Finance companies and other lending agencies are not relieved from liability for tax in cases in which they engage in the business of selling to users or consumers tangible personal property to which they hold or acquire title. Except as provided in subsection (b), when a lending agency transfers title to a repossessed car to a user, the lending agency is engaging in the business of selling tangible personal property at retail and incurs Retailers' Occupation Tax (ROT) liability on its receipts from those sales. It shall be registered as a retailer under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act and shall file returns and otherwise comply with that Act.
EXAMPLE: ABC Auto Inc. reports on the cash method of accounting and is in the business of making retail sales of automