Bed and Breakfast Establishment. A private owner-occupied house where not less than four rooms are let and a breakfast is included in the rent, and all accommodations are reserved in advance.
Bed and Breakfast Home. A private owner-occupied house where not more than three rooms are let and a breakfast is included in the rent, and all accommodations are reserved in advance.
Commissioner. The Commissioner of Revenue or the Commissioner's duly authorized representative.
Hosting Platform. Services through digital platforms, third-party websites, software, online-enabled applications, mobile phone applications or other, similar electronic processes that allow:
Hotel. A building used for the feeding and lodging of guests licensed or required to be licensed under M.G.L. c. 140, § 6.
Intermediary. A person or entity, other than an operator, that facilitates the sale, use or possession of an occupancy to the general public and charges a room charge; provided, however, that the term "facilitates" shall include a person or entity that brokers, coordinates or in any other way arranges for the purchase, sale, use or possession of occupancies by the general public; provided further that Intermediary shall include a hosting platform and operator's agent.
Local Excise. The local room occupancy excise imposed by M.G.L. c. 64G, § 3A.
Local Fee. Each of the Convention Center Financing Fee, as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(8); the Cape Cod and the Islands Water Protection Fund Fee, as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(9); and the Community Impact Fee, as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(10).
Lodging House. A house licensed or required to be licensed under M.G.L. c. 140, § 23 and where lodgings are rented to not less than four people who are not within the second degree of kindred to the owner or operator of such lodging house.
Motel. A building or portion of a building in which a person is lodged for hire with or without meals and that is licensed or required to be licensed under M.G.L. c. 140, § 32B; provided, however, that a Motel shall not include a hotel or lodging house.
Occupancy. Occupancy as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(5)(c).
Occupant. A person who uses, possesses or has a right to use or possess a room in a bed and breakfast establishment, hotel, lodging house, short-term rental or motel for rent under a lease, concession, permit, right of access, license or agreement.
Operator. A person operating a bed and breakfast establishment, hotel, lodging house, short-term rental or motel in the commonwealth including, but not limited to, the owner or proprietor of such premises, the lessee, sublessee, mortgagee in possession, licensee or any other person otherwise operating such bed and breakfast establishment, hotel, lodging house, short-term rental or motel.
Operator's Agent. A person who, on behalf of an operator of a bed and breakfast establishment, hotel, motel, short-term rental or lodging house:
Person. An individual, partnership, trust or association, with or without transferable shares, joint-stock company, corporation, society, club, organization, institution, estate, receiver, trustee, assignee or referee and any other person acting in a fiduciary or representative capacity, whether appointed by a court or otherwise, or any combination of individuals acting as a unit.
Professionally-managed Unit. One of two or more short-term rental units that is located in the same city or town, operated by the same operator and are not located within a single-family, two-family or three-family dwelling that includes the operator's primary residence.
Rent. Rent as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(5)(a).
Short-term Rental. An owner-occupied, tenant-occupied or non-owner occupied property including, but not limited to, an apartment, house, cottage, condominium or a furnished accommodation that is not a hotel, motel, lodging house or bed and breakfast establishment, where:
State Excise. The state room occupancy excise imposed by M.G.L. c. 64G, § 3.
Example 1: Mrs. Smith owns two adjoining short-term rentals (Property 1 and Property 2). Mrs. Smith has registered as an operator and filed a declaration of her intention to transfer occupancy in Property 1 for a total of not more than 14 days in a calendar year. From August 1st through August 10th inclusive, she rents out Property 1 to an occupant. This rental is not subject to the excise on short-term rentals, because it is for less than 14 days in the calendar year, provided that Mrs. Smith does not rent Property 1 for more than four additional days in the calendar year. If Mrs. Smith does rent Property 1 for more than four additional days in the calendar year, then all subsequent rentals of Property 1, as well as the rental from August 1st through August 10th are subject to the applicable state and local excises and any local fees.
