Texas Tax News & Headlines

 
 This week,
TAX RELATED NEWS FOR TEXAS CONSTRUCTION;

 

-Applying Texas Sales and Use Tax to New Construction and Real Property Repair and Remodeling Services

-Billions more in tech investment is coming to Texas

-South Texas wants to know -- What is going on with the new Harbor Bridge?

 Applying Texas Sales and Use Tax to New Construction and Real Property Repair and Remodeling Services

Do Construction Companies Need to Pay Sales Tax?

One of the more complicated areas involving Texas sales and use tax is the taxation of various new construction and real property repair and remodeling services.[1] Determining what’s taxed and what’s not requires delving through myriad definitions scattered across the Texas Tax Code and Comptroller’s rules. It can get confusing fast. Here’s a quick breakdown.

What’s a “Contractor”?

Let’s get this out of the way up front. When the Comptroller says “contractor,” it may not mean what you think it means. The term “contractor” as used for purposes of the Texas sales and use tax is a term of art. The term is defined as:

Any person who builds new improvements to residential or nonresidential real property, completes any part of an uncompleted new structure that is an improvement to residential or nonresidential real property, makes improvements to real property as part of periodic and scheduled maintenance of nonresidential real property, or repairs, restores, maintains, or remodels residential real property, and who, in making the improvement, incorporates tangible personal property into the real property that is improved.[2]

Notice what the term doesn’t cover: nonresidential repair and remodeling. That’s because while new construction and residential repair or remodeling aren’t taxable services, nonresidential repair and remodeling is a taxable service and subject to Texas sales and use tax.[3]

This is important, because the Comptroller uses the designation “contractor” as a way to distinguish between taxable and nontaxable construction services. This can cause considerable confusion to those new to the Comptroller’s rules, since the Comptroller has one rule for contractors (i.e., persons who perform new construction and residential repair and remodeling) and one rule for nonresidential repair and remodeling (let’s call them “service providers”).[4]

New Construction vs. Repair or Remodeling

The first thing to ask in determining the taxability of construction services is whether what is being performed is 1) new construction or 2) repair or remodeling.

“New construction” is defined as:

All new improvements to real property, including initial finish-out work to the interior or exterior of the improvement. An example is a multiple story building that has had only its first floor finished and occupied. The initial finish-out of each additional floor before initial occupancy or use is new construction. New construction also includes the addition of new usable square footage to an existing building. Examples include the addition of a new wing onto an existing building. Reallocation of existing square footage inside a building is remodeling and does not constitute the addition of new square footage. For example, the removal or relocation of interior walls to expand the size of a room or the finish out of an office space that was previously used for storage is remodeling. Raising the ceiling of a room or the roof of a building is not new construction if new usable square footage is not created.[5]

On the other hand, “repair” is defined as “[t]o mend or bring back real property that was broken, damaged, or defective as near as possible to its original working order.”[6] “Remodeling” means “[t]o rebuild, replace, alter, modify, or upgrade existing real property.”[7]

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Billions more in tech investment is coming to Texas

Billions more in tech investment is coming to Texas - constructconnect.com 

Passage of the CHIPS Act bill by the U.S. Senate is certain to accelerate technology investment in Texas even further and boost the construction industry by extension. More than $52 billion in subsidies and support will be available, plus billions more in additional tax breaks, for domestic semi-conductor manufacturing as part of a plan to repatriate production of critical technology.

The biggest names in the industry have discovered Texas and are making the state central to their future ambitions.

For example, every week there’s coverage surrounding the $17 billion Samsung microchip fabrication facility in Taylor, with the recent selection of Yates Construction as the project’s overall construction service provider.

Samsung may not be finished with their Texas tech expansion. As previously reported, and confirmed last month, the company is considering several potential additional “Fab” facilities in areas around Manor and Taylor. It is estimated these investments could result in nearly $200 billion of extra investment and over 8,000 jobs.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo  said in a statement that, “Samsung’s investment would be transformational for America’s domestic chip manufacturing industry, create thousands of good paying jobs and secure our ability to lead the world in 21st Century innovation.”

Korean-based Samsung is far from the only major tech investment established in the state or planning further expansion.

Texas Instruments (TI) broke ground in May on a $30 billion project that would ultimately encompass four semiconductor and wafer fabrication plants near Sherman.

“For more than 90 years, TI has been a member of the powerful ‘Made in Texas’ brand and we are proud that the company has chosen to continue its legacy of innovation in the Lone Star State,” said Governor Greg Abbott in a news release last November. “In addition to bringing billions of dollars in capital investment and thousands of new jobs to north Texas, this historic investment will keep Texas a national leader in semiconductor manufacturing while also strengthening the domestic semiconductor supply chain.”

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South Texas wants to know -- What is going on with the new Harbor Bridge?

South Texas wants to know - What's going on with the new Harbor Bridge?

There’s many a thing to be frustrated with in today’s world: inflation, immigration, pandemics, bad press, and all the other minutiae that falls out of the unknown world around us. So why am I surprised and disappointed that the Coastal Bend’s pet project for the past six years has come to a grinding halt ... again! 

Since creditable information is in short supply, especially to the general public (me), I have to surmise (or fantasize), someone at the patron level has determined that I’m either not smart enough to understand what the problem really is, or that I don’t need to know. That might be OK and even justified in some cases, but where some of my tax dollars are consumed, I feel I have a right to know the truth whether I understand or not.

More:Here's everything we know, don't know about the new Harbor Bridge construction pause

Our would-be new Harbor Bridge has fallen into a category of “sometime yes and sometime no” when considering a timeline. In my vocational field of “construction,” there’s always the opportunity to entertain “glitches” which, in turn, causes delays in the timeline. But, in most cases, the “glitch” has, at least, been thought about in the past and possible solutions planned for the future to keep the project on queue, and hopefully, within the budget. 

Well, things look a little grim as I consider the new Harbor Bridge project. You would think from all the talent and big thinkers involved at the design and control level, planning ahead for all sorts of “glitches,” this would have been prepared for way back in 2016. It makes me remember the “Think Ah-e- -a- - -d” sign on my office wall. 

The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT at all levels), Flatiron/Dragados, Arup-CFC, International Bridge Systems, and any other entity involved, just think of the probable engineering and scientific brainpower in these lofty organizations! And what does it look like to the common citizen on the street, i.e. a future bridge user? A chaotic, mysterious mess of no information, or misinformation, issued by a “non-team” of over-educated prima donnas that demonstrate no consideration of the vast audience of South Texans. 

You say, “wait a minute, it's not that bad!” Oh no? I have tried to read everything printed, watched TV, and talked with my congressman seeking informative information to help me understand some possible situation that has again caused a “pause” (delay) in the construction process. To whomever is in charge: I can take it. I might not be able to completely comprehend all aspects of the cause for shutdown, but, if it’s the truth, I’m big enough to take it. 

But consider this: knowing it’s the plain unadulterated truth eases my frustration and takes the edge off the thought of deception. So, stop pointing ghost fingers of who’s right and who’s wrong, give us the details and publish the truth ... what’s really going on?

Johnny W. Cotten is a retired Corpus Christi architect. 

 

CHECK BACK WEEKLY FOR MORE TAX RELATED ARTICLES!

 

 

Texas Property Taxes why are they so HIGH! - Spring Texas Real Estate |  Realtors 
 

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