated  business  tax  return  was  filed  and 
must  include: 
 
  A daily record of all cash and credit sales including those under a finance or 
   installment plan; 

  A record of the amount of all merchandise purchased including bills of lading, 
   invoices, and purchase orders; 

  A record of all exclusions, deductions, and exemptions allowed or claimed; and 

  A true and complete yearly inventory of the value of stock on hand.164 

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Chapter 7: Sourcing and Distribution 

Sourcing 

The term sourcing refers to where a specific taxable sale/transaction is considered to take 
place. Sourcing determines where the collected tax is ultimately distributed (i.e., which 
county or city receives the distribution). Generally, the sourcing of taxable sales made by 
taxpayers and the distribution of the state-level and municipal-level business taxes collected 
depends on the type and location of the taxpayer. 

 1. In-State Taxpayers other than Video Programmers, Mobile 
    Telecommunications Providers, and Classification 4 Contractors  

If the taxpayer is in the state of Tennessee, its sales are sourced to the county and/or 
municipality where it has a physical location. If an in-state taxpayer does business anywhere 
else in the state without establishing a place of business in that locality, those sales will also 
be sourced to the county and/or municipality where it has a physical location.165 There are, 
however, special rules that apply to specific businesses such as contractors, and video 
programmers, that are discussed in more detail below. If the municipality where the 
taxpayer is located has not elected to levy the municipal-level tax or if the taxpayer is located 
outside of any municipality limits, no municipal-level tax will be due. 
 
If the taxpayer’s activities extend into another county or municipality to the extent that the 
taxpayer establishes an additional location, the taxpayer will also source sales from that 
location to the additional county or municipality. Please see Chapter 2 for additional 
information on how to determine if a business has established a location.  

 2. Out-of-State Taxpayers other than Video Programmers, Mobile 
    Telecommunications Providers, and Classification 4 Contractors 

Sales from a taxpayer without a Tennessee location are sourced to the state and reported 
on the state Location ID. Such sales are apportioned to the state, and 100% of the state 
business tax collected on such sales will be distributed to the state general fund. Out-of-
state taxpayers are generally exempt (as discussed in Chapter 2 of the Manual) from the 
municipal-level tax.166   
 
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 3. Taxpayers with both In-State and Out-of-State Locations other than 
    Classification 4 Contractors   

Businesses  with established locations in Tennessee that also make taxable sales from 
locations outside of the state should source  the sales made from or  attributed to the 
business’s in-state location to the applicable city/county. Sales made from or attributed to the 
business’s out-of-state location should be sourced to the state. This means that the business 
should register for county, and if applicable, city account(s) for its sales made from its in-state 
location and for a state account for its sales made from its out-of-state location. 
 
For example:   
 
   Company A  sells uniforms from three different  locations in Tennessee:  the city of 
    Nashville  (within the urban services  district of Davidson County), Spring Hill, and 
    Franklin. It also has a Kentucky location and a Virginia location that make sales of items 
    to Tennessee customers that it delivers in its own trucks.   
     
   Company A must register each of its Tennessee locations with and obtain a business 
    license from the Nashville, Franklin, and Spring Hill city officials and the Davidson, 
    Williamson, and Maury County clerks. It must also file returns for each location and 
    pay the appropriate city and state taxes.   
 
   Additionally, Company A must register its Kentucky and Virginia locations with the 
    Department (it will have one state account for all its out-of-state locations) and file a 
    state tax return and pay the appropriate state tax based on its total Tennessee sales 
    made from the Kentucky and Virginia locations. It will not get business licenses for 
    these locations. 

 4. Contractors 

If an in-state or out-of-state contractor has sales of more than $100,000 in a county or more 
than $100,000 in a municipality, then those sales are sourced to the county and/or 
municipality where the contract work was performed. These are considered deemed 
locations and are treated the same as a physical location.167 If the municipality where the 
work was done has not elected to levy the tax, then those sales will not be subject to the 
municipality tax. 
 
If an in-state contractor has sales of $100,000 or less in a county or incorporated 
municipality, then those sales are sourced to the county and/or municipality of the 

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contractor’s domicile. If sales of $100,000 or less are earned in an area outside of an 
incorporated municipality’s limits, then those sales will not be subject to the municipality tax. 
 
The tax collected from all such sales is distributed as described for in-state taxpayers to the 
locations where the sales are sourced. 
 
If the contractor does not have a Tennessee domicile and has sales of $100,000 or less in a 
county, then those sales are sourced to the state, and the state business tax is distributed to 
the state general fund. In such cases, the contractor is not subject to the municipality 
business tax. 

 5. Video Programmers 

If the taxpayer provides video programming services (as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6- 
102 provided below), all its sales from taxable sales of services and tangible personal 
property are sourced to the county and/or municipality where the services or tangible 
personal property were received by its customer. This is true, even if the taxpayer does not 
have a physical location in that locality.168 The tax is distributed as described for in-state 
taxpayers, with the county and municipality portions going to the counties and 
municipalities where the sales are sourced. 
 
“Video programming services” is defined as programming by “a television broadcast station 
and shall include cable television services sold by a provider authorized pursuant to title 7, 
chapter 59, wireless cable television services (multipoint distribution service / multichannel 
multipoint distribution service) and video services provided through wireline facilities located 
at least in part in the public rights-of-way without regard to delivery technology, including 
Internet protocol technology.” “Video programming services” does not include any of the 
following: 
 
   Digital products transferred electronically, including, but not limited to, software, 
    ringtones, and reading materials such as books, magazines, and newspapers; 
     
   Audio and video programming services provided by a commercial mobile service 
    provider as defined in 47 U.S.C. §  332(d) ; 
 
   Audio and video programming services provided as part of, or incidental to, Internet 
    access service, such as, but not limited to, video capable email, provided, that the 

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    services are not generally considered comparable to programming provided by a 
    television broadcast station; and 
 
   Direct-to-home satellite television programming services. 

 6. Mobile Telecommunications Service Providers 

Mobile (cellular) telecommunications service providers (“providers”) who provide mobile 
telecommunications services to customers in Tennessee must source sales from such sales 
to the customer’s primary place of use in accordance with the Mobile Telecommunications 
Sourcing Act.169 Note that this special sourcing rule only includes sales of mobile 
telecommunications services. Sales of cellular equipment (e.g., cell phones, chargers, 
accessories, etc.) are sourced to the taxpayer’s location where the sales were made. 
 
For Example: 
 
   Company X sells mobile telecommunications services, cellphones, and accessories. 
    During the tax year, Company X sold $105,000 of cellphones and accessories from its 
    Chattanooga store location. Company X also made $340,000 in mobile 
    telecommunications services sales to customers with a place of primary use in the 
    following cities in Hamilton County: $105,000 in Chattanooga, $105,000 in East Ridge, 
    $25,000 in Red Bank, $5,000 in Soddy-Daisy, and $100,000 in the unincorporated 
    area of Hamilton County. 
      
   The $105,000 in sales of cellphone and accessories made from the Chattanooga 
    store are sourced and reported for both the city and county under the Classification 
    2 under the store Location ID. 
     
   The mobile telecommunications services are sourced and reported using the 
    Classification 3 rate as follows: 
      
    o $105,000 under the Chattanooga Location ID; 
    o $105,000 under the East Ridge Location ID; and  
    o $340,000 under the Hamilton County Location ID. 
       
    Because the mobile telecommunications services sold to customers with a place of 
    primary use in the city of Soddy-Daisy and Red Bank are less than $100,000, no 
    business tax is reported to Soddy-Daisy and Red Bank. However, the $5,000 and 

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    $25,000 are included in sales reported to Hamilton County. The provider is still 
    required to have minimal business activity licenses for the cities of Soddy-Daisy and 
    Red Bank. 
     
For more information on sales of services, see Chapter 4 of this manual. 

Distributions 

 1. In-state Taxpayer Distributions 

State business tax collections from in-state taxpayers are distributed as follows: 
 
   $7.00 per return will be paid to the county clerk in the county in which the taxpayer 
    has a physical location; then 
     
   5% of the remaining collections will be paid to the county clerk in the county where 
    the taxpayer has a physical location; then 
 
   42.62% of the remaining collections will be paid into the State’s general fund;170 then 
 
   1.125% of the remaining collections will be paid to the Department of Revenue to 
    cover administration and collection expenses; then 
 
   The remaining collections will be paid to the county in which the taxpayer has a 
    physical location.171 

 2. Municipal-Level Business Tax Collections from In-state Taxpayers 

Municipality business tax collections from in-state taxpayers are distributed as follows: 
 
   $7.00 per return will be paid to the appropriate city official in the municipality in 
    which the taxpayer has a physical location; then 
     
   5% of the remaining collections will be paid to the appropriate city official in the 
    municipality in which the taxpayer has a physical location; then 
 
    42.62% of the remaining collections will be paid into a fund held by the State to be 
    used for purposes of the municipality in which the taxpayer has a physical location; 
    then 

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   1.125% of the remaining collections will be paid to the Department to cover 
    administration and collection expenses; then 
 
   The remaining collections will be paid to the municipality in which the taxpayer has a 
    physical location.   172 

 3. Fees Levied Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710 

The fees, penalties, and interest levied by a county or municipality for the exercise of 
privileges of antique malls, flea markets, craft shows, antique shows, gun shows, auto shows, 
and transient vendors will be retained by the county or municipality that levied the fee.173 An 
amount equal to 5% of the proceeds of the fee will be paid to the county clerk, if fees are 
collected by the county, or to the municipal business tax official, if fees are collected by the 
municipality.174 

 4. Taxpayers Without Licenses or Locations 

The tax, interest, and penalties collected from taxpayers without licenses under Tenn. Code 
Ann. § 67-4-723(a) or established physical locations, outlets, or other places of business in 
any county or municipality in Tennessee are earmarked and allocated in entirety to the 
state’s general fund.175 

 5. Audited Taxpayers 

As previously stated in this chapter, when the Department audits a taxpayer’s books and 
records and discovers that the taxpayer owes additional tax, penalty, or interest, 100% of the 
tax, penalty, or interest assessed because of the audit will be earmarked and specifically 
allocated to the state’s general fund.176         

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Chapter 8: Exemptions and Exclusions 

Exempt Sales of Services 

Generally, sales of services are subject to the business tax.  However, Tenn. Code Ann. § 
67-4-708(3)(c)(i-xvi) lists 16  types of services that are excluded from taxation. The Standard 
Industrial Classification Index of 1972 (“SIC” or “SIC Index”) provides definitions of business 
activities that are both taxable and exempt under the Tennessee Code. Taxpayers should 
use the definitions of the 16 types of services provided in the SIC Index and any 
supplements and amendments to the SIC to determine if their business activities qualify as 
exempt under the Tennessee  Code. 177 
 
The SIC Index classifies business establishments by the type of economic activity they 
perform; SIC classifications are based on the “primary” or “predominant” activity of the 
subject industries. Not all business types are included in the SIC Index; rather, the SIC Index 
classifies only those types of business establishments representing a significant part of the 
economy.178 
 
The following 16 services are exempt from business tax: 
 
  Medical, dental, and allied health services to human beings, including convalescent 
   and rest home care, but excluding services by persons engaged in the business of 
   making dentures and artificial teeth; 
    
  Legal services; Educational services offered by elementary and secondary schools, 
   colleges, universities, professional schools and junior colleges, library and 
   information centers, correspondence schools, vocational schools, and specialized 
   non-degree-granting schools; 
 
  Services rendered by nonprofit membership organizations operating on a nonprofit 
   membership basis for the promotion of the interest of the members; 
 
  Domestic services performed in private households; 
 
  Services furnished by nonprofit educational and research agencies; 
 
  Services by religious and charitable organizations; 
 
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   Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping services; 
 
   Public Utilities as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101; 
 
   Banking services including brokerage and investment services; 
 
   Insurance services; 
 
   Operation of residential and nonresidential buildings except hotels, motels, and 
    rooming houses; 
 
   Leasing of agricultural, airport, forest, mining, oil, and public utility property; 
 
   Veterinarian services; 
 
   Architectural, engineering, and land surveying services; and  
 
   Services provided by farmers to other farmers for the planting or harvesting of 
    agricultural products or for the preparation, improvement, or maintenance of land 
    used to produce agricultural products.179  
 
Although services by the above entities are exempt from business tax, these entities may 
be liable for business tax if they make other types of sales that do not fall within this 
exemption. 

 1. Medical, Dental, and Allied Health Services 

The sales of medical, dental, and allied health services to human beings (SIC Major Group 80), 
except services of persons making dentures and artificial teeth, are exempt from business tax.  
This exemption includes, but is not limited to, services offered by: 
 
    Licensed medical professionals 
      
    Dentists 
 
    Licensed massage therapists 
     
    Assisted living facilities 

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     Acupuncturist 
 
     Audiologists 
 
     Chiropractors 
 
     Optometrists 
 
     Podiatrists  
 
These entities may be liable for business tax if they make other types of sales that do not fall 
within this exemption. 
 
    For example, sales of tangible personal property, such as electric toothbrushes or 
     teeth whitening products, by a dentist are subject to business tax.  

  2. Legal Services 

 Establishments headed by members of the bar and primarily engaged in offering legal advice 
 or services are exempt from business tax as legal services according to Industry Group 8111 
 of the SIC.180 Exempt legal services do not include court reporter services, nor do they 
 include services that are not provided by an attorney.181 

  3. Educational Services 

 Certain educational services are exempt from business tax. These services are exempt if 
 offered by organizations providing academic or technical instruction. Educational services 
 offered by libraries, student exchange programs, and curriculum development programs 
 are also exempt educational services. 
  
 Exempt educational services include services offered by:  
  
     Elementary and secondary schools 
       
     Colleges 
 
     Universities 
 
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    Professional schools 
 
    Junior colleges 
 
    Libraries and information centers 
 
    Vocational schools 
 
    Specialized non-degree  granting  schools  (e.g.,  pilot  school,  driving  school, 
     finishing  school)   
 
Educational services offered by the following entities are not exempt from business tax: 
 
   Schools for the instruction of beauticians, cosmetologists, and barbers; 
     
   Schools providing job training for the unemployed, underemployed, handicapped, 
    and persons with job market disadvantage due to a lack of education, job skill, or 
    experience; 
 
   Individuals providing music lessons or private tutoring services; 
 
   Daycares; and  
 
   Pre-Kindergarten programs. 

 4. Services Rendered by Nonprofit Membership Organizations 

Services rendered by nonprofit membership organizations operating on a nonprofit 
membership basis for the promotion of the interest of the members are not subject to 
business tax. If nonprofit membership organizations make sales of food, beverages, or other 
tangible personal property, these sales are subject to business tax.182 
 
Nonprofit membership organizations are delineated as such by federal law and include: 
 
   Business associations 
     
   Professional membership organizations 
 
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      Labor unions 
 
      Civil, social, and fraternal associations 
 
      Political organizations 
 
      Religious organizations  

    5. Domestic Services Provided in Private Households 

Domestic services performed in private households are exempt from Tennessee business 
tax.183 Private households that qualify for this exemption may employ individuals as 
cooks, laundresses, maids, sitters, butlers, personal secretaries, managers of personal 
affairs, and outside workers such as gardeners, caretakers, and other maintenance 
workers. 184 
 
This exemption does not include:  
 
      Services performed by businesses that hold their services out to the general public, 
       such as home care companies.  
         
      Services performed in the households of farming establishments, amusement, and 
       entertainment services, or babysitting and other day care services.  

    6. Nonprofit Educational and Research Agencies 

Services furnished by nonprofit educational and research agencies are exempt from 
business tax.185 According to the SIC Index, educational and research agencies are 
organizations performing noncommercial research that operate primarily on funds from 
endowments, contributions, and grants. These services are classified in Industry 8733 titled 
Noncommercial Research Organizations within Industry Group 873 titled Research, 
Development, and Educational Research in the SIC Index.186 
 
Services furnished by organizations that perform commercial research are not exempt 
under this section.   
 
The following research activities are exempt from business tax as nonprofit educational and 
research agencies:   
 
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   Archeological expeditions  
     
   Biological research 
 
   Economic research 
 
   Medical research 
 
   Scientific research 
 
   Sociological research 

 7. Services by Religious and Charitable Organizations 

Neither the SIC Index, the Tennessee Code, nor the Tennessee courts have defined the term 
“charitable organization” for the purposes of Tennessee business tax. The Tennessee 
Supreme Court stated that when a statute does not define a term, it is proper to look to 
common usage to determine the term’s meaning.187 Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004) 
defines the term “charitable organization” as a “tax-exempt organization that:  
 
   Is organized and operated exclusively for religious, scientific, literary, educational, 
    athletic, public-safety, or community-service purposes; 
     
   Does not distribute earnings for the benefit of private individuals; and  
 
   Does not participate in any way in political candidate campaigns or engage in 
    substantial lobbying.” 
 
