The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act (the Act) [35 ILCS 120 ] imposes a tax upon persons engaged in this State in the business of selling tangible personal property to purchasers for use or consumption. The tax is measured by the seller's gross receipts from such sales made in the course of such business. (For further information concerning gross receipts, see Subpart D of this Part.)
For purposes of this subsection (a)(3), the following definitions apply:
"Prepaid telephone calling arrangements" means the right to exclusively purchase telephone or telecommunications services that must be paid for in advance and enable the origination of one or more intrastate, interstate, or international telephone calls or other telecommunications using an access number, an authorization code, or both, whether manually or electronically dialed, for which payment to a retailer must be made in advance, provided that, unless recharged, no further service is provided once that prepaid amount of service has been consumed. Prepaid telephone calling arrangements include the recharge of a prepaid calling arrangement. "Prepaid telephone calling arrangement" does not include an arrangement whereby the service provider reflects the amount of the purchase as a credit on an account for a customer under an existing subscription plan.
"Recharge" means the purchase of additional prepaid telephone or telecommunications services whether or not the purchaser acquires a different access number or authorization code.
"Telecommunications" means that term as defined in Section 2 of the Telecommunications Excise Tax Act [35 ILCS 630 ]. (Section 2-27 of the Act).
* Gasoline
* Diesel fuel
* Combustible gases (e.g., liquified petroleum gas and compressed natural gas) delivered directly into the fuel supply tanks of motor vehicles
* Gasohol.
* Avgas
* Jet fuel
* 1-K kerosene
* Combustible gases unless delivered directly into the fuel supply tanks of motor vehicles
* Heating oil (e.g., kerosene and fuel oil) unless delivered directly into the fuel supply tanks of motor vehicles, in which case it is considered diesel fuel.
When something that has been exempted becomes taxable as to sales that are made on and after some particular date, the date of sale for this purpose shall be deemed to be the date of the delivery of the property. This is true even if such delivery is made under a contract that was entered into before the effective date of the new tax.
The Retailers' Occupation Tax is an occupation tax whose legal incidence is on the seller, rather than on the purchaser. However, with the enactment of the Use Tax Act in 1955 [35 ILCS 105 ], the retailer became a tax collector under that Act and is required to comply with the bracket systems or tax collection schedules prescribed in the Department's Use Tax Regulations for the collection of the Use Tax by retailers from users.
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 130.101
Amended at 29 Ill. Reg. 7004, effective April 26, 2005