Example 2: In August, Mrs. Smith rents out Property 2 for an original term of ten days. Mrs. Smith has registered as an operator, but did not file any declaration of an intention to transfer occupancy in Property 2 for a total of not more than 14 days in a calendar year. Although the transfer of occupancy in a short-term rental for a total of not more than a total of 14 days in a calendar year is generally not subject to the excise on short term rentals, the requirements of 830 CMR 64G.1.1(3)(b)2. are not met here. The entire ten-day rental period of Property 2 is subject to the applicable state and local excise and any local fees.
Example 3. Mr. Johnson owns a short-term rental property. Mr. Johnson has registered as an operator, but did not file a declaration of an intention to transfer occupancy in his property for a total of not more than 14 days in a calendar year. He rents out his property to an occupant without using an intermediary for the period October 1st through October 10th. Mr. Johnson also arranges four one-week rentals of his property in November and December through two different intermediaries. Mr. Johnson's short-term rental property has been rented out for more than 14 days, and each rental is subject to the excise on short-term rentals. Mr. Johnson is responsible for collecting and remitting state and local excises and any local fees for the rental from October 1st through October 10th. Each intermediary that rents out Mr. Johnson's property during the months of November and December is responsible for collecting and remitting state and local excises and any local fees on those rentals. Any further rentals of Mr. Johnson's property either directly or through an intermediary occurring during the remainder of the calendar year will be subject to the excise on short-term rentals.
Example 1: Hotel in City A rents rooms to occupants for a two night stay at the rate of $500.00 per night. It also charges its occupants for linen services totaling $100 for the two-night stay. The linen services are included in the rent subject to the state and local excise. Hotel also charges its occupants for spa services, including facials and massage services. These services are offered only to occupants of Hotel. Because these services are not offered to non-occupants, the charges for these services are included in the rent subject to the applicable state and local excise and any local fees. In this example, rent includes the nightly room rate, charges for linen services, and any charges for spa service, whether or not such charges are separately stated.
Example 2: Same facts as Example 1, except that Hotel also offers the same spa services to non-occupants on similar terms offered to occupants. Charges for the spa services are not included in the rent subject to the applicable state and local room occupancy excise and any local fees.
Example 3: Hotel's amenities include various recreational facilities, including a swimming pool, tennis court, and exercise center. Use of these amenities is available only to occupants of Hotel. Hotel imposes a separate charge to occupants for these amenities. Charges for the amenities are included in the rent subject to the applicable state and local excise and any local fees, whether Hotel's occupants use the amenities or not. The value of the recreational facilities in comparison to the value of rooms offered for occupancy is irrelevant.
Example 4: Intermediary accepts a booking for Hotel on July 1, 2019 for a three-night stay starting on July 14, 2019. The charge for the room is $100 per night before taxes and fees. Intermediary charges a $25 fee for booking the transaction. The local excise in City A is 6%, for a total excise of 11.7%. The charges for the booking are as follows:
Room Charge | $300.00 |
Booking Fee | $25.00 |
Total Rent | $325.00 |
Tax 11.7% | $38.03 |
Total Amount Due | $363.03 |
Example 5: Through an intermediary, Mr. Jones rents out two separate units located in Town B as short-term rentals. These units are not located within a single-family, two-family or three-family dwelling that includes Mr. Jones primary residence. They are professionally-managed units as defined in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(2). Each unit is rented for 15 days. The charge for each rental is $2,500 per unit. Intermediary charges a booking fee of $25.00 for each rental. Town B adopted a 4% local excise. Town B has also voted to impose a Community Impact Fee of 3% of the rent on each transfer of occupancy of these professionally managed units. In addition, Town B is a member of the Cape Cod and the Islands Water Protection Fund.
The charges for each booking to be collected by Intermediary are as follows:
Unit Rental Charge: | $2,500.00 |
Unit Booking Fee: | $25.00 |
Total Rent: | $2,525.00 |
Tax: 15.45% | $390.11 |
5.7% State excise plus 4% Local excise plus 3% Community Impact Fee plus 2.75% Cape Cod and the Islands Water Protection Fund Fee)
Total Amount Due: | $2,915.11 |
Example 6: Hotel also operates a restaurant on its property. The restaurant charges sales tax on meals purchased by occupants of Hotel. Rent does not include amounts subject to sales tax where the hotel operator is acting as a vendor with respect to its taxable sales. If an occupant purchases a meal at the restaurant and pays sales tax on it, the amount paid for the meal would not be included in the rent subject to the applicable state and local room occupancy excise and any local fees, even if the purchase was charged to the occupant's room, because the hotel is operating the restaurant as a vendor and collecting sales tax on the meal.
Example 7: Seaside Cottage is a short-term rental operated by Ms. Smith on Martha's Vineyard. As a courtesy to her guests, Ms. Smith includes linens and ferry tickets at no extra charge. Whether or not Ms. Smith separately states the cost of those items, the amount of consideration allocated to them is included in rent subject to the applicable state and local room occupancy excise and any local fees.
Example 8: Same facts as example 7, except that Ms. Smith provides linens to her guests for an additional fee, and purchases ferry tickets on their behalf at their request. The linen fee is a separately stated, optional charge provided by the operator, and therefore is included in rent subject to the applicable state and local room occupancy excise and any local fees. The charge for the ferry tickets is an optional, separately stated, charge for a service provided by another vendor not related to occupancy. It is not included in the rent.
Example 1. A enters into an agreement in writing with B to occupy a room in B's hotel for a period of 100 days. No state or local excise is imposed, unless the agreement terminates before the 90th day.
Example 2. A occupies a room in B's motel on a day-to-day basis and without any written agreement for a period of 100 days. B must collect and pay over tax to the Department of Revenue on a monthly basis for the first 90 consecutive days. If the occupancy extends beyond 90 consecutive days, the tax must be returned to A. B may recover any tax paid in accordance with 830 CMR 64G.1.1(11)(b), as applicable.
Example 3. A corporation contracts with a hotel operator to reserve several rooms for use by its employees on a continuing basis. The corporation may cancel its reservations by 7:00 P.M. each evening without obligation; otherwise, the corporation is liable for the full rate for occupancy. The operator is required to collect the excise on fees for occupancy whenever the corporation is liable for room rental unless continuous occupancy exceeds 90 days. Exercise of the cancellation option constitutes a break in the occupancy by the corporation.
Example 4. An individual occupies the same room in the same hotel for 62 consecutive days, then moves to a different room in the same hotel. The operator is required to collect the excise on the rent for the new room until the occupancy exceeds 90 days. Moving from one room to another within the same hotel does not constitute a break in occupancy, regardless of whether the rates on the two rooms differ.
Example 5. An airline contracts with a motel operator for use by airline employees of eight rooms to be paid for by the airline (whether or not the rooms are actually used). The airline is considered the occupant for purposes of determining whether the occupancy exceeds 90 days. If it does so, the operator need not collect the excise on the rental charges to the airline.
Example 1: Town C accepts the local excise on March 15, 2019. The local excise in Town A will take effect on July 1, 2019, unless Town C has designated a later effective date.
Example 2: City D accepts the local excise on January 30, and designates an effective date of October 1st of the same year. The local excise in City D will take effect on October 1st of the same year.
All taxes related to taxable rent charges reported on the return are due and must be paid at the time the return is filed.
If an operator enters into an agreement with an intermediary to collect or facilitate the collection of rent from an occupant as provided in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(6), the intermediary, rather than the operator, is required to collect and remit the tax due with respect to occupancies arranged through that intermediary. All state and local excises and applicable local fees are to be reported on and remitted with the return. An intermediary that does not report rent charges and remit the tax due in accordance with 830 CMR 64G.1.1(11)(c)1. through 3., shall not be in compliance with 830 CMR 64G.1.1(6).
Notwithstanding the requirements set forth in 830 CMR 64G.1.1(11), an operator or intermediary is required to file a return only for any month when tax is due. If no tax is due, no return is required to be filed. Any changes made to a return that has been filed with the Commissioner must be made by filing an amended return electronically through Mass Tax Connect in accordance with the rules in 830 CMR 62C.26.2, Amended Returns.
830 CMR, § 64G.1.1