Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
Sales tax on leasing transactions involves four determinations: (1) true lease vs. financing — character affects tax treatment; (2) upfront tax vs. periodic tax election; (3) in-state vs. interstate lease — sourcing rules; and (4) lessor vs. lessee responsibility for tax collection and remittance. The short version is that CA generally treats equipment leases as continuing sales, allowing election to pay tax upfront on purchase price or periodically on lease payments. In our experience, the upfront-vs.-periodic election is where most businesses get tripped up.1
Leasing tax question? A 15-minute consultation is free.
Four leasing transaction determinations.
The Four Leasing Determinations
| Determination | Treatment2 |
|---|---|
| Character | True lease = continuing sale |
| Timing | Upfront or periodic election |
| Sourcing | Location of property use |
| Responsibility | Lessor collects typically |
Quick Reference
Jump to: character, timing, sourcing, or responsibility.
1. True Lease vs. Financing
True lease continuing sale; financing treated differently.
If this is you: Equipment lease transaction. Analyze whether true lease (lessor retains residual) or disguised sale / financing. Character drives tax treatment.
Character Strategy
- Review lease document.
- Identify residual interest.
- Evaluate purchase option terms.
- Classify transaction.
- Apply appropriate tax treatment.
2. Upfront vs. Periodic Election
Pay tax on purchase price upfront or on lease payments periodically.
If this is you: Lessor choice at lease inception. Upfront: tax on full purchase price. Periodic: tax on each lease payment. Cash flow and administrative considerations.
3. In-State vs. Interstate Sourcing
Tax typically at location of property use.
If this is you: Property used in multiple states or moved between states. Sourcing rules determine taxing state. CA primary situs rules apply.
4. Lessor vs. Lessee Responsibility
Lessor typically collects and remits; agreements can allocate differently.
If this is you: Lease agreement allocates tax responsibility. Default lessor collects from lessee and remits. Agreement terms control but don’t override statute.
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Leasing Tax Lookup
| Authority | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CA RTC §6006.3 | Continuing sale treatment |
| CDTFA Reg 1660 | Leases generally |
| CDTFA Pub 46 | Leasing tangible personal property |
| Form BOE-100-B | Tax return |
| Resale certificate | Purchase for lease |
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Leasing Statute
- 3-year CDTFA statute.
- 8-year for non-filers.
- Unlimited for fraud.
Leasing Patterns
| Situation | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Upfront election + correct basis | Clean compliance |
| Periodic + proper collection | Standard compliance |
| Mischaracterized lease | Assessment + penalty |
| Interstate sourcing error | Audit exposure |
Leasing Audit Escalation
CDTFA Audit
Lease agreement and tax treatment review.
Assessment
Back tax + penalty.
Appeals / OTA
Challenge through CDTFA or OTA.
First 48 Hours
- Identify lease transactions.
- Review characterization.
- Verify election and timing.
- Evaluate sourcing.
- Engage counsel.
The ROI Question
Proper characterization and election saves significant tax. Professional review of lease programs typically pays for itself.
When to Engage
- Equipment leasing business.
- Lease characterization questions.
- CDTFA leasing audit.
- Multistate lease operations.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is leasing taxed in CA?
Per RTC §6006.3, leases are continuing sales. Election to pay tax upfront on purchase price or periodically on lease payments. Lessor choice at inception.
What is upfront election?
Lessor pays sales / use tax on purchase price when acquiring property for lease. No tax on subsequent lease payments. Simplifies administration.
What is periodic election?
Lessor collects sales tax on each lease payment. No tax upfront. Ongoing collection and remittance required.
Which is better?
Depends on lease characteristics. Long leases with high residual typically periodic. Short leases or sale-equivalent often upfront. Cash flow also factor.
Can I change election?
Generally no. Election binding for the lease. New leases can make separate election.
What is a true lease?
Lessor retains residual interest at lease end. Lessee has right to use but not buy. Distinguishes from disguised sale / financing.
How are financing leases taxed?
Treated as sale at inception. Full tax upfront on purchase price. Lease payments generally not taxable.
What about cross-state leases?
Tax generally at location of use. CA tax if property primarily used in CA. Mobile property has specific rules.
Who collects the tax?
Lessor typically. Included in lease payments and remitted to state. Lessee pays indirectly through higher lease payments.
What if lessor doesn’t collect?
Lessee can owe use tax. Joint and several liability typical. Both lessor and lessee need proper compliance.
Are security deposits taxed?
Generally no if refundable. Non-refundable deposits applied to payments may be taxable.
What about maintenance contracts?
Separate from lease; analyze separately. Parts / labor bundled into lease may need breakout.
Does resale certificate help?
Resale certificate permits purchase without tax if for resale / lease. Periodic election allows resale purchase.
If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.
The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.
Get a Candid Assessment — FreeOr call us directly at (619) 378-3138
Next Steps
Leasing tax question? 15-min consultation free.