The Department uses the above criteria to determine whether a taxpayer is classified as a 
charitable organization and exempt from business tax.  

 8. Accounting, Auditing, and Bookkeeping Services 

Businesses primarily engaged in furnishing accounting, bookkeeping, and auditing services 
are exempt from business tax.188 These businesses may use data processing techniques as 
part of providing their services. However, businesses that are primarily engaged in providing 
data processing services are not included under this exemption. Businesses providing 
income tax preparation services without accounting, auditing, or bookkeeping services are 
not included under this exemption. 

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The following services are included under this exemption: 
 
        Accounting services 
          
        Auditing services 
 
        Bookkeeping and billing services 
 
        Services by certified public accountants 
 
        Payroll accounting services  

    9. Public Utilities 

Public utilities, as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101(6)(A), are exempt from business 
tax.189  
 
“Public utility” means every individual, copartnership, association, corporation, or joint stock 
company, its lessees, trustees, or receivers, appointed by any court whatsoever, that own, 
operate, manage or control, within the state, any interurban electric railway, traction 
company, all other common carriers, express, gas, electric light, heat, power, water, 
telephone, telegraph, telecommunications services, or any other like system, plant or 
equipment, affected by and dedicated to the public use, under privileges, franchises, 
licenses, or agreements, granted by the state or by any political subdivision thereof.190 
 
Public utilities do not include: 
 
        Corporations, agencies, or instrumentalities owned by the United States; 
          
        Counties, municipal corporations, or other subdivisions of Tennessee; 
 
        Corporations, agencies, or instrumentalities of the state; 
 
        Corporations or joint stock companies where more than 50 percent of the voting 
         stock or shares are owned by the United States, the state of Tennessee, or by any 
         other nonutility in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101(6)(A)(i)-(iii); 
 
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  Cooperative organizations, corporations, or associations not organized or doing 
   business for profit; 
 
  Individuals or entities offering domestic public cellular radio telephone services 
   authorized by the federal communications commission; 
 
  Counties, municipal corporations, or subdivisions of states bordering Tennessee to 
   the extent that these entities distribute natural gas to retail customers within the 
   municipal boundaries and/or urban growth boundaries of a Tennessee city or town 
   adjoining the bordering state; 
 
  Any non-utilities acting jointly, in combination with, or through a joint agency or 
   instrumentality; 
 
  Nonprofit Corporations that own and operate wastewater systems primarily for the 
   use of the members of the corporation and which has received a written statement 
   of exemption from regulation as a public utility from the Tennessee public utility 
   commission prior to January 1, 2009;  
 
  Nonprofit homeowners’ associations or organizations; or 
 
  Interexchange carriers.  

Trucking Companies 

Transportation companies carrying or hauling passengers or cargo for a consideration are 
generally subject to business tax on all intrastate receipts.191  However, Tenn. Code Ann.        
§ 67-4-708(C)(ix) states that persons making sales of services or engaging in the business of a 
public utility, as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101, are exempt from the business tax.  
Public utility (see Section 9 for the full definition) includes “common carriers.” Unfortunately, 
the business tax code does not define the term “common carrier.”  
 
Trucking companies historically operated under specific operating authorities issued by the 
federal and state government. Such operating authorities were referred to as a “common 
carrier operating authority” or a “contract carrier operating authority.” Similar to the other 
services listed in Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101(6), common carriers generally operated to 
inure to the benefit of the public without the right to choose or discriminate. Contract 
carriers were not bound to accept business from the general public. 

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However, the evolution of the trucking industry rendered these distinctions superfluous; 
thus, federal and state regulations have essentially removed these authorities and instead 
simply issue a motor carrier operating authority. Because common carrier operating 
authorities are no longer issued, the Department no longer relies on operating authorities 
for purposes of administering the business tax.  
 
Therefore, if a trucking company offers its services to the public, it is a common carrier and 
is exempt from business tax.  Even if the trucking company’s services are negotiated by 
contract, dedicated, and certain vehicles are exclusive to a specific customer, the 
transportation services are exempt if the trucking company solicits additional business from 
the public in any way.  
 
If a trucking company only offers its service under continuing agreements with a person or 
limited number of persons by dedicating motor vehicles to them for their exclusive use for a 
continuing period and does not hold itself out to the public as soliciting additional 
customers, it is not operating as a common carrier and all its intrastate receipts are subject 
to business tax.  
 
Finally, transportation companies such as local moving companies, towing companies, taxis, 
limousines, ride sharing services, and transportainment companies like the buses and 
trolleys around town that haul passengers for entertainment purposes are not public 
utilities for business tax purposes. Therefore, such businesses are subject to business tax.  

 10. Banking and Related Functions 

Tennessee law192 specifically exempts from business tax services furnished by institutions 
engaged in deposit banking or closely related functions, including:  
 
  Banking services provided by reserve banks, commercial banks, savings institutions, 
   credit unions, and foreign banks;  
    
  Fiduciary activities;  
 
  Services furnished by persons engaged in extending credit or lending money except 
   persons taxable under subdivision (5); 
 
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  Services furnished by establishments engaged in the underwriting, purchase, sale, or 
   brokerage of securities on their own account or on the account of others; 
 
  Services furnished by exchanges, exchanged clearing houses, and other services 
   allied with the exchange of securities and commodities; and 
 
  Services furnished by investment trusts, investment companies, holding companies, 
   and commodity trading companies. 
 
Major Group 61 (Non-depository Credit Institutions) of the 1987 SIC Index includes 
establishments engaged in the business of extending credit in the form of loans, but not 
engaged in deposit banking. 

State and Federal Credit Unions 

State and federal credit unions are exempt from almost  all  forms of state taxation, 
including business tax.193 12 U.S.C. § 1768 states that “Federal credit unions . . ., their 
property, their franchises, capital, reserves, surpluses, and other funds, and their income 
shall be exempt from all taxation now or hereafter imposed by the United States or by any 
State, Territorial, or local taxing authority; except that any real property and tangible 
personal property of such Federal credit unions shall be subject to Federal, State, 
Territorial, and local taxation to the same extent as other similar property is taxed.” 
 
Tenn. Code Ann. § 45-4-803 states that “[e]xcept for taxes on property and the credit union 
fees provided by law, no tax levied by this state, whether privilege, excise, franchise, sales 
or otherwise, shall be levied upon or be applicable to any credit union chartered under the 
laws of this state unless and until the same tax may be legally levied upon and be 
applicable to federally chartered credit unions in this state, in which case the tax shall be 
levied upon and be applicable to all such state and federally chartered credit unions.” 
 
Federal credit unions are exempt from all forms of state taxation, including business tax, 
except for ad valorem taxation of real and personal property. In the United States Court of 
Appeals case United States of America v. State of Michigan, 851 F.2d 803, 808-09 (6th Cir. 
1988), the court determined that federal credit unions are federal instrumentalities and 
enjoy the immunities of the federal government. State credit unions also are exempt from 
all state taxation, including business tax, except for ad valorem taxation of real and 
personal property. 

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Brokerage Fees or Commissions 

Businesses that solicit or broker loans on behalf of and for the benefit of their customers 
and other mortgage loan companies are included in Industry Group 616 as mortgage 
bankers and brokers and are exempt from business tax. 

    11. Insurance  Services 

Providers of insurance or  insurance  agents  of  any  type  selling  or  furnishing  necessary 
services related to insurance and insurance adjustors are exempt from business tax. See 
Industry Group 641 titled Insurance Agents, Brokers, and Services within SIC Major Group 
64194 This exemption also includes independent organizations and businesses that are engaged 
in the provision of insurance services, e.g., insurance research services, insurance loss 
prevention services, and insurance claim adjusters not employed by insurance companies.   

    12.Operators   of Residential and Nonresidential Buildings  

Businesses primarily engaged in the operation of dwellings of apartment buildings, dwellings 
other than apartment buildings, and nonresidential buildings are exempt from business tax. 
See Industries 6512-6514 within SIC Industry Group 651 titled Real Estate Operators (except 
Developers) and Lessors. However, businesses engaged in the operation of hotels, motels, 

and rooming houses are not exempt from business tax. 

Apartment Buildings 

Apartment buildings are defined in the SIC Index as buildings containing five or more 
housing units. See Industry 6513 titled Operators of Apartment Buildings within SIC Industry 
Group 651.195 This exemption includes apartment buildings, apartment hotels, residential 
hotels, and retirement hotels. However, standard hotels, rooming and boarding houses, 
camps, and other lodging places for transients are not included under this exemption. 

Dwellings Other Than Apartment Buildings 

Dwellings and residential buildings containing four or fewer housing units are considered 
dwellings other than apartment buildings in the SIC Index. See Industry 6514 titled Dwelling 
Operators, Except Apartments within SIC Industry Group 651. Operators of these buildings 
are exempt from business tax. 

Nonresidential Buildings 

The following activities are exempt from business tax: 

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  Operation of bank buildings; 
    
  Operation of insurance buildings; 
 
  Leasing of piers, docks, and associated buildings; 
 
  Operation of commercial and industrial buildings; 
 
  Property operation of retail establishments; 
 
  Property operation of shopping centers; and 
 
  Ownership and operation of theater buildings. 

 13. Lessors of Real Property 

Businesses primarily engaged in leasing real property, not classified elsewhere in the SIC are 
exempt from business tax. See SIC Industry 6519 titled Lessors of Real Property, Not 
Elsewhere Classified within Industry Group 651.196 This exemption includes leases of the 
following types of real property: 
 
  Agricultural property; 
    
  Airport property; 
 
  Forested property; 
 
  Property used for mining; 
 
  Property from which oil is extracted; and   
 
  Public utility property. 

 14. Veterinary Services 

Veterinary medical services are exempt from the business tax. Veterinary services include 
dentistry, surgery, and services involving the boarding and lodging of animals. SIC Industry 
Group 074 is titled Veterinary Services and provides additional information on the veterinary 

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services included in the exemption. However, the veterinary services exemption does not 
include sales of non-exempt goods or services. For example: 
 
  Veterinarian Y, in addition to his or her veterinary medical practice, sells pet foods 
   and medications to be administered at home by the owner. Veterinarian Y also 
   provides non-medical grooming services. Veterinarian Y must get a business license 
   and pay the business tax on sales from the food, medication, and non-medical 
   grooming services. Veterinarian Y’s sales of medical veterinary services would be 
   considered exempt sales of services. The business tax classification will be 
   determined by whichever taxable item sold (pet food, medications, or grooming 
   services) makes up the largest portion of his or her taxable sales.  

 15. Architecture, Engineering, and Land Surveying Services  

Engineering 

Establishments primarily engaged in providing professional engineering services as defined 
in Industry Group 871 of the SIC are exempt from business tax. Establishments providing 
and supervising their own engineering staff on temporary contract to other firms are 
included in this industry. 
 
Businesses providing the following engineering services are exempt: 
 
  Ship, boat, tool, and machine designing; 
    
  Industrial, civil, electrical, and mechanical engineering services; 
 
  Marine engineering services; and 
 
  Petroleum engineering services. 

Architecture 

Businesses providing the professional architectural services listed below are exempt from 
business tax. 
 
  Architectural engineering services 
    
  Architectural services 

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   House designers 

Land Surveying 

Businesses that provide the professional surveying services listed below are exempt from 
business tax. 
 
   Photogrammetric engineering services 
     
   Land, water, and aerial surveying  

 16.  Services Provided by Farmers to Other Farmers 

Services provided by farmers to other farmers for  planting  or  harvesting  of  agricultural 
products or for the preparation, improvement, or maintenance of land used in the 
production of agricultural products are exempt from business tax.197 

Other Miscellaneous Exemptions 

 1. Services Sold for a Lump Sum 

If exempt services are sold at the same time as nonexempt services and/or tangible 
personal property, the exempt services will only be exempt if they can be purchased 
separately and separately itemized on the invoice. 
 
If a group of services are sold together for one lump sum and are not individually sold, the 
services will be categorized under the SIC classification that most appropriately describes 
the group of services as a whole. For example: 
 
   A company offers a suite of services that includes bookkeeping, payroll, legal, 
    management, billing, maintenance oversight, human resources, and public 
    relations services in one lump sum. A customer cannot pick and choose the 
    individual services it will receive. The cost includes all the services together. The 
    company’s services will most closely fall under SIC Index number 8741, 
    Management Services. 
     
If the SIC of the group does not fall under one of the exempt service categories, then the 
lump sum for the group of services will be taxable. Note that any actual pass-through 

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amounts (i.e., amounts transferred to a taxpayer with no mark-up that the taxpayer is 
obligated to pay over to a third party on its client’s behalf) included in the amount received 
by a taxpayer from its client should not be included in the amount taxed. Such pass-
through amounts could include postage, insurance premiums, or certain taxes.198 This is 
true even if some of the services offered in the group of services would be exempt if sold 
separately. Therefore, in the example above, because management services are not 
included in one of the exempt service categories, the lump sum for the suite of services is 
subject to the business tax.  

        Audit Note: A company that sells services for a lump sum may not separate 
        out exempt services from nonexempt services during an audit. If the 
        services are sold together and cannot be purchased separately, they should 
        be categorized together and only exempted if the entire group as a whole 
        falls under one of the exempt service categories. 

    2. Services for Affiliated Entities  

Services  provided  to  an  affiliated  business  entity  at  cost without  any markup are 
excluded  from  the  definition  of  services  and  thus  are  not  subject  to  the  business 
tax.199 If  a  taxpayer  provides  services  to  an  affiliated  business  entity  for  a  markup, the 
taxpayer will only owe business tax on the markup amount.200 

    3. Internet Services 

Federal  law prohibits states or any  state division  from imposing a  tax on  internet  access.201 
Therefore,  receipts that are attributable to the sale of internet services are not subject to 
business tax. Telecommunication services that are sold by an internet service provider to 
provide internet access are also exempt from business tax.  

        Audit Note: If an auditor discovers that a taxpayer has paid business tax on 
        internet access services during an audit, the taxpayer should be given a 
        credit or refund for the amount paid. 
                                                                                                        
Taxable Sales by Providers of Exempt Services 

Businesses primarily providing services exempt from business tax must still pay business tax 
on sales of non-exempt tangible personal property and taxable services. These businesses 

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must obtain business licenses and report and pay the business tax on their taxable sales. For 
example: 
 
  Services provided by deposit banking institutions are exempt from business tax. ABC 
   Bank makes vehicle loans as part of its business activities. However, when a loan on 
   a vehicle goes into default, the bank will repossess the vehicle and then sell the 
   vehicle at auction. ABC Bank must get a business license and pay the business tax on 
   the sales of the vehicles. Because the bank sells new or used vehicles, the bank 
   would be a Classification 2 taxpayer. 

Persons/Entities 

Business tax does not apply to persons in the following circumstances:  
 
  Any person employed in the capacity of an employee or servant as distinguished 
   from that of an independent contractor.202 
    
  A person that is primarily engaged in the fabrication or processing of tangible 
   personal property for resale and consumption off the premises with respect to the 
   sales of such property made from the manufacturing location or from a storage or 
   warehouse facility that is situated within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing 
   location.203 
 
  Any person operating vending machines who exercise the option of paying the 
   gross receipts tax provided for in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-506. 
 
  Newspaper route carriers and newspaper peddlers.204 
 
  Any institution operated for religious or charitable purposes, with respect to any 
   profits that are earned from the sale of items contributed to the institution or 
                                                                205
   articles produced by the institution from contributed items.    
 
  A person who, as part of the normal business operations, buys and sells intangible 
   personal property. See, for example, Letter Ruling 17-05. 
 
  Persons conducting shows, displays, or exhibits sponsored by any nonprofit 
   organization of gun collectors. A person who regularly engages in business as a 
   dealer in guns or who sells guns for future delivery is not exempt.  206 

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   Any person residing or located in this state or any governmental entity, nonprofit 
    corporation, institution, or organization which has received, and is currently 
    operating under, a 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3) or (4) exemption from the Internal Revenue 
    Service whose only taxable business activity during the tax period is conducted at 
    the Tennessee state fair or at only one county fair and their affiliates.207 
 
   Any person having sales of less than $100,000 within a county or incorporated 
    municipality is exempt from the tax and licensing provisions in Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 
    67-4-704 and 67-4-723 with respect to sales sourced to the county or municipality 
    under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717. Any person subject to the tax imposed in Tenn. 
    Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a) and having sales of less than $100,000 in a county will be 
    exempt from the tax levied in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-704 with respect to sales 
    occurring in that county.208 
 
   Persons or qualified businesses doing business from a location within an enterprise 
    zone. This exemption will only be allowed for five years from the date the business 
    is originally certified as a qualified business. 
 
   Persons making sales or rental of real property that belongs to them. Sales and 
    rentals of real property belonging to anyone other than the seller is subject to the 
    business tax, e.g., such as sales by real estate agents. 
 
   Movie theaters are exempt from business tax on all their gross receipts (sales of 
    tickets and concessions).209 This does not extend to live production theaters.  
     
   Persons who drill, install and repair wells and are properly licensed, annually, with 
    the Department of Environment and Conservation are exempt from business tax on 
    those services.210 
 
   Out-of-state businesses or employees who are responding to state-declared 
    disasters are exempt from business, franchise, and excise taxes for the income and 
    receipts generated from business conducted in the state during the disaster 
    response period.211 

 1. Persons with Taxable Sales < $100,000 

Businesses with less than $100,000 in taxable sales sourced to a county are exempt from the 

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state-level business tax in that county, and businesses with less than $100,000 in taxable 
sales sourced to a municipality are exempt from the municipal-level business tax in that 
municipality.212   

Minimal Activity License 

       Counties and municipalities that have enacted business tax will issue minimal activity 
        licenses to any persons exempt from business tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-
        712(d) if the persons have annual sales of more than $3,000 but less than $100,000 
        per year within the jurisdiction.  
 
No person with sales of more than $3,000 but less than $100,000 per year can engage in 
business in the jurisdiction without first obtaining the minimal activity license. 
 
Persons with $3,000 or less in annual sales in any incorporated municipality or county may, 
but are not required to, have a minimal activity license. Any year a person’s gross receipts in 
the jurisdiction are $100,000 or more, the person will be required to file a regular business 
tax return for the tax year. 
 
For more information on licensing, please see Chapter 3 of this manual. 

    2. Radio and Televisions Stations 

Radio and television stations under the authority of the Federal Communications 
Commission are not liable for business tax.213 However, persons who operate cable 
television services are subject to business tax.214 

    3. Providers of Direct-to-Home Satellite Services 

Providers of direct-to-home satellite television programming services are specifically 
excluded  from both the state-level and municipal-level business tax. This exclusion covers 
sales of the providers’ services as well as sales of any tangible  personal property. 215 

    4. Publishers or Printers of Newspapers and other Periodicals 

Publishers or printers of newspapers and other periodicals are considered manufacturers 
and are not liable for business tax.216 However, publishers or printers engaged in any other 
activity made taxable under the Business Tax Act are liable for tax on that activity.217 
Activities that are incidental to the manufacturing portion of the business are not subject to 
tax.218 

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 5. Qualified Blind Persons and Disabled Veterans 

 Affidavit Requirement 

Any applicant who wishes to seek the benefits of a business tax exemption for qualified 
blind persons or disabled veterans must file an affidavit accessible on the Department’s 
website. The affidavit must be filled out completely and include the applicant’s position, 
financial condition, and the source of the applicant’s income. The affidavit must be received 
and reviewed by the Department prior to the issuing of the proper business license. Any 
person making a false affidavit and procuring a free privilege license as a result commits 
perjury and will be punished under the law. 

Qualifying Blind Persons 

Any person unable to see because of total blindness qualifies for the exemption if the 
following conditions are met. The person: 
 
   Owns property of less than $2,500 after the deduction of encumbrances thereon;  
     
   Is doing business with a capital not exceeding $2,500; 
     
   Is residing within and being a citizen of Tennessee and of the county in which the 
    exemption is claimed; and  
 
   Is the sole beneficiary of the business.219 
 
Any institution for the blind engaged in the training and employment of the blind of the state 
likewise is exempt from the payment of the business tax without regard to property 
qualifications. 

Individuals must complete this affidavit to qualify for this exemption. Affidavit may be 
accessed via this link. 

Disabled Veterans 

Certain disabled veterans are exempt from paying the business tax. To qualify for the 
exemption, the individual must be: 

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   A disabled veteran of any armed conflict in which the United States has engaged, a 
     former uniformed member of the armed forces, or a peacetime uniformed 
     member of the armed forces who was disabled while in regular service;  

   The owner of less than $5,000 of property after the deduction encumbrances 
     thereon;  

   In business with a capital stock of no more than $5,000; 

   A citizen and resident of Tennessee and of the county in which the exemption shall 
     be claimed; and 

   The sole beneficiary of the business.220 

Only one of the exemptions described above may be claimed by any one person. Any 
business for which the exemption is claimed will be conducted by the qualifying individual 
personally or a member of that person’s immediate family who may be assisted by not more 
than one person not a member of the family. 

With respect to former members of the armed forces operating as peddlers, one vehicle is 
considered as one place of business. 

 6. Manufacturers 

Both in-state and out-of-state manufacturers are specifically exempt from business tax.221 
To qualify for the exemption, a taxpayer must meet each of the requirements listed below. 
 
    A business must qualify for the exemption on a per location basis. 
      
    The business  must  be  engaged  in  one  of the  activities  described  under 
     Division  D  of  the  SIC  Index or be otherwise primarily engaged in fabricating and 
     processing tangible personal property for resale and consumption off the 
     premises.222 
      
    More than 50% of the business’s gross receipts must be derived from 
     manufacturing. 
      
    The sales of the manufactured products must be made fromthe manufacturing 

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    location or from a storage or warehouse facility situated within a ten-mile 
    radius of the manufacturing location.  223  Location includes any adjoining 
    buildings  and any buildings on the same parcel of land that, combined, make up a 
    manufacturing campus. 
 
If  a  business  qualifies  as  a  manufacturer,  sales  made from the  qualified  location  or 
qualified storage or warehouse facility, of  items  not  manufactured  at  that  location  but 
incidental  to  the  business’s  manufacturing  sales  are  also  exempt.224 Furthermore, if 
installation of the  manufactured product is incidental to the sale of the manufactured 
product and is done by  the manufacturer’s employees, then the installation is also exempt.   
 
The performance of  installation services does not disqualify a business from the 
manufacturing exemption.  However, if the business  charges separately  for the installation 
services and  the  amount  received from those services is at least 50% of the business’s 
gross receipts, then the  business is not “primarily” engaged in manufacturing and thus 
does not qualify for the  exemption. For example: 
 
  Company A fabricates and installs structural steel. It does not sell anything else. The 
   customer will pay one single price when it purchases the steel, which it purchases 
   from the manufacturing facility. Company A will install the steel for no additional 
   charge. Company A would be considered exempt from business tax. 

Qualifying as a Manufacturer 

For business tax purposes, a manufacturer is defined as someone who is in the business of 
any of the activities listed in Division D of the SIC Index or individuals who otherwise qualify 
as manufacturers or processors of tangible personal property for resale.    225 
 
The decision of whether a taxpayer is a manufacturer is made on a location basis for both 
business tax and sales tax. Like business tax, locations that qualify as manufacturing 
locations for sales tax purposes are ones where the business is primarily engaged in 
fabricating and processing tangible personal property for resale and consumption off the 
premises.  

Therefore, businesses primarily engaged in fabricating or processing tangible personal 
property for resale and consumption off the premises for sales tax purposes are exempt 
from business tax on sales of their manufactured product (as well as activities incidental to 
the manufacturing portion of the business) when made from the manufacturing location or 

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a warehouse or storage facility located within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing 
location.  

Classification of Select Businesses  
 
While most of the activities listed under each of the SIC Index manufacturing groups are 
clearly defined and easily understood, some are ambiguous. These activities are listed below. 
 
  Quarries: 
    
           o Generally, quarries are not considered manufacturers for business tax 
             purposes and are included in the SIC Index under Division B: Mining.  
              
           o Certain quarry locations are considered manufacturing locations for business 
             tax purposes if the taxpayer is primarily engaged in fabricating or processing 
             tangible personal property for resale and consumption off the premises at 
             that specific location.  
              
           o If the quarry location qualifies as a manufacturer for sales tax purposes, it is 
             also exempt from business tax on the sales derived from manufactured 
             product (as well as activities incidental to the manufacturing portion of the 
             business) made from that manufacturing location or a storage or warehouse 
             facility situated within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing location.  
 
  Dental Labs: 
    
           o Dental labs are not manufacturers for business tax purposes.  
              
           o If the dental lab constructs artificial dentures, bridges, inlays, and other 
             dental restorations on specifications from dentists, then the lab is classified 
             under Division I: Services, Industry 8072.   
 
           o However, a person manufacturing, in a location other than a dental lab, 
             artificial teeth to be used as instruments by dentists and dental colleges is 
             grouped under Industry 3843 and thus is considered a manufacturer for 
             business tax purposes. 
 
  Recyclers: 

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    o Generally, it is unlikely a recycler will be considered a manufacturer.  
       
    o If the recycler is assembling, breaking up, sorting, and wholesale distributing 
      scrap and waste materials, then it is grouped under Industry 5093 and is not 
      a manufacturer for business tax purposes. 
 
    o However, if it is doing something more to the scrap materials, then it may be 
      considered a manufacturer.  
 
               For example, if a recycler primarily recovers nonferrous metals and 
               alloys from scrap and dross, then it would be grouped under Industry 
               3341 and would be considered a manufacturer. 
                
  Cabinetry: 
    
    o Generally, a manufacturer of wood cabinets (e.g., kitchen cabinets, bathroom 
      vanities), whether they be for permanent installation or free-standing, is 
      considered a manufacturer under Industry 2434.  
       
    o If the cabinetry is custom built for individuals, then the fabricator is grouped 
      under Industry 5712 and would not qualify as a manufacturer for business 
      tax purposes unless the fabricator is also considered a manufacturer for 
      sales and use tax purposes.  
       
  Malt Beverage Breweries: 
    
    o Generally, malt beverage breweries are considered a manufacturer under 
      Industry 2082. 
       
    o However, micro-breweries often have tap rooms where manufactured 
      malted beverages are sold to the general public for consumption on the 
      premises. 
 
    o If dominant sales are made at the tap room to the general public for 
      consumption on the premises, the brewery’s primary activity at that location 

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      is retail trade. Such locations do not qualify for a manufacturer business tax 
      exemption because they do not meet the “more than 50% test.”  
 
    o If  the  dominant  business  activity is selling to wholesalers  for resale, the 
      brewery is primarily engaged in manufacturing, and thus the location would 
      qualify for a business tax exemption. 
       
  Qualified Distributions Centers, Data Centers, and Pollution Control Facilities:  
    
    o As noted above, businesses that are otherwise primarily engaged in 
      fabricating and processing tangible personal property for resale and 
      consumption off the premises qualify as manufacturers. This is commonly 
      reflected by having a sales and use tax industrial machinery number.  
       
    o However, the industrial machinery sales tax exemption is also granted to those 
      buying exempt industrial machinery for qualified distribution centers, qualified 
      data centers, and pollution control facilities. These are generally contractors, 
      and they are not engaged in “the fabrication or processing of tangible personal 
      property for resale and consumption off the premises.” Therefore, they cannot 
      qualify for a business tax exemption on the premise that the location is also 
      exempt from sales tax. 

Primarily Engaged in Manufacturing 

To qualify as a manufacturer and receive the manufacturing exemption, a person must be 
“primarily engaged” in manufacturing at a given location. This qualification is met if more 
than 50 percent of the manufacturer’s revenues at a given location are derived from 
manufacturing tangible personal property.226 
 
Several taxpayers manufacture goods and make nonmanufacturing sales from the same 
location (e.g., sales of goods purchased to sell, goods manufactured by the taxpayer 
elsewhere, sales of goods at retail, and services, such as installation of the goods). To 
determine if a taxpayer qualifies for the manufacturing exemption, auditors may separate a 
taxpayer’s gross sales into two separate columns to determine the percentage of the 
taxpayer’s revenues derived from manufacturing at a location:  
 
  A column for sales of manufactured goods (this includes those that are installed by 
   the taxpayer, if the installation is included in the sale of the manufactured good); and  

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  A column for all other sales (separately billed installation sales, sales of non-
   manufactured goods, etc.).   227 
    
If installation is part of the sale of the manufactured good (i.e., the manufactured good and 
installation of that good are sold for one price) and not a separate sale, then the SIC Index 
classifies it as a manufacturing activity. The description in the SIC Index under the Division C: 
Construction 3 heading states that “installation work performed as a service incidental to 
sale by employees of an establishment manufacturing… prefabricated equipment and 
materials is classified according to the primary activity in the Manufacturing…Division.” For 
example: 
 
  Company B installs kitchens and makes all its sales from its manufacturing facility. 
   Customers sometimes buy new countertops from Company B. For this, Company B 
   makes and installs granite countertops. Some jobs include countertops, as well as 
   the installation of sinks, cabinetry, etc. that Company B purchases for resale. One 
   third of Company B’s receipts are from the manufacture and installation of the 
   countertops. Two thirds of the receipts are for the sale and installation of the 
   cabinets, sinks, etc., purchased for resale.  
    
         o Company B would not be considered an exempt manufacturer and would be 
           a contractor under classification 4 because less than 50% of Company B’s 
           receipts are from manufacturing. 

Sales Made from a Manufacturing Location or from a Warehouse or Storage Facility 
Located within a Ten-Mile Radius 

To be considered a manufacturing sale, the sale must occur from the taxpayer’s 
manufacturing location or from a warehouse or storage facility located within a ten-mile 
radius of the manufacturing location. The description in the SIC Code under the Division D: 
Manufacturing heading states that “[f]abricating operations performed at the site of 
construction by contractors are not considered manufacturing, but the prefabrication of 
sheet metal, concrete, and terrazzo products and similar construction materials is included 
in the Manufacturing Division.” 
 
In some cases, the business may meet the qualifications of the manufacturing exemption at 
the primary business location, but it may also perform installation work akin to contractor 
work at other locations.  For example: 

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  An asphalt manufacturing plant that qualifies for manufacturing exemption at its 
   primary location lays asphalt for its customers at job site locations. Since the 
   taxpayer’s primary business location is not a Class 4 contractor, the taxpayer is not 
   required to register deemed locations in every jurisdiction where its sales exceed 
   $100,000. Other examples where this may occur include, but are not limited to truss, 
   structural steel, and granite countertop manufacturing locations. 
 
Business tax applies to each individual location, and the exemptions from the business tax 
also apply on a location-by-location basis. If the manufacturer makes sales from a separate, 
nonmanufacturing location on a different plot of land that is not a storage or warehouse 
facility located within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing location, then those sales will 
be subject to the tax, even if the goods sold were manufactured by the taxpayer elsewhere. 
For example: 
 
  Company C fabricates cinder blocks for sale and sells masonry bricks that it 
   purchased for resale. Both products are stored and sold from a warehouse that is 
   twenty miles from Company C’s manufacturing facility. Fifty-five percent of its sales 
   are of cinder blocks, and forty-five percent are of bricks.  
    
    o        Company C would not be exempt from business tax because the products 
             were not sold from a manufacturing facility or a storage or warehouse facility 
             situated within a ten-mile radius of the manufacturing facility. 

Auditing Manufacturers 

If an auditor concludes that a business qualifies for the business tax manufacturing 
exemption, then:  
 
  All sales made at a qualifying location by the manufacturer (any nonmanufacturing 
   sales made at that location by the manufacturer are considered incidental to the 
   manufacturing sales) are exempt; and 
    
  The auditor does not need to further classify the business under Tenn. Code Ann. § 
   67-4-708, the classifications section of the business tax statute. 
 
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However, if the auditor determines that the business does not qualify for the manufacturing 
exemption, then he/she should determine the business’s classification by determining the 
dominant business activity.  
 
Additionally, a business may not qualify for the manufacturing exemption if 
nonmanufacturing sales account for more than 50% of the taxpayers’ sales made from that 
location. For example: 
 
   A taxpayer manufactures tangible personal property and makes retail sales of 
    tangible personal property from the same location. The taxpayer’s retail sales 
    account for 60% of the total sales from that location. This taxpayer would be 
    considered a retailer and would not be considered a manufacturer at this location. 

 7. Persons Making Casual and Isolated Sales 

Business is defined as “any activity engaged in by any person, or caused to be engaged in by 
the person, with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage, either direct or indirect.”228 
Business does not include casual  and  isolated  sales or sales made by  a  person  not 
routinely  engaged  in  business.229 As such, occasional, casual, and isolated sales are  not 
subject  to  the  business  tax.  
 
Business tax also does not apply to sales of tangible personal property or services not 
normally sold by a wholesaler and retailer and tangible personal property if the property has 
been used by the dealer prior to the sale.230  
 
   A sporting goods store decides to renovate its sales floor and sell its used sales 
    fixtures (shelves, hangers, racks, etc.). Receipts from the fixture’s sale would not be 
    subject to business tax.  
     
If persons hold themselves out as engaged in business, then they are still liable for sales of 
tangible personal property or taxable services bought for resale although the sales may be 
few and infrequent.231  

Manufacturers, Processors, Wholesalers, or Jobbers 

Manufacturers, processors, wholesalers, or jobbers engaged in the business of distributing 
tangible personal property or furnishing services subject to business tax are not deemed to 
be making casual and isolated sales when they sell such tangible personal property or 

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services to purchasers for use or consumption, notwithstanding the fact that such sales may 
comprise a small fraction of their total business.232  

Antique Shows, Flea Markets, Gun Shows, Auto Shows and Craft Shows 

Persons regularly engaged in the recurring sale of tangible personal property at antique 
malls, flea markets, craft shows, antique shows, gun shows and auto shows and antique 
malls, flea markets, crafts shows, antique shows, gun shows and auto shows regularly 
engaged in the recurring sale of tangible personal property are not considered to be making 
casual and isolated sales.233 The businesses and persons making sales have the burden of 
proving their sales are actually casual and isolated and qualify for exemption.234 

 8. Taxpayers Responsible for Other Privilege Taxes 

The following businesses pay privilege taxes and are not subject to business tax on sales on 
which they pay privilege tax:235  
 
   Bottlers and manufacturers of soft drinks; 
     
   Establishments selling mixed drinks or setups;  
 
   Gas, water, and electric companies; 
 
   Miscellaneous public utilities; and 
 
   Individuals who pay recordation tax. 

 9. School Bus Operators and Drivers 

School bus operators and boards of education are not liable for business tax for operating 
vehicles to transport children to and from school.236 However, if a vehicle is used for profit in 
transporting individuals other than school pupils, then the entities operating the vehicle may 
be subject to business tax.237 

Additionally, owners and operators of school buses used to transport children to and from 
school or any activity during the normal school term that is sponsored by or participated in 
by any public school or its students are not liable for business tax.238 However, the owners 
and operators remain liable for registration fees for the buses that they operate.239 

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Exempt Sales 

 1. Qualified Amusement Activities 

Gross proceeds from admissions to amusement or recreational activities conducted, 
produced, or provided by: 
 
   Nonprofit museums; 
     
   Nonprofit entities which operate historical sites and nonprofit historical societies, 
    organizations, or associations; 
 
   Organizations which have received and currently hold a 26 U.S.C. § 501(c) exemption 
    from the Internal Revenue Service; or  
 
   Organizations listed in Major Group No. 86 of the SIC Index are exempt from 
    business tax. 240 This major group includes organizations operating on a membership 
    basis for the promotion of the interests of their members. Included are 
    organizations such as trade associations; professional membership organizations; 
    labor unions and similar labor organizations; and political and religious 
    organizations. This major group does not include business establishments operated 
    by membership organizations, which are classified according to their primary 
    activity.241  
 
This exemption does not apply unless such entities, societies, associations, or organizations 
promote, produce, and control the entire activity.242 

 2. Agricultural Sales 

Tennessee gross sales of livestock, horses,  poultry, nursery stock, and other farm products 
direct from the farm are exempt from business tax, provided that those sales are made 
directly by the producer, breeder, or trainer. When sales of livestock, horses, poultry, or 
other farm products are made by any person other than the producer, breeder, or trainer, 
they will be classified and taxed for business tax as Classification 4. Additionally, catfish 
farmers and tropical fish farmers are exempt from business tax.243 
 
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 3. Sales of Intangibles 

Sales of intangible personal property, such as royalties, copyrights, stocks, bonds, notes, 
and other securities, are not subject to the business tax. For business tax purposes, 
“tangible personal property” is defined as “personal property that may be seen, weighed, 
measured, felt or touched, or is in any other manner perceptible to the senses.”244 Tangible 
personal property does not include insurance, stocks, bonds, notes, or other obligations or 
securities.”245 
 
Non-taxable intangibles include:  
 
   Renewable Identification Numbers;     246 
     
   Copyright licenses; 
 
   Franchise fees; 
 
   Broadcast rights; and 
 
   Transfer of virtual currency. 
 
 Please note that a sale of software is not considered a sale of intangible property. 

 4. Wholesaler to Wholesaler 

Sales made by one wholesaler to another wholesaler (or sales by one retailer to another 
retailer at cost) are excluded from the definition of sale and thus are not subject to the 
business tax.247 
 
A wholesale sale or sale at wholesale is the “sale of tangible personal property or services 
rendered in the regular course of business to a licensed retailer for resale, lease, or rental 
as tangible personal property in the retailer’s regular course of business to a user or a 
consumer.”248 Wholesale sales are sales from a wholesaler to a retailer. Retailers are 
persons in the business of making sales at retail or any sales other than wholesale sales. 249 
 
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    5. Sales or Rentals of Real Property 

Generally, the receipts from the sale or rental of real property are excluded from business 
tax.250 However, the exclusion does not include commissions earned by brokers or agents 
from the sale or rental of the real property. 

Real Estate Agents or Brokers 

Persons receiving commissions, fees, service charges, and other income received for 
services associated with the sale or rental of real or personal property that belongs to 
others are liable for business tax on their gross receipts.251 The real estate firms, 
brokerages, agencies, partnerships, or corporations that own or operate a real estate 
business, not the individuals that they employ, are the entities liable for business tax on 
their total gross receipts. Total gross receipts refer to all commissions, fees, or charges 
collected from the customer regardless of whether a portion of the commission, fee, or 
charge is passed on to an individual broker or agent.252 

    6. Short-Term Rentals of Real Property 

The short-term rental (180 consecutive days or less for business tax purposes) of vacation 
lodging, including a person’s home, is subject to business tax.  

Minimum Requirement for Filing and Registration  

A provider of overnight rentals is required to register and file for business tax if its taxable 
gross receipts are $100,000 or more in each jurisdiction in which it does business. That 
means that a property owner or management company will not be subject to business tax 
in any city and/or county where its total rental property receipts in that city and/or county 
are not at least $100,000. 

Property Management Companies 

A “property management company” is defined as “a  person who, for consideration, 
manages a vacation lodging for an individual property owner  that provides such lodging 
for a rental fee to consumers.”253 
 
If the owner of the property uses a management company to provide overnight rentals of 
vacation lodgings, then the management company, rather than the owner, must pay the 
business tax on the gross receipts from the rentals. The gross receipt from the rental 

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includes all fees collected for the rental, as well as any other money that a consumer must 
pay to rent the accommodations such as: 
 
  Non-refundable pet deposits; 
    
  Required cleaning fees; and 
 
  Property damage protection fees.  
 
The property owner or property management company must register in the county and city 
in which the property is located as a Classification 3 taxpayer. If no property management 
company is used, the owner must pay the business tax. If the property management 
company or property owner has multiple units within a jurisdiction, they will only need one 
license.  
 
  For example, property management company A (“taxpayer”) has 14 rentals in Sevier 
   County. Five of the rentals are in Gatlinburg, three rentals are in Pigeon Forge, 
   three rentals are in Sevierville and the remaining are outside of a city jurisdiction. 
   The taxpayer needs one license from Sevier County, one license in Pigeon Forge, 
   and one license in Gatlinburg. 
    
If a property owner  conducts  any other  taxable activity or sales in the state, he will be 
subject to  the business tax on those specific  receipts. 

Online Advertisers of Vacation Lodging 

Online platforms who advertise overnight rentals of vacation lodging on behalf of individual 
property owners are not property management companies for business tax purposes. 
Therefore, the individual property owners are responsible for filing the business tax return 
and paying business tax on the gross receipts from the rentals. 

Trailer Parks or Camps 

Persons operating trailer parks or camps where charges are made only for the rental of real 
property are exempt from the business tax.254 However, persons renting trailers to 
transients for occupancy at the trailer park location for a period of 90 days or less, selling 
tangible personal property, or making separate charges for specific services furnished are 
liable for business tax (such as electricity at the camp site).255 
 
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7. Sales of Items Donated to Religious and Charitable Institutions 

Profits earned by institutions operated for religious or charitable purposes from the sale of 
items donated to them—or from articles produced from items donated—are not subject to 
business tax.256 

8. Freight & Delivery Charges 

Freight, delivery, or other similar transportation charges are subject to business tax if title to 
the property being transported passes to the vendee at the destination point. 257 Deliveries 
of tangible personal property and services to customers outside the state of Tennessee by a 
person subject to the business tax or by a common carrier before the customer obtains 
possession are exempt from the business tax. 

Exclusions 

In addition to the exemptions outlined above, the business tax also contains various 
exclusions. Receipts of the following entities, persons, and activities are excluded in 
determining gross sales for the calculation of business tax:258 

  Persons that are subject to gross receipts tax for engaging in the business of 
   operating as bottlers and manufacturers of soft drinks and soft drink substitutes in 
   Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-402; 
    
  Gas, water, and electric current companies; 
    
  Telephone and telegraph companies except providers of mobile telecommunications 
   services; 
    
  Theaters, motion pictures, and vaudeville shows; 
    
  Establishments selling mixed drinks or setups for mixed drinks; 
    
  Rental of films to theaters that are taxed under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-212; and 
    
  Rental of films, transcriptions, and recordings to radio and television stations 
   operating under a certificate from the Federal Communications Commission. 
    
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Various exclusions are also listed as exemptions above, this is specifically authorized in TENN .
COMP  . R. & R    EGS. 1320-04-05-.16(2), which states the “[a]ny other amounts attributable to the 
exclusions authorized by the Business Tax Act, or rules and regulations pertaining thereto, 
may also be excluded. (See TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.36).”  

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Chapter 9: Deductions 

Overview 

The Tennessee business tax statutes and regulations allow taxpayers to make various 
deductions that ultimately reduce their tax liability. Deductions differ from exemptions in 
that they must be reflected on the business tax return as amounts deducted from total gross 
sales. Most of these deductions are provided in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711.  

 1. Cash Discounts  

Taxpayers may deduct cash discounts allowed and taken on sales from their business tax 
base.259 For example: 
 
       A taxpayer offers its vendors cash discounts on credit sales to accelerate collections. 
        The cash discount is indicated on the customer invoice as follows—2/10, net 30—
        indicating that the customer will receive a 2% discount if it pays the invoice within 10 
        days; otherwise, payment is due within 30 days. On a $5,000 credit sale for which the 
        customer takes the cash discount, the discount is calculated as follows: 
 
        Gross credit sale   $   5,000 
        Less: cash discount $     (100)    (gross credit sale X 2%)
        Net credit sale     $   4,900      subject to business tax

All taxpayers that claim a cash discount, or any of the deductions outlined below from their 
gross sales, must maintain invoices and other documents to substantiate their claims to 
such deductions; otherwise, the deductions will be disallowed.260  

 2. Returned Items  

Taxpayers may deduct from their gross sales proceeds  from  returned  items,  if  refunded 
to  the  customer  in  cash  or  credit.261  If a taxpayer gives credit to a customer for items 
that the customer voluntarily returns, or the taxpayer gives a credit or allowance to a 
customer as an adjustment (or otherwise) for a given sale, whether or not the property is 
returned, the amount of credit or allowance actually given or credited to the customer's 
account may be deducted from the gross sales subject to business tax.262 For example: 
 
       A taxpayer sells an appliance to a customer for $250. The customer later returns 
        the appliance, stating that it is faulty, and requests a refund. The taxpayer issues 

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    the customer a refund by crediting the customer’s credit card. The taxpayer may 
    deduct the sale proceeds for this returned item from its gross sales. 

 3. Trade-In Allowances  

Taxpayers may deduct the amount allowed as trade-in value for any article sold.263  
 
When an item of tangible personal property is taken in trade as a credit or partial payment 
on the sale of new or used articles, business tax is calculated on the difference between the 
sales price of the new or used article sold and any credit given for the used article accepted 
in the trade.264 For example: 
 
   A customer purchases a new car from the taxpayer for $30,000. As part of this 
    transaction, the customer trades in its used car for which the taxpayer gives the 
    customer a trade-in value of $9,000. The taxpayer will report on its business tax return 
    the gross sale of $30,000 and then take a deduction for the $9,000 trade-in value. 
 
A credit will not be allowed for trade-ins unless the item traded is of a like kind and character 
of that which is purchased and indicated as a trade-in by model and serial number, where 
applicable, on an invoice given to the customer.265 

 4. Repossessed Goods  

Taxpayers may sell items of tangible personal property, such as motor vehicles, and provide 
financing for the sale with a security agreement. Under the security agreement, the taxpayer 
retains a security interest in the property until it is paid in full. If the purchaser defaults on the 
required payments, the dealer may repossess the property. When a taxpayer repossesses 
property that is sold pursuant to the terms of a security agreement, the taxpayer may take a 
deduction for the difference between the remaining amount due on the selling price of the 
repossessed property and $500.266 
 
Of the unpaid balance due on the repossessed property, only the amount that constitutes 
principal is eligible for this deduction; amounts that constitute interest, carrying charges, or 
similar charges cannot be deducted.267 Also, amounts that constitute sales and use tax, late 
fees, repossession fees, towing fees, or any other fees that are added after the original sale 
may not be deducted. Taxpayers claiming this deduction must maintain adequate 
documentation to substantiate the sale and subsequent repossession of the item(s) in 
question; this documentation should include the following: 
 
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  Identity of the parties and items involved; 
    
  Dates of the sale and repossession; 
 
  Amount of original purchase price subject to business tax; 
    
  Terms of the security agreement (recourse/nonrecourse, repayment schedule); 
    
  Detailed list of amounts paid (including down payment, principal, and interest); and 
    
  Itemized list of charges that comprise the outstanding balance of the loan (including 
   the unpaid principal balance). 
 
The repossession deduction is available only if the taxpayer holds the note or has transferred 
the note with recourse to another entity. Recourse means that the entity receiving the note 
(generally a financial institution) has the right to demand payment from the taxpayer that 
made the sale. If the sales contract goes into default, the financial institution returns the 
financed item to the dealer. The dealer is required to reimburse the finance company for the 
unpaid portion of the loan and pay any other fees incurred by the purchaser, such as 
additional interest, late fees, repossession fees, etc. If the taxpayer transfers the note without 
recourse to another entity, neither the taxpayer nor the other entity would be entitled to claim 
the deduction. 
 
If a bank or other financial institution purchases a contract without recourse from a taxpayer, 
relating to tangible personal property sold by the taxpayer under a security agreement or 
other title-retained instrument, said bank/financial institution may not take any deduction or 
credit for any unpaid balances remaining due on such contract following repossession of the 
property or any action to enforce the lien.268 In this instance, the taxpayer would not be 
eligible for the deduction either. 
 
    Audit Tip: The auditor should verify that the amount of the deduction does 
    not exceed the amount of gross sales originally reported from the sale. If a 
    previously financed amount is combined with a current sale on a security 
    agreement, only the amount that applies to the repossessed item qualifies 
    for the deduction. 
                                                                                                    
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Example – Repossession Deduction 

A car is sold for $5,000 and financed by the taxpayer. The customer defaults on the note after 
remitting a $500 down payment and an installment payment of $2,500 ($500 of this payment 
is for interest). The taxpayer also charged the customer a $100 doc fee and business tax of 
$15.30. On the taxpayer’s books, the customer’s account appears as follows: 
 
Base price of automobile                   $      5,000.00
Doc fee                                    $         100.00
Business tax                               $            15.30
State sales tax                            $         358.08
Local sales tax                            $            44.00
State single article                       $            44.00
Total sales price plus tax                 $      5,561.38

Down payment                               $         500.00
Installment payment                        $      2,500.00 ($500.00 applied to interest)

Loan amount                                $      5,061.38 (Total sales price less down payment)
Payment on principal                       $     (2,000.00) (Installment payment less interest)
Late fees                                  $         250.00
Towing fees                                $         100.00
Balance owed per taxpayer's records        $      3,411.38

The repossession deduction permitted for business tax purposes is calculated as follows: 
 
Sales price (excluding sales tax) $      5,115.30
Less: down payment                $        (500.00)
Less: payment on principal        $     (2,000.00)
 Unpaid principal                 $      2,615.30
Less: statutory deduction         $        (500.00)
 Repossession deduction           $     2,115.30

 5. Subcontractor Payments  

Contractors may deduct from their business tax base amounts actually paid during the 
business tax period to a subcontractor that holds a business license, or who is licensed by the 
state board for licensing contractors, for performing the activities described in Tenn. Code 

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Ann. § 67-4-708(4)(A):  
 
   Persons receiving compensation from rendering exterminating services, from 
   installing personal property, from constructing, building, erecting, repairing, grading, 
   excavating, drilling, exploring, testing, or adding to any building, highway, street, 
   sidewalk, bridge, culvert, sewer, irrigation or water system, drainage, or dredging 
   system, levee or levee system or any part thereof, railway, reservoir, dam, power 
   plant, electrical system, air conditioning system, heating system, transmission line, 
   pipeline, tower, dock, storage tank, wharf, excavation, grading, water well, any other 
   improvement or structure or any part thereof. 
 
To claim this deduction, the contractor must complete Schedule C of the Business Tax Return, 
which provides information such as the name, address, business license or contractor's license 
number of the subcontractor, and the amount paid for subcontract work. In addition, the 
contractor must also maintain in its records a copy of the subcontractor's business license or 
license issued by the board for licensing contractors. 
 
For example: 
 
    A contractor is building a new home for a client. The contractor entered into an 
     agreement with a well driller whereby the contractor would pay the well driller to 
     drill the well for the new home. Here, the contractor could complete Schedule C 
     and deduct the payments made to the well driller as the well driller is making 
     improvements to real property.  
 
Taxpayers holding themselves out to their customers as the provider of a particular service for 
which the taxpayer then subcontracts with a third party to perform the labor, cannot take a 
deduction for the amount paid to the third-party subcontractor.269 For example: 
 
  A business contracts to repair tangible personal property. The business holds itself out 
   to its customers as the provider of the repair service. The business then subcontracts 
   with a third party to perform the labor. That business is selling a repair service to 
   consumers at retail and cannot deduct the amount paid to the third party. 
    
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 6. Sales of Services Delivered to a Location Outside Tennessee 

The deductibility of the sales of services to locations outside Tennessee has undergone 
multiple changes. For periods prior to January 1, 2014, Tennessee law provided a business tax 
deduction for “[s]ales of services substantially performed in other states.” Effective January 1, 
2014, the language was amended to allow a business tax deduction for “[s]ales of services that 
are received by customers located outside the state.”  
 
Finally, for periods after January 1, 2016 (i.e., current law), taxpayers may deduct from their 
business tax base the sale of any service that is delivered to a location outside the state.270 
This language was amended as part of the Revenue Modernization Act.  

Services Performed on Commission 

Commissions derived from services performed in Tennessee on behalf of an out-of-state 
business may not be deducted from business tax, as the commissions are derived from 
services delivered in Tennessee. For example:  
 
   A Tennessee company is an independent distributor (“the distributor”) for a multi-level 
    marketing company that is located outside the state (“MLM”). The distributor does not 
    sell the MLM’s products, but rather the distributor receives commissions from the 
    MLM relating to sales of the MLM’s products that are made by the distributor’s sales 
    network, or “downline distributors,” who are located in Tennessee. Because the 
    distributor is delivering its service in Tennessee on behalf of the MLM, its commissions are 
    subject to Tennessee business tax. 
 
   A Tennessee telemarketing company (“the company”) solicits sales of various tangible 
    personal property from customers in states other than Tennessee. When the customer 
    places an order, the company submits the order to a warehouse located outside the 
    state. The out-of-state warehouse processes the order and collects the payment; the 
    company does not maintain a stock of merchandise, nor does it take title or 
    possession of the products sold. In exchange for the company’s services, the company 
    receives a commission from an out-of-state supplier in exchange for the company 
    selling the supplier’s products. The commissions that the company receives from the out-
    of-state supplier are deductible because none of the customers are located in Tennessee. 

Examples – Deductible Service Sales 

   A Tennessee computer repair company repairs a computer in its Tennessee shop for 

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    an Arkansas customer. After the repair is complete, the computer is shipped via 
    common carrier back to the customer. The repair sale is deductible. 
 
   A Tennessee web designer creates websites and advertisement templates in 
    Tennessee that are stored on the designer’s server in Tennessee. A California 
    customer pays the designer a monthly fee to remotely access and use the templates. 
    The software always remains on the Tennessee server. The sales from the web designer’s 
    services provided to the California customer are deductible. 
 
However, if an out-of-state customer with an out-of-state billing address receives a service in 
Tennessee (an over-the-counter sale), the sale is subject to the tax. 

Example – Non-Deductible Service Sale 

   A Georgia trucking company has a truck that breaks down in Tennessee. A Tennessee 
    mechanic repairs the truck in Tennessee and sends the bill to the Georgia address of 
    the company. When the truck is repaired, the driver picks up the repaired truck from 
    the mechanic and returns the truck to Georgia. The repair service is subject to business 
    tax and is not deductible from the business tax base. 

 7. Sales of Tangible Personal Property in Interstate Commerce  

Taxpayers may deduct from their business tax base sales in bona fide interstate commerce.    271 
 
Deliveries of tangible personal property and services to customers located in this state are 
sales subject to the business tax, regardless of whether the property is subsequently 
transported outside the state.272 However, deliveries of tangible personal property or services 
to customers outside this state by the taxpayer or a common carrier, before a customer 
obtains possession, are sales exempt from the business tax.273  

Examples 

   A taxpayer receives commissions for custom artwork through their website from 
    customers located both within and outside the state. Once completed, the taxpayer 
    ships the commissioned artwork to its customers via common carrier. The taxpayer 
    may deduct the sales of commissioned artwork that are delivered to customers located 
    outside the state (the taxpayer may not deduct the sales to in-state customers). 
     
   A Tennessee car dealer sold a car to a customer that is an out-of-state resident. The 

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    customer came to the dealer’s lot to purchase the car. After the purchase, the 
    customer took possession of the car and drove it off the lot. The customer utilized a 
    3-day affidavit to purchase the car exempt from sales tax. However, because the 
    customer took possession of the vehicle in Tennessee, the car dealer cannot deduct 
    this sale for business tax purposes.  

 8. School to Student Sales  

The proceeds of the sale of school supplies and meals made to students and school 
employees on campus at elementary and secondary schools may be deducted. However, sales 
of such items made by private independent contractors cannot be deducted.274 For example, 
proceeds from selling school supplies sold by the school bookstore or meals sold in school’s 
cafeteria are deductible if the bookstore or cafeteria are run and staffed by the school 
employees.  

 9. Bad Debts 

Taxpayers may deduct from their gross sales bad debts that arise from sales on which the 
taxpayer previously paid business tax.275 For the purpose of calculating this deduction, a “bad 
debt” is defined by federal statute.276 However, this amount must be adjusted to exclude the 
following: 
 
   Interest; 
     
   Financing charges; 
 
   Sales or use taxes charged on the purchase price; 
 
   Uncollectible amounts on property that remain in the possession of the seller until the 
    full purchase price is paid; 
 
   Expenses incurred in attempting to collect any debt; and 
 
   Repossessed property.277 
 
The bad debts deduction may be taken on the Business Tax Return for the period during 
which the bad debt is written off as uncollectible in the taxpayer's books and records and is 
eligible to be deducted for federal income tax purposes. A taxpayer who is not required to file 
federal income tax returns may also take the bad debts deduction for the period in which the 

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bad debt is written off as uncollectible in the taxpayer's books and records, if the taxpayer 
would be eligible for a bad debt deduction for federal income tax purposes.278 
 
If a taxpayer takes a bad debts deduction for business tax purposes and the debt is 
subsequently collected in whole or in part, the amount collected will be subject to business 
tax. The taxpayer must report the gross sales from the collection and remit the business tax 
due on the Business Tax Return filed for the period in which the collection is made.279 
 
If the amount of bad debts deduction exceeds the amount of gross sales for the period during 
which the bad debt is written off, the taxpayer may file a refund claim and receive a refund, 
pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1802. The statute of limitations for filing the refund claim 
is measured from the due date of the Business Tax Return on which the bad debt could first 
be claimed.280 

 10. Miscellaneous Federal and State Excise Taxes 

In calculating the business tax, the taxpayer may take a deduction for the following taxes; 
provided, that such deductions may be claimed only by the taxpayer who made direct 
payment to the applicable governmental agency and, in addition, by all subsequent vendees of 
such taxpayer licensed to do business in the state:281 
 
  Federal excise taxes imposed on beer, gasoline, motor fuel, and tobacco products; 
    
  Tennessee gasoline tax;282  
 
  Tennessee motor vehicle fuel use tax;283 
 
  Tennessee tobacco tax; 284 
 
  Tennessee beer taxes;  285 
 
  Special tax on petroleum products;286 and 
 
  Liquified gas tax.287  
 
The taxpayer may gather the information for deduction from their records or the records of 
their subsequent vendees. 
 
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Additionally: 
 
      Tennessee sales and use taxes or liquor by the drink taxes that are required 
      to be passed on to the consumer should be excluded from the gross sales 
      reported on the business tax return, but such taxes passed on to the 
      consumer may be deducted from the gross sales reported, if such taxes are 
      included in gross sales on the business tax return. 
       
      Tennessee bail bond taxes that are required to be collected by a bail 
      bondsman should be excluded from the gross sales reported on the business 
      tax return, but such taxes collected by the bail bondsman may be deducted 
      from the gross sales reported if such taxes are included in gross sales on the 
      business tax return. 
                                                                                              
This deduction does not apply to contractors’ use tax on materials the contractor purchases 
to fulfill its contracts because the contractor is not permitted to directly pass this tax along to 
its customers. 

 11.  Accommodation Sales  

Sales receipts from a bona fide accommodation sale are not subject to business tax and may 
be deducted from the taxpayer’s gross sales in determining their business tax base, provided 
that such sales have been included in the gross sales reported on the Business Tax Return. 
 
An “accommodation sale” is an occasional and incidental sale for resale by a person 
regularly engaged in the business of making sales of the type of property that is sold for 
resale to other persons similarly engaged in the business of selling such property.288 The 
amount paid by the buyer to the seller for an accommodation sale may include additional 
charges for the cost of freight, in storage costs, and transportation costs incurred in the 
transfer of the property from the seller to the buyer.289 For example: 
 
  Dealership A has a purchase order from a customer for a new vehicle with 
   customized specifications. However, Dealership A does not have a vehicle in stock 
   that meets the customer's requirements. Dealership B does have such a vehicle in 
   stock. Dealership B sells the vehicle to Dealership A at cost, which includes 
   transportation costs incurred by Dealership B. This transaction qualifies as an 
   accommodation sale, and Dealership B may deduct from its business tax base the 
   proceeds from the sale. 

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However, the amount paid by the buyer to the seller cannot exceed the amount paid by 
the seller to their vendor in acquiring the property and any additional, permissible charges 
for costs incurred by the seller.290 For example: 
 
  Assume the same facts as in the previous example, except that Dealership B 
   charges Dealership A a markup of 20% in excess of Dealership B’s cost for the 
   vehicle. Because the selling price of the vehicle to Dealership A exceeds Dealership B’s 
   cost, the sale does not qualify as an accommodation sale and Dealership B may not 
   deduct the proceeds from the sale. 

 12. Patronage Dividends  

The amount of cash and other patronage dividends declared by cooperative selling 
associations or corporations, that are paid to or credited to a member's account from the 
earnings of such association or corporation, may be taken as a deduction from gross sales for 
the tax period in which the distributions and credits are made.291 

 13. Public Warehousing and Storage Leases 

Taxpayers that operate a warehouse, but also lease space within the warehouse without 
furnishing any services to the lessee of the space, may exclude the sales for such leases from 
the gross sales subject to the business tax, or deduct them from the gross sales they are 
included in the gross sales reported on the Business Tax Return.292 

 14. Motor Vehicle Rentals Refundable Deposits 

Deposits made by customers that are refundable when a motor vehicle, trailer, and/or similar 
rentals are left at the destination, and that are actually refunded to the customer, may be 
deducted by the taxpayer from their gross sales in determining the business tax.293 

 15. Funeral Directors Cash Advances 

In cases where a funeral director makes "cash advances" for opening graves, transportation, 
newspaper notices, telephone calls and other similar services, and furnishes items such as 
flowers and clothing, acting as an agent for their customer and making a charge for 
reimbursement for the advances without adding any profit to the charges, such charges shall 
be included in the gross sales of the funeral director but may be deducted on the Business Tax 
Return in calculating the business tax due and payable.294 

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Chapter 10: Credits 

Overview 

Tennessee law provides several credits against business tax liability. These credits are 
generally found in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713. 
 
     The total business tax credits outlined below and available to a taxpayer in 
     Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713 may not be used to offset more than 50% of the 
 
     taxpayer’s liability. 
 
Personal Property Taxes 

Personal property taxes properly paid under Tenn. Code Ann. Title 67, Chapter 5, Part 5, or 
Part 13 may be taken as a credit against the total business tax liability of the taxpayer 
actually paying the personal property taxes.295 The following conditions apply: 
 
  Personal property taxes are allowable as a credit only to the extent that the property 
   is located at the place of business covered by the business tax return on which the 
   credit is being claimed.296 
    
  The property is taxed in the same city or county that the return is being filed. 
    
  Personal property taxes are allowable as a credit only for taxes paid either during the 
   tax period covered by the return or prior to the due date of the return.297 
    
  There is no credit available for payment of property taxes on real property. 
 
  Only the amount of personal property tax paid to the county will be used to 
   determine the credit for the state business tax purposes.  
 
  Only the amount of personal property taxes paid to the city will be used to 
   determine the credit for the city business tax purposes. 
    
     Payment-in-lieu-of-tax (“PILOT”) payments may not be taken as a credit 
     against business tax for property tax paid.  

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 1. Personal Property Taxes Assessed During Audit 

 Personal property taxes assessed pursuant to an audit and subsequently paid may be 
 taken as a credit either on the business tax return filed for the year in which the additional 
 personal property tax was paid or on the return covering the immediately previous year.298 
 If the credit is taken in the previous year, an amended business tax return must be filed for 
 that year.299 

 2. Taxes Paid on Property Leased or Rented 

A taxpayer that leases personal property to a third party, but pays property tax on the 
leased property, may take the credit on its business tax return filed for its business location, 
if the leased property is located in the same jurisdiction that is receiving the taxpayer’s 
business tax allocation. This would only apply if: 
 
   The property is leased to others by the taxpayer; and 
     
   The taxpayer paid personal property tax on the property. 
 
In cases where a lease or rental agreement provides specifically for payment of personal 
property taxes by the lessee or renter to the lessor or owner, personal property taxes paid 
by the lessee to the lessor covering any period of time extending beyond June 1, 1971, 
arising from assessments made against the lessor or owner may be taken as a credit 
against the business tax liability.300 The lessor may not take the credit authorized to the 
lessee pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(3).301 

Examples 

   Company C, located in Franklin, Tennessee, leases printers to multiple businesses 
    located in Brentwood and Franklin Tennessee. Company C pays the personal 
    property tax on the printers. Company C reports the receipts from all the leases on 
    its business tax return for the City of Franklin and Williamson County.  
     
           o   Company C may take credits for the personal property tax it paid on the 
               printers located in Franklin for its city business tax and for the personal 
               property tax it paid to Williamson County for state business tax.  
                
           o   Company C may not take a credit for the Brentwood printers for its city 
               business tax but may do so for business tax sourced to the state. 

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   Propane Dealer (“PD”) is in Chattanooga, Tennessee. PD leases propane tanks 
    throughout Tennessee and pays property tax on all the leased tanks. PD reports the 
    receipts from the leases of the tanks on its Chattanooga and Hamilton County 
    returns.  
     
     o      PD may take a credit for the property tax it paid on the tanks in Chattanooga 
            for its city business tax.  
             
     o      PD may also take a credit for state business tax for the property tax that it 
            paid to Hamilton County on the tanks located in Chattanooga, East Ridge, 
            Soddy-Daisy, and Red Bank.  
             
     o      However, PD may not take a credit for any property tax that it paid outside of 
            Hamilton County. 

 3. Providers of Video Programming Services 

Providers of video programming services, as defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-102, are 
allowed the personal property tax credit to the extent that:  
 
   The property is located in a jurisdiction where the taxpayer’s receipts are sourced 
    in accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717; and  
     
   The property is taxed by that jurisdiction.302 

 4. Special School District Taxes 

Personal property taxes paid pursuant to a special school district tax levied by a public or 
private act may be taken as a business tax credit.303 This credit only applies to special 
school districts located in Gibson County and Carroll County.  

 5. Property Transferred to a Government Entity 

The amount of Tennessee personal property taxes that a person would normally owe except 
that, pursuant to an agreement between the person and a local governmental or 
instrumentality, the person’s personal property has been transferred to a local government 
or instrumentality, may be credited against the business tax liability provided that: 
 
   The person shall be eligible for such credit only to the extent of the tax generated 

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   from its receipts for services rendered by such person to an affiliated person. 
    
  Either person directly owns or controls 80% or more of the other, or 80% or more of 
   both persons is directly or indirectly owned or controlled by a common parent. 
    
  The provisions of this section are not affirmatively rejected by a two-thirds vote of 
   the legislative body of the county or municipality exercising jurisdiction over the 
   governmental unit or instrumentality.304 

Privilege Taxes 

A business tax credit may be taken for the pro rata portion of any of the following taxes paid: 
 
  Gross receipts tax for Production Credit Associations, 
    
  Beer taxes, 
    
  Privilege and excise taxes, and 
    
  Property tax, extending past June 1, 1971, and repealed as of that date.305  
 
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Chapter 11: Industry-Specific Guidance 

Contractors 

 1. Overview 

For business tax purposes, a contractor is defined as a person engaged in the business of 
contracting, performing a contract, or engaging in any of the activities or activities like the 
following: 
 
   Receiving compensation from rendering exterminating services, installing personal 
    property, constructing, building, erecting, repairing, grading, excavating, drilling, 
    exploring, testing, or adding to any building, highway, street, sidewalk, bridge, 
    culvert, sewer, irrigation or water system, drainage or dredging system, air 
    conditioning system, heating system, transmission line, pipeline, tower, dock, storage 
    tank, wharf, excavation, grading, water well, or any other improvement, structure, or 
    part of thereof.  
     
Contractors are Classification 4 taxpayers. Contractors are liable for business tax regardless 
of whether their contracts are lump sum or cost-plus basis. 

 2. Reporting Sales and Progress Payments 

Contractors report sales on a cash basis. TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.09(2) states that 
progress payment charges billed pursuant to a contract and received by a contractor and 
any charges for renting or leasing equipment to others for use in constructing, or making 
improvements or additions, or repairing buildings or other structures on real property when 
the equipment is operated by the lessor are subject to business tax. 

 3. Deemed Location 

For business tax purposes, a “deemed location” is a county and/or municipality where a 
contractor is not domiciled or located but where the contractor earns taxable receipts of 
more than $100,000 for work performed in the jurisdiction.306 
 
Taxable receipts from contracts performed in each deemed location must be reported on 
the return for the county and/or municipality where the work was performed. The taxable 
receipts for a deemed location are not reported on the return for the county and/or 
municipality of domicile or location.  

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When the charges billed exceed $100,000 for work performed in a deemed location, the 
contractor is required to register for business tax and pay the one-time standard business 
license fee of $15 for that location. Taxable receipts of more than $100,000 received during 
the tax period will be reported on the return for the deemed location. 
 
     Taxable receipts of $100,000 or less in compensation from contracts in a 
     county and/or municipality other than the contractor’s place of domicile or 
     location must be reported on the return for the county and/or municipality 
     of domicile or location. 
     Therefore, all taxable receipts for work done in any county will be subject to 
 
     the state tax. However, where those receipts are sourced, and which county 
     is apportioned the tax still depend on whether work is done in a deemed 
     location.  
  
 4. In-State Contractors 

State-Level Tax 

In-state contractors with less than $100,000 in taxable sales during a tax period are exempt 
from business tax and are not required to file a business tax return.307 However, if a 
contractor has more than $3,000 but less than $100,000 in sales in the county of domicile, a 
contractor is required to obtain a minimal activity license in that county. 
 
In-state contractors with less than $100,000 in taxable sales in their county of domicile or 
taxable sales sourced to their county of domicile, but with more than $100,000 in taxable 
sales in another county are exempt from business tax in their county of domicile. However, 
these contractors are taxable in the county where they generated more than $100,000 in 
taxable revenue. This other county is considered a “deemed location.” As such, the 
contractor should acquire a standard business license in the county where over $100,000 in 
sales was generated and a minimal activity license in the county of domicile (if more than 
$3,000 in sales in the domicile county). 
 
Contractors with more than $100,000 in taxable sales in their domicile county and more than 
$100,000 in taxable sales in another county in the state are taxable in their domicile county 
and in the other counties where they had more than $100,000 in taxable sales (“deemed 
locations”). These taxpayers should obtain standard business licenses in the domicile county 
and counties where they have established deemed locations. 

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Municipal-Level Tax 

In-state contractors with less than $100,000 in taxable sales within a municipality are exempt 
from business tax in that jurisdiction. Contractors with less than $100,000 but more than 
$3,000 in taxable sales within their domicile municipality should obtain a minimal activity 
license for their domicile municipality. 
 
In-state contractors with less than $100,000 in taxable sales in a domicile municipality but 
with more than $100,000 in another municipality are exempt from business tax within their 
domicile municipality and subject to business tax in the other municipality where they 
generated more than $100,000 in taxable sales. These taxpayers should obtain a standard 
business license in the municipalities where they have established deemed locations and a 
minimal activity license in their domicile municipality (if more than $3,000 in sales in the 
domicile municipality). 
 
In-state contractors with $100,000 or more in taxable sales within their domicile municipality 
or sourced to their domicile municipality and more than $100,000 in taxable sales in another 
municipality are subject to business tax in both jurisdictions. These contractors should 
obtain standard business licenses in their domicile municipality and municipalities where 
they have established a deemed location.  

Example 1 

Johnson Erectors (“Johnson”)308 is domiciled in City of Clarksville in Montgomery County, 
Tennessee. For the period beginning October 1, 2023, and ending September 30, 2024, 
Johnson performed $3,255,000 in total contracts. Johnson performed contracts totaling 
$1,505,000 within its domicile jurisdiction (Clarksville/Montomgery County). 
 
The following contracts were performed outside of Johnson’s domicile: 
 
  City of Jackson/Madison County – $ 110,000 
  City of Springfield/Robertson County – $35,000 
  Shelby County (outside Memphis City limits) – $1,500,000 
  City of Oliver Springs/Morgan County – $105,000 
    
Johnson must obtain the following business licenses and report its gross taxable sales as 
follows: 

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 Cities              Clarksville    Springfield  Jackson  Memphis     Oliver 
                     (domicile)     (no filing) (deemed   (no filing) Springs 
                                                location)             (deemed 
                                                                      location) 

 Gross Taxable Sales $1,540,000     $0          $110,000  $0          $105,000 
 Reported on Return 

 Type of Business    Standard       Minimal     Standard  N/A         Standard  
 License                            Activity 

 Counties         Montgomery  Robertson  Madison          Shelby      Morgan 
                  (domicile)     (no filing) (deemed      (deemed     (deemed 
                                             location)    location)   location) 

 Gross Taxable    $1,540,000     $0          $110,000     $1,500,000  $105,000 
 Sales Reported 
 on Return 

 Type of Business Standard       Minimal     Standard     Standard    Standard  
 License                         Activity 

Johnson would report the $35,000 in taxable gross sales earned in Springfield/Robertson 
County under its domicile location returns (Montgomery/Clarksville). This is because Johnson 
did not meet the $100,000 threshold to have a deemed location in Springfield/Robertson 
County. Johnson would need standard business licenses in all jursidictions except for 
Memphis, Springfield, and Robertson County. Johnson would need a minimal activity license 
in both Springfield and Robertson County because it had more than $3,000 but less than 
$100,000 in gross receipts in those locations. Johnson did not have any sales in Memphis, 
thus it would not be required to obtain a minimal activity license or a standard business 
license.  

Example 2 

Foundation Builders, (“Foundation”) is domiciled in the City of Lebanon in Wilson County, 
Tennessee. From the period beginning October 1, 2023, and ending September 30, 2024, 
Foundation performed contracts totaling $2,040,000. Foundation performed contracts 

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totaling $1,930,000 in contracts within its domicile jurisdiction. Foundation has taxable 
receipts that are less than $100,000 in each of two municipalities located in the same county 
all of which are outside of Foundation’s place of domicile. The total taxable receipts for the 
county are more than $100,000. 
 
The following contracts were performed outside of Foundation’s domicile: 
 
  City of Smyrna/Rutherford County – $60,000 
         
  City of Murfreesboro/Rutherford County – $50,000 
         
Foundation must obtain the following business licenses and report its gross taxable sales as 
follows: 

 Cities              Lebanon (domicile) Smyrna (no filing) Murfreesboro (no 
                                                           filing) 

 Gross Taxable Sales $2,040,000         $0                 $0 
 Reported on 
 Return 

 Type of Business    Standard           Minimal Activity   Minimal Activity  
 License 

 Counties                 Wilson (domicile)    Rutherford (deemed location) 

 Gross Taxable Sales      $1,930,000           $110,000 
 Reported on Return 

 Type of Business License Standard             Standard  

Foundation would need a minimal activity license in both Smyrna and Murfreesboro 
because it had more than $3,000 but less than $100,000 in gross receipts in those locations. 
For purposes of applying the exemption, deemed location analysis, and filing requirements, 
multiple locations in the same jurisdiction are combined. Because Smyrna and Murfreesboro 
are both located in Rutherford County, the receipts in both locations are combined. When 
combined, the total taxable sales in Rutherford County equal $110,000. Therefore, 

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Foundation needs a standard business license in Rutherford County and must file a return 
and remit the tax under a Rutherford County location id. Because those sales are included 
on the Rutherford County location id, they are not reported on the corresponding Wilson 
County location id. Additionally, they are included on the Lebanon location id because there 
is not a corresponding municipal-level return in Smyrna or Murfreesboro.  

Example 3 

Armstrong Home Improvements, (“Armstrong”), is domiciled in the city of Nashville/Davidson 
County. For the period beginning October 1, 2023, and ending September 30, 2024, 
Armstrong performed contracts totaling $2,000,000. A portion of the contracts, totaling 
$175,000, were performed in the city of Murfreesboro in Rutherford County, Tennessee.  
 
Armstrong must obtain the following business licenses and report the following amounts: 

 Cities              Nashville (domicile)  Murfreesboro (deemed location) 

 Gross Taxable Sales $1,825,000            $175,000 
 Reported on Return 

 Business License    Standard              Standard  

 Counties            Davidson (domicile)   Rutherford (deemed location) 

 Gross Taxable Sales $1,825,000            $175,000 
 Reported on Return 

 Business License    Standard              Standard  

Armstrong has more than $100,000 in all jursidictions in which it worked. Therefore, 
Armstrong must obtain a standard business license in all jurisdictions and must file a 
business tax return in all jurisdictions.  

 5. Out-of-State Contractors 

A contractor that does not have a location or domicile in Tennessee and has taxable gross 
receipts in the state of less than $100,000 per county is exempt from the business tax and 
does not need to register for business tax or obtain a business license. 

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A contractor that does not have a location or domicile in Tennessee and has taxable gross 
receipts in any county of $100,000 or more is subject to the state business tax and should 
register and file a return with the Department.  
 
The contractor should total all its receipts for each county in which it has taxable sales of 
$100,000 or more and pay the state tax on all such receipts, or at least the $22 minimum tax. 
The contractor is not required to pay the minimum tax for each county in which it receives 
compensation. For example: 
 
   Contractor A is domiciled in Kentucky but receives compensation of $10,000 in 
    Davidson County, $121,000 in Williamson County, and $5,000 in Sumner County 
    during a tax period. Because he has receipts of $100,000 or more in at least one 
    Tennessee county, Contractor A should register and file one return with the 
    Department. His total taxable receipts are $121,000 (only the receipts from counties 
    where he earns $100,000 or more). 

Deemed Location 

If a contractor receives taxable compensation of more than $100,000 during a tax period in 
any county and/or municipality, the contractor will be deemed to have a location in that 
county and/or municipality for business tax purposes.309 Therefore, the contractor must 
register for and obtain a standard license in that county and/or municipality for that tax 
period.  
 
The contractor should file a separate return for that county and/or municipality, and the 
compensation the contractor received in that county and/or municipality will be sourced to 
that county and/or municipality. The contractor should subtract this compensation from the 
remainder of the compensation it receives in the state which is filed on a separate return.  
 
For example: 
 
   Contractor B is domiciled in Georgia but receives compensation of:  
     
         o   $162,000 in Hamilton County/Chattanooga,  
         o   $112,000 in Bradley County (unincorporated area), and  
         o   $123,000 in Polk County (unincorporated area). 
              
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   Because Contractor B performed a service in Tennessee and has receipts of 
    $100,000 or more in at least one Tennessee County, Contractor B should register 
    with the Department. Further, because he received more than $100,000 in Hamilton 
    County/Chattanooga, Bradley County, and Polk County, he should also obtain 
    standard business licenses from the Hamilton County Clerk, Polk County Clerk, 
    Bradley County Clerk and the Chattanooga city official. Contractor B should file a 
    return for Hamilton County reporting his receipts in that county of $162,000 and 
    should file a return for Chattanooga reporting his receipts in that municipality of 
    $162,000. He should also file separate returns reporting receipts of $112,000 in 
    Bradley and $123,000 in Polk county. 
     
Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(c)(3) provides that if a contractor does not have a domicile or 
location in the state and receives $100,000 or less in compensation in a municipality during a 
taxable period (therefore does not have a deemed location), such compensation is not 
subject to the municipal-level business tax. 

 6. Subcontractors 

Contractors may deduct payments made to subcontractors if: 
 
   The contractor completes Schedule C of the business tax return listing the 
    subcontractor’s name, address, business license, and amount paid; 
     
   It keeps a copy of the subcontractor’s business license or license issued by the board 
    for licensing contractors; and  
     
   The deductible amounts were made during the business tax period to 
    subcontractors, or other persons holding a business license or who is licensed by a 
    state board for licensing contractors for performing activities described in Tenn. 
    Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4)(A), the classifications section of the business tax statute. 310 
     
Contractors may not reduce their own gross receipts by deducting payments to 
subcontractors if the subcontractor is not licensed for business tax. Contractors are not 
required to determine whether their subcontractors have paid business tax. The contractor 
is only required to obtain a copy of a subcontractor’s business license and report the 
required information on Schedule C of the business tax return (Payment to Subcontractor 
Worksheet). 

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Services 

Payments to subcontractors are deductible if:  

   The payments are for Classification 4(A) services (see Chapter 2 for more information 
    on services); and  
     
   The taxpayer claiming the deduction actually sold those subcontracted services.  
     
Contractors and subcontractors do not need to be primarily in the business of providing 
Classification 4(A) services to be eligible for the subcontractor payment deduction. 

Subcontractor Not Licensed in Deemed Location 

A contractor that receives more than $100,000 from a contract outside of the county or city 
where they are domiciled is required to register in the county and/or city where the work is 
performed. If a taxpayer’s subcontractors had $100,000 or less in contracts in a particular 
county or city, the Department would allow the taxpayer to deduct payments to that 
subcontractor if the subcontractor held a business license or was licensed by the state board 
for licensing contractors for work described in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4)(A). 

 7. Speculative Builders 

Persons that build houses or other structures on their own property from their own plans 
and that offer the structures for sale are not subject to business tax provided no structural 
changes are made to the initial building plans to suit the contracted buyer.311 Cosmetic 
changes such as paint, flooring, counter tops, etc., are not considered structural changes.  
 
If, while constructing a house or other structure, a builder agrees to sell the property and 
alters the plans to the specifications of the buyer (e.g., extends a room, removes a wall, etc.), 
the builder will be considered a contractor and liable for business tax on the total receipts 
above the price that the property would otherwise be sold.  
 
A builder is subject to business tax in this manner if the builder:  
 
   Contracts to sell a building and lot prior to completion of the construction of the 
    building, and 
     
   Alters the building plans to the specifications of the buyer.  

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For example, while constructing a home, a builder decides to sell the property and adds an 
additional bathroom to the main floor of the home at the request of the buyer. The builder 
sells the home for $360,000, and the value of the land is $60,000. The builder would owe 
business tax on the $300,000 structure. 

Agriculture 

 1. Agricultural Commodity Brokers 

When sales of livestock, horses, poultry, or other farm products are made by any person 
other than the producer, breeder, or trainer, they will be classed and taxed as Classification 
4 sales under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4). The business tax shall also include the 
commissions, fees, margins, or other charges received from sales of livestock, poultry, or 
other farm products.312  

 2. Agricultural Exemptions 

Farmers Providing Services to Other Farmers 

Farmers providing services to other farmers for planting or harvesting agriculture products, 
or for the preparation, improvement, or maintenance of land used in the production of 
agricultural products are exempt from business tax.313 

Sales Directly from the Farm 

Receipts of the producer from sales of livestock, poultry, and other farm products directly 
from the farm, including receipts from catfish farmers, are excluded from gross sales on 
business tax returns.314 
 
When sales of livestock, horses, poultry, or other farm products are made by any person 
other than the producer, breeder, or trainer, they will be classed and taxed as Classification 
4 sales under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4).315  

Lessors of Agricultural Properties 

Persons leasing agricultural, airport, forest, mining, oil, and public utility properties are 
excluded from business tax for the provision of these services. 
 
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Mobile Telecommunications Providers 

Mobile telecommunications services sold to customers in Tennessee are subject to business 
tax. The federal Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act (“MTSA”) requires mobile 
telecommunications services providers (“providers”) to source gross receipts from the sale of 
mobile telecommunications services to the customer’s place of primary use. The customer’s 
place of primary use is the street address where the customer primarily uses the service (i.e., 
the customer’s residential or business address). Providers should obtain a business license, 
register for business tax, and report sales of mobile telecommunications services made in 
each city and county (i.e., jurisdiction) where they make $100,000 or more in taxable sales 
during the tax year. 

 1. Registration and Reporting 

Mobile telecommunications services and tangible personal property sold by a provider 
within a jurisdiction are reported separately. In accordance with the MTSA, providers must 
register under Classification 3 and report sales of mobile telecommunications services under 
Location IDs established for the sole purpose of reporting such sales to customers with a 
place of primary use within a city or county jurisdiction.  
 
Tennessee Taxpayer Access Point (“TNTAP”) registration allows providers to select the city or 
county where they meet the $100,000 threshold instead of registering using a business 
location address. Providers should first obtain a Location ID to report the sales of mobile 
telecommunications services at the Classification 3 rate for each city where they meet the 
$100,000 threshold. When a provider registers in a city, the Department’s registration 
system will automatically create a separate county Location ID to report tax at the 
Classification 3 rate for the county.  
 
A provider making sales of mobile telecommunications services in multiple cities within a 
county as well as the unincorporated area of the county will have a separate Location ID 
under Classification 3 for each city where it meets the $100,000 threshold. The provider will 
also have a single separate county Location ID under Classification 3 to report all sales of 
mobile telecommunication services into the county (i.e., all cities and unincorporated areas 
in the county) if the total sales into the county are $100,000 or more. A provider with a store 
location in that jurisdiction should continue to report sales of tangible personal property 
made from the store under the Classification 2 rate using the store Location ID to report 
sales made from the store for both the city and county. 

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Example  

Company X sells mobile telecommunications services, cellphones, and accessories. During 
the tax year, Company X sold $105,000 of cellphones and accessories from its Chattanooga 
store location. Company X also made $340,000 in mobile telecommunications services sales 
to customers with a place of primary use in the following cities in Hamilton County: $105,000 
in Chattanooga, $105,000 in East Ridge, $25,000 in Red Bank, $5,000 in Soddy-Daisy, and 
$100,000 in the unincorporated area of Hamilton County. 
  
The $105,000 in sales of cellphone and accessories made from the Chattanooga store are 
sourced and reported for both the city and county under the Classification 2 under the store 
Location ID. 
 
The mobile telecommunications services are sourced and reported using the Classification 3 
rate as follows: 
  
    $105,000 under the Chattanooga Location ID; 
    $105,000 under the East Ridge Location ID; and  
    $340,000 under the Hamilton County Location ID. 
 
Because the mobile telecommunications services sold to customers with a place of primary 
use in the city of Soddy-Daisy and Red Bank are less than $100,000, no business tax is 
reported to Soddy-Daisy and Red Bank. However, the $5,000 and $25,000 are included in 
sales reported to Hamilton County. The provider is still required to have minimal business 
activity licenses for the cities of Soddy-Daisy and Red Bank.  

  2. Sales of Phones and Accessories from Outside the State 

Providers making sales of tangible personal property to customers in Tennessee from 
locations outside of Tennessee are only subject to the state-level business tax on those 
sales. Providers should report such sales under a separate out-of-state Location ID on their 
consolidated business tax return.  

  3. Personal Property Tax Credit  

A provider may take a credit on its business tax return for the personal property taxes paid 
to the same jurisdiction during the tax period covered by the return or prior to the due date 
of the return. The credit shall be taken first against the business tax due for a store location 
and then may be taken against the business tax due for the wireless telecommunications 

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services for the same jurisdiction up to 50% of the provider’s business tax liability in that 
jurisdiction. 

 4. Sales of Internet Access  

Taxable mobile telecommunications services do not include charges for internet access. 
Sales of internet access are not taxable because of the federal Internet Tax Freedom Act. 
 
Persons providing wireless telecommunications services must register and pay business tax 
as a Classification 3 service provider in every county and city jurisdiction where those sales 
of services are received by their customers.  

Performance Entities 

Performing artists or their business entities (collectively “performance entities”) who perform 
in Tennessee are subject to business tax, and they must pay tax on merchandise sales, as 
well as ticket sales and commissions. 
 
Performance entities, when performing at any given location, often receive a commission on 
ticket sales or a portion of the admission receipts to the event from the ticket promoter. The 
amounts received are receipts for the sale of services. The performance entities may also 
sell merchandise, such as souvenirs and t-shirts. There are no exemptions from business tax 
under the law for either of these types of sales. 

 1. In-state Performance Entities 

In-state and out-of-state performance entities have different licensing requirements. While 
all ticket and merchandise sales/commissions are subject to business tax if they total 
$100,000 or more per jurisdiction, there are different reporting and licensing requirements 
for in-state performance entities versus out-of-state performance entities. 

Licensing with the County and City 

Performance entities with a Tennessee location (e.g., an office or other place of business) 
must obtain a county business license from the county of that location if the entity’s total 
state taxable receipts are $100,000 or more. 
 
In-state performance entities must also obtain a city business license from the city of that 
location if the city has a business tax and the entity’s total city taxable receipts are $100,000 
or more.  

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Minimal Activity Licensing 

If a performance entity’s total state taxable receipts are at least $3,000 but less than 
$100,000, the entity must get a minimal activity license from the county of its location. If the 
entity’s total city taxable receipts, if applicable, are at least $3,000 but less than $100,000, the 
entity must get a minimal activity license from the city of its location. If the performance 
entity’s taxable receipts are less than $3,000, it does not have to obtain a license or file a 
return. 

Filing 

Performance entities with locations in Tennessee must file a tax return that includes sales 
subject to both the state and the city business tax rates with the Department.  

 2. Out-of-State Performance Entities 

Performance entities that perform in Tennessee, but do not set up an established location in 
the state must register and file a return with the Department, reporting all sales made in 
each county that are $100,000 or more. Out-of-state performance entities are not subject to 
the city business tax. Additionally, these entities are not required to obtain any type of 
business tax license. 

 3. Are Touring Artists Transient Vendors? 

Performing artists generally do not meet the definition of a transient vendor found in Tenn. 
Code Ann. § 67-4-702(24) as transient vendors are sellers of merchandise. Sellers of services 
are not considered transient vendors. If performing artists are only selling tangible personal 
property, it is possible that these artists may be classified as transient vendors. 

Traveling Photographers 

A “traveling photographer” is a photographer who makes studio-type photographs or 
portraits and sells them but does not have an established studio or place of business in the 
trade area in which such photographs are taken.316 A traveling photographer is not a 
photographer who makes photographs to be placed upon articles of identification.317 
 
Before a traveling photographer may do any business in a community, the photographer 
must register with the sheriff or chief of police where the photographer proposes to conduct 
temporary business.318 The photographer must provide:  
 
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   The photographer’s full name and address;  
     
   The name and address of any other person working with the photographer;  
     
   The name and address of the employer of the photographer; and  
     
   Proof that a deposit of $100 has been made with the county clerk and a like amount 
    with the proper municipal tax collector, against whatever amount or amounts of 
    business taxes the photographer may owe on account of business done in the 
    county or municipality, or both, depending on the case. 319 
     
Any deposits made will be a credit on the amount of business tax for which such 
photographer may be liable to any county or municipality.320 When the taxes are paid, any 
balance remaining to the photographer’s credit with the respective taxing jurisdictions will 
be refunded.321 

Lottery Commissions 

The 6.5% commission earned on lottery ticket sales is included in gross receipts and subject 
to the business tax. However, receipts from lottery tickets are not subject to business tax nor 
are they subject to sales and use tax. 
 
Commissions earned from the sales of lottery tickets are considered Classification 3 sales. 
Because the applicable business tax rate is determined by an entity’s dominant business 
activity, lottery ticket vendors must determine their appropriate business tax classification 
based on gross receipts. 

Funeral Directors 

Funeral directors are liable for business tax depending on how they bill customers.  

 1. Unit Price 

When a funeral director sells goods and services for a “unit price” the transaction is regarded 
as a sale of tangible personal property and taxed as a Classification 2 sale.322 
 
   For example, if a funeral director sells a casket, burial vault, and all services 
    furnished for one stated price, this sale would be considered a Classification 2 sale of 
    tangible personal property. 

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 2. Itemization 

If a funeral director sells goods and services but itemizes the bill (e.g., the price for the 
casket, burial vault, and other tangible personal property sold and services rendered), the 
tax rate is determined by the classification that comprises the dominant business activity, 
either Classification 2 or Classification 3.323  
 
   For example, Funeral Home J (“J”) sells funeral goods and services to a client. J 
    itemizes the charges on the invoice sent to the client.  
     
     o   The charges are as follows: 
          
                   Basic Funeral Service Fee:     $ 2,000 
                   Vault:                         $ 1,400 
                   Embalming Services:            $    800 
                   Casket:                        $ 2,400 
                   Transportation Services:       $    400  
                     
     o   Because J itemized these sales on the invoice to the client, the items are 
         taxed as Classification 2 sales. J’s dominant business activity in this 
         transaction is the provision of tangible personal property (i.e., vault and 
         casket) because the vault and casket totaled $3,800 of the transaction while 
         services totaled $3,200. 

 3. Cash Advances 

When a funeral director makes cash advances for services and furnishes items such as 
flowers and clothing to a customer, acts as an agent for the customer, and charges for 
reimbursement on the advances without adding profit to the charges for himself, the 
charges are included in the funeral director’s gross sales but may be deducted on the 
business tax return in computing business tax owed.324  
 
Services include: 
 
   Opening graves 
     
   Transportation 
     
   Newspaper notices 

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  Telephone calls 
    
  Other similar services 

Cemeteries and Memorial Gardens 

Income derived from interment charges made by cemeteries, memorial gardens, etc., is 
taxable under the Business Tax Act.325  In cases where no deed or certificate of ownership is 
given, charges for burial in lots, crypts, etc., will be deemed to be charges made for the right 
of sepulcher and the entire gross income therefrom is taxable without any deduction for 
amounts set aside for perpetual care.326 The sale of boxes, urns, markers, vases, plants, 
shrubs and other tangible personal property are also taxable under the Business Tax Act.     327 

Municipal Airports 

Certain airports or other navigation facilities located outside the territorial limit of the 
municipality that created or controls the facility may be taxed under the Business Tax Act by 
the creating or controlling municipality as though the facility were located within the 
municipality’s territorial limit. Any vocation, occupation, business, or business activity located 
on the grounds of the facility may also be taxed as though it were located within the 
territorial limit of the municipality. 
 
Limitations to this authority to tax are defined in Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-727(b). 

Leased Departments  

A person (“lessee”) operating a leased department is liable for the business tax and must file 
business tax returns and pay the minimum tax for that location. 328 A lessee is not permitted 
to include their tax liability on the returns of the lessor of the department.329 For example: 
 
  An individual who leases a booth at a hair salon that has his or her own clients and 
   cash drawer must file business tax returns and pay the minimum tax for the 
   location. 
    
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Commission Agents 

A commission agent or factor, such as an oil company bulk station or any other type of 
business that does billing in the name of the supplier they represent while using their own 
employees or agents and their own equipment and supplies in operating their business, is 
taxable under Classification 3 on its gross commissions.330 Such persons shall obtain a 
separate license in their own name even though the principal they represent may have 
obtained a license for reporting sales made by the commission agent or factor. 

Vending Machines 

All persons making sales of tangible personal property through coin-operated vending 
machines must register with their city and county and pay business tax. 331 However, vending 
machine taxpayers may elect to pay the gross receipts tax imposed in Item 65(c)(1), T.C.A. § 
67- 4-503, in lieu of the business tax.332   
 
If a vending machine operator sells tangible personal property by any means other than 
through vending machines or makes charges for servicing coin-operated machines other 
than those he owns, he is subject to, and must pay, the appropriate business tax applicable 
to such other activities.333 
 
A person engaged in a non-coin-operated vending business that incidentally sells 
merchandise through a vending machine must pay business tax on such sales unless the 
person elects to pay the Gross Receipts Tax under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-503.  

Antique Malls, Flea Markets, Craft Shows, Antique Shows, Gun 

Shows, and Auto Shows 

Antique malls, flea markets, craft shows, antique shows, gun shows, and auto shows that are 
operated as public facilities where two or more retailers of tangible personal property carry 
on business are subject to business tax at a rate of $1 per booth per day from each exhibitor 
at the promotion location.   334 A “flea market booth” is any contiguous space leased by a 
single vendor to sell tangible personal property.335   
 
For information on casual and isolated antique sales, see Chapter 4 of this manual. 
 
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 1. Fee in Lieu of Business Tax 

Exhibitors registered for Tennessee sales and use tax purposes and those who register 
annually pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-220 (dealers who make retail sales at flea 
markets) have the option of either:  
 
   Obtaining a business tax license and remitting the business tax in accordance with 
    the provisions of Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709; or  
     
   Remitting a $1 fee per day per booth for each jurisdiction to the flea market 
    operator. For example, if the flea market is location in a city within a county, the 
    operator would collect $2 per day per booth. 
     
The $1 per day per booth fee is in lieu of any business tax. The owner, manager, operator, or 
promoter of an antique mall, flea market, craft show, antique show, gun show, or auto show 
at a location that is not a continuing business, must obtain a business license and collect and 
submit fees to local tax officials with the supporting documents required by those officials, 
within 72 hours after the closing of the event.  
 
The preceding provision does not apply to exhibitors properly licensed at the promotion 
location prior to July 1, 1983, until such time as that license expires. The provision also does 
not apply to promotions conducted by nonprofit associations, corporations, or 
organizations, nor to casual and isolated activities by persons who do not hold themselves 
out as engaged in business. 

Individual Exhibitors 

Exhibitors electing to obtain a business tax license must present evidence of the license to 
the operator before conducting business. Exhibitors who are not registered annually should 
pay the $1 fee per booth per day to the flea market operators.  

Submitting Forms and Payments 

Fees collected by the owner, manager, operator, or promoter of an antique mall, flea  
market, craft show, antique show, gun show, or auto show location that is a continuing 
business are due and payable monthly, on the first day of each month. 
 
All owners, managers, operators, or promoters must transmit completed forms and tax 
collected during the preceding month to collecting officials, (both city and county, if 

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applicable), on or before the 10th day of each month. Failure to remit the tax by the 10th day 
of each month will cause the tax to become delinquent. 

 2. Businesses Selling Antiques at Least 5 Days Per Week 

The above information does not apply to any business that is primarily engaged in selling 
antiques at least 5 days each week in a permanent location. For antique malls selling 
antiques at least 5 days a week with a common cash register for all sales, only the mall 
operator will be required to obtain a business tax license and pay on all receipts derived 
from that location. Individual booths rented at such malls will not be deemed to be separate 
places, locations, or outlets in the state from which business is conducted. 

Transient Vendors 

A transient vendor is defined as “any person who brings into temporary premises and 
exhibits stocks of merchandise to the public for the purpose of selling or offering the 
merchandise to the public.”336 “Merchandise” is any consumer item that is or is represented 
to be new or not previously owned by a consumer.  
 
A transient vendor does not include: 
 
   Any person selling goods by sample, brochure, or sales catalog for future delivery to 
    the seller by the owner or occupant of a residence; or  

   Any person making sales resulting from the prior invitation to the seller by the owner 
    or occupant of a residence; or 
     
   Any person making sales of services. 

 1. Temporary Premises 

A “temporary premises” is any public or quasi-public place, including a hotel, rooming house, 
storeroom, building or part of a building, tent, vacant lot, railroad car, or motor vehicle that 
is temporarily occupied for the purpose of exhibiting stocks of merchandise to the public.  
 
Premises are not temporary if the same person has conducted business at those premises 
for more than 6 consecutive months or has occupied the premises as the person's 
permanent residence for more than 6 consecutive months.  
 
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A taxpayer that has an established business location (i.e., a location that is more than a 
temporary premises) in Tennessee is not a transient vendor. If a taxpayer moves to another 
municipality, that taxpayer is not considered transient. Please see Chapter 2 for additional 
information on what constitutes a location for business tax.  

 2. Transient Vendor License Fee 

In lieu of paying the business tax on gross receipts, transient vendors pay a 50-dollar 
business tax license fee for each two-week period the vendors are engaged in business in 
each county or municipality where they sell or offer to sell merchandise or where they are 
issued a license.337  
 
Transient vendors should pay a fee of $50 for each 14-day period in each county or 
municipality, or both: 
 
   Where the vendors sell or offer to sell merchandise; or  
     
   Where they are issued a license.  
     
The fee must be paid prior to the first day of engaging in business. Transient vendors are not 
liable for the tax levied under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709.  

 3. Transient Vendors and Business Tax 

A taxpayer that meets the definition of a transient vendor and does not have an established 
location in Tennessee is not subject to state and local business tax regardless of whether the 
taxpayer has substantial nexus in Tennessee. Accordingly, a transient vendor has no receipts 
to source using the sourcing provisions under Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(b)(1) because it is 
paying the transient vendor fee and not liable for state-level or municipal-level business tax. 
For example: 
 
   Hotel in Nashville, Tennessee  hosted a  four-month modern art exhibition where 
    professional artists displayed and sold art.  
     
   Artist 1 came from Kentucky, brought $40,000 worth of art to display and sell at the 
    exhibition, and paid the Nashville clerk $400 (roughly $100/mo. transient vendor fee).  
 
   Artist 1 sold $20,000 in art and returned to Kentucky once the exhibition ended. 
 
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  Artist 1 is not subject to Tennessee business tax because it did not establish a location 
   in Tennessee and otherwise met all the requirements as a transient vendor. 

Food Trucks 

Food trucks must be licensed for business tax in the jurisdiction where the food truck is 
based (domiciled). Food trucks must display their license when selling in other jurisdictions.  
 
Food truck operators that pay a fee to utilize commercial kitchen space or a commissary to 
prepare food are based (domiciled) in the jurisdiction where the commercial kitchen or 
commissary is located. If the food truck operator continues managing the business from its 
domicile (such as keeping and managing its books and records, scheduling events, etc.) it 
must be registered in both its domicile and the jurisdiction where the commercial kitchen or 
commissary is located.  

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1 Dixie Rents, Inc. v. City of Memphis, 594 S.W.2d 397, 399-400 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979). 
2 The Tennessee Code Annotated may be accessed for free at the following link: 
https://advance.lexis.com/container?config=014CJAA5ZGVhZjA3NS02MmMzLTRlZWQtOGJjNC
00YzQ1MmZlNzc2YWYKAFBvZENhdGFsb2e9zYpNUjTRaIWVfyrur9ud&crid=df4206ac-948a-
487a-8a8a-8e2c48b8be80&prid=d4c835c1-112a-44d3-b572-9c4bed4ee970  
3 The business tax rules and regulations can be found at the following link: 
https://publications.tnsosfiles.com/rules/1320/1320-04/1320-04-05.20160926.pdf  
4 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.03. 
5 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-704. 
6 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(13). 
7 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.35. 
8 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a). 
9 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-704 and 705.    
10 Please see Chapter 11 for special rules that apply to cable, telecom, and other specific 
industries. 
11 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(2). 
12 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(2). 
13 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(5). 
14 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(2)(F). 
15 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3). 
16 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-702(a)(16) and (25). 
17 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-704. 
18 General Motors Corp. v. Washington, 377 U.S. 436 (1964). 
19 Boeing Equipment Holding Company v. Tennessee State Board of Equalization, 1987 WL 15202 
(Tenn. Ct. App., August 7, 1987). 
20 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-704. 
21 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-705. 
22 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a). 
23 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-717(a)(1). 
24 Please note, Rule 14 is still in effect and is helpful in making this determination. 
25 Public Chapter 377 (2023) increased the filing threshold from $10,000 to $100,000, 
effective May 11, 2023. This applies to tax years beginning on or after December 31, 2023. 
26 Please note, there are provision that apply to telecommunications and cable providers, 
vending machine operators, and overnight lodging rentals. These are discussed later in this 
Manual. 
27 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(22)(A). 
28 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(22)(A)(i)-(iv)(c). 
29 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.07. 
30 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a)(1)(A)-(C). Please note, the following activity is also covered 
under this code section: “making sales as a natural gas marketer to customers located within 
 
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this state through the presence in this state of the seller's property, through the holding of 
pipeline capacity by the seller on pipelines located in this state, or through the presence in 
this state of the seller's employees, agents, independent contractors, or other 
representatives acting on behalf of the seller to solicit orders, provide customer service, or 
conduct other activities in furtherance of such sales. For purposes of this subdivision 
(a)(1)(D), the phrase "presence in this state of the seller's property" shall include property 
owned by the seller in this state during delivery to the customer, whether in a pipeline or 
otherwise.” 
31 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(a)(2). 
32 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.14. 
33 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(22)(A)(i)-(iv)(c). 
34 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-706. 
35 TNTAP may be accessed at https://tntap.tn.gov/eservices/_/  
36 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-706(a). 
37 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-706(c). 
38 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-723(a)(6). 
39 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.28(1). 
40 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.28(2). 
41 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-723(a). 
42 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-723(c). 
43 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-723(b)(1). 
44  .Id
45 Tenn. Code Ann.  § 67-4-721(e). TENN  . COMP      . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.57. 
46 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709(4)(A)(i). 
47 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(a). 
48 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(b). 
49 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(c)(1). 
50 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(c)(2). 
51 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(c)(2). 
52 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-721(c)(3). 
53 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(7). 
54 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(15)(B). 
55 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(18)(A)(i). 
56 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.05 and 1320-04-05-.53. 
57  .Id  
58 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(18)(B). 
59 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.05. 
60 Hermitage Memorial Gardens Mausoleum and Memorial Chapel, Inc. v. Dunn, 541 S.W.2d 147, 
149 (1976). 
61  .  Id
62 Id. 
 
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- 164 -
63 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(c). 
64 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(21). 
65  .Id
66 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.48(1). 
67 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.48(2). 
68 Auto Glass Co. of Memphis v. Gerregano, No. W2018-01472-COA-R3-CV, 2019 WL 1343987 at 
*5 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019). Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(19), (21). 
69  .Id
70 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.48(2). 
71 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(1). 
72 Aabakus, Inc. v. Huddleston, 1996 WL 548148 at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996). 
73The 1987 version of the manual can be accessed online at 
http://www.osha.gov/pls/imis/sicsearch.html. 
74 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.02(3). 
75 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(23). 
76 Id. 
77 See Ruling 17-05. 
78 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.21(1). 
79  .Id
80  .Id
81 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.49. 
82 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.22. 
83 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.23. 
84  .Id
85 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(19). 
86 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.18. 
87 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.08. 
88 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(19). 
89  Id. These advertising costs are not included in the sales price when no portion of the 
payment is retained as profit by the auctioneer, and when the payment has been placed in 
escrow or a trust account by the auctioneers on behalf of the seller. 
90  .Id
91 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(19). 
92 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.18. 
93 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.08(2). 
94 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(5). 
95 Aabakus, Inc. v. Huddleston, 1996 WL 548148 at 2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 25, 1996). 
96 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(1).  
97 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(2). 
98 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i)-(xvi). 
 
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- 165 -
99 Hermitage Memorial Gardens Mausoleum and Memorial Chapel, Inc. v. Dunn, 541 S.W.2d 147 
(Tenn. 1976). 
100 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4). 
101 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(5). 
102 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-710 and 67-4-705(c). 
103 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710. 
104 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710(a)(2). 
105 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-231(a). 
106 TENN. COMP. R. & REGS. 1320-04-05-.41(1).   
107 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(2)(F)). 
108 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a).   
109 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(iii). 
110 See also SIC Code 8049. 
111 See Letter Ruling 18-01 for further examples. 
112 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709. 
113 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(17). 
114 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(26). TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.20, 1320-04-05-.47 
and 1320-04-05-.50. 
115 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(27). 
116 See Bearing Distributors, Inc. v. Gerregano    , 2002 WL 40008 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022). 
117 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.10.  
118 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(15). 
119 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.47(4). 
120  .Id
121Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(15). 
122 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.47(1). 
123Id. 
124 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(18)(B). Pfizer v. Johnson, 2006 WL 163190 (Tenn. Ct. App. 
Jan. 23, 2006). 
125 Eisai, Inc. v. Gerregano 2023 WL 2193450 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2023). 
126 Rule 20 states: Hospitals and persons rendering allied health services to human beings, 
including convalescent and rest home care, are rendering services, and are the users and 
consumers of products sold to them. Sales to the State, or other governmental agencies, and 
institutions exempt from paying Sales and Use Tax under the provisions of T.C.A. § 67-6-322, 
are deemed to be wholesale sales. Sales to all other institutions, etc., not otherwise exempt 
from sales and use tax under T.C.A. § 67-6-322, are deemed to be retail sales. 
127 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(23) states, in pertinent part, that tangible personal property 
does not include materials, substances or other items of any nature inserted or affixed to 
the human body by duly licensed physicians or dentists or otherwise dispensed by them in 
the treatment of patients. 
128 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(18)(B). 
 
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129 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709. 
130 Public Chapter 377 (2023) lowered the tax rate for Classification 5A taxpayers from 3/10 
of 1% to 1/10 of 1%, effective May 11, 2023. This applies to tax years beginning on or after 
December 31, 2023. 
131 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-714(a). 
132 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-705(b). 
133 Public Chapter 683 (2022). 
134 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-715. TENN  . COMP      . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.53. 
135 Public Chapter 377 (2023) increased the sales threshold from $10,000 to $100,000, 
effective May 11, 2023. This applies to tax years beginning on or after December 31, 2023. 
136 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-107. 
137 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-715(g). TENN  . COMP     . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.30. 
138 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-2-107(f)(1). 
139  .Id
140 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-2-107(f)(1)(A). 
141 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-114(b). 
142 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-721 and 67-4-714(b). 
143 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-714. 
144 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-802. 
145 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-804(b)(1). 
146 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-804(c)(2). 
147 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-1-804(c) and 67-1-1400-1445. 
148 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-803(c)-(d). 
149 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-803. 
150 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-803(c)(1)(A)-(E). 
151 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-803(d)(1)(A)-(I). 
152 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-107. 
153 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-803. 
154 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-801(a)(1)(B). 
155 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-801(a)(2). 
156 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1438. 
157 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1801. 
158 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1501(b)(1)-(2). 
159 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1501(b). 
160 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1802(a)(1)(A). 
161 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-1802(b)(1). 
162 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-722. 
163 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-1-113. 
164 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.42. 
165 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(b)(1) and (c)(1). 
166 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-724(c). 
 
                                                                                    166 | Pa ge  



- 167 -
167 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709(4)(A)(i). 
168 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-717(b)(2) and (c)(2). 
169 4 U.S.C.A. § 117(b). 
170 Tennessee Works Tax Act (2023) changed the distribution to the general fund from 43% to 
42.62%. 
171 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-724(a). 
172 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-724(b). 
173 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-724(d). 
174  .Id
175 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-724(c). 
176  .Id
177 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C). TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.16. 
178 See Aabakus, Inc. v. Huddleston, 1996 WL 548148 at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996). 
179 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i)-(xvi). 
180 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C).  
181 Hershey v. Knowles, 1991 WL 191633 (Tenn. 1991). 
182 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.12(1)(g). 
183 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(iii). 
184 See SIC Major Group 88 titled Private Households. 
185 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(C)(vi). 
186 These services are classified in Industry 8733 titled Noncommercial Research 
Organizations within Industry Group 873 titled Research, Development, and Educational 
Research in the SIC Index. 
187 See, e.g., Tennessee Farmers Assur. v. Chumley, 197 S.W.3d 767, 782-83 (Tenn. 2006); Beare 
Co. v. Tennessee Dept. of Revenue, 858 S.W.2d 906, 908 (Tenn. 1993). 
188 See SIC Industry 8721 within Industry Group 872 titled Accounting, Auditing, and 
Bookkeeping Services. 
189 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(C)(ix). 
190 Tenn. Code Ann. § 65-4-101(6)(A). 
191 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.58. 
192 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i)-(xvi). 
193 Tenn. Code Ann. § 45-4-803. 12 U.S.C. § 1768. 
194 See Industry Group 641 titled Insurance Agents, Brokers, and Services within SIC Major 
Group 64. 
195 See Industry 6513 titled Operators within SIC Industry Group 651. 
196 See SIC Industry 6519 titled Lessors of Real Property, Not Elsewhere Classified within 
Industry Group 651. 
197 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(i)-(xvi). 
198Note that, as also stated in Aabakus, Inc. v. Huddleston, any actual pass-through amounts 
(i.e., amounts transferred to a taxpayer with no mark-up that the taxpayer is obligated to pay 
over to a third party on its client’s behalf) included in the amount received by a taxpayer 
 
                                                                                    167 | Pa ge  



- 168 -
from its client should not be included in the amount taxed. Such pass-through amounts 
could include postage, insurance premiums, or certain taxes. 
199 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(21). 
200 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(19). 
201 Internet Tax Freedom Act, 47 U.S.C.A. §151, note §1101(a). 
202 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(1). 
203 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(2). 
204 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(4). 
205 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(5). 
206 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(6). 
207 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(7). 
208 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(d). 
209 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-6-309(b). 
210 Tenn. Code Ann. § 69-10-102(b). 
211 Tenn. Code Ann. § 58-2-204(c)(5). 
212 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(d). 
213 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.40(1). 
214 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.40(2). 
215 Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 67-4-704(b) and 67-4-705(d). 
216 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.39(1). 
217 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.39(2). 
218 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.39(3). 
219 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(a)(1). 
220 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(a)(2). 
221 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(2). 
222 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.13(9) and 1320-04-05-.29(3). 
223 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.29(3)-(4). 
224 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.16(1)(c). 
225 https://www.osha.gov/pls/imis/sic_manual.html. 
226 Tenn. Farmers’ Coop. v. State ex rel. Jackson, 736 S.W.2d 87, 91-92 (Tenn. 1987). 
227 This analysis is different than that for sales tax, which requires three separate categories 
(sales of manufactured goods alone, sales of manufactured goods that are also installed, 
and all other sales). 
228 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(2). 
229  Id. TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.05(1). 
230 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.05(1). 
231  .Id
232 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.05(2) and 1320-04-05-16(1)(c). 
233 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.05(3). 
234  .Id
235 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(3). 
 
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236 Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-6-2112(a). 
237  .Id
238 Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-6-2112(b). 
239  .Id
240 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(e). 
241 https://www.naics.com/standard-industrial-code-divisions/?code=86 . 
242  .Id
243 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(c)(2). 
244 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(23). 
245  .Id
246 See Letter Ruling 17-05. 
247 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(18)(B). 
248 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(19). 
249 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(16). 
250 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R1320-04-05-.16(1)(g). 
251 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.41(2). 
252 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.41(3). 
253 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(14). 
254 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.56. 
255  .Id
256 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(b)(5). 
257 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.18. 
258 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.16. 
259 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(1). 
260 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.12(3). 
261 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(2). 
262 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.45. 
263 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(3). 
264 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.54(1). 
265 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.54(2). 
266 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(4). 
267 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.44(2). 
268 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.44(3). 
269 See Revenue Ruling 18-01. 
270 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(6). 
271 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.12(1)(f). 
272 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.33(1). 
273 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.33(2). 
274 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(7). 
275 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(8). 
276 See 26 U.S.C. § 166. 
 
                                                                        169 | Pa ge  



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277 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(8)(B). 
278 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(8)(C). 
279 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(8)(D). 
280 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(8)(E). 
281 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(b). 
282 Compiled in Tennessee Code Annotated Title 67, Chapter 3. 
283 Id. 
284 Compiled in Tennessee Code Annotated Title 67, Chapter 4, Part 10. 
285 Compiled in Tennessee Code Annotated Title 57, Chapters 5 and 6. 
286 Compiled in Tennessee Code Annotated Title 67, Chapter 3, Part 9. 
287 Compiled in Tennessee Code Annotated Title 67, Chapter 3, Part 11. 
288 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.01(1). 
289 Id. 
290 Id. 
291 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.34. 
292 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.38(2). 
293 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.31(3). 
294 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.19(2). 
295 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(2). 
296 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(2)(A). 
297 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(2)(B). 
298 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(2)(C). 
299  .Id
300 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(4). 
301  .Id
302 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713. 
303 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(4). 
304 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-713(a)(5). 
305 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4- 713(a)(1). 
306 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709(4)(A)(ii). 
307 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(d)(1). 
308 All company names contained in the examples are fictional. 
309 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-709(4)(A)(ii). 
310 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-711(a)(5)(A). 
311 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.51. 
312 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(4)(B). 
313 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-708(3)(C)(xvi). 
314 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.16(d). 
315 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-712(c)(1). 
316 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-729(a). 
317  .Id
 
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318 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-729(b)(1). 
319 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-729(b)(2). 
320 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-729(b)(3). 
321  .Id
322 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.19(1)(a). 
323 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.19(1)(b). 
324 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.19(2). 
325 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS & R. 1320-04-05-.06. 
326  .Id
327  .Id
328 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.25. 
329  .Id
330 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.07. 
331 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.59(1). 
332  .Id
333 TENN  . COMP  . R.    EGS& R. 1320-04-05-.59. 
334 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710(a)(1)(A). 
335 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710(a)(1)(B). 
336 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-702(a)(17). 
337 Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-710(a)(2). 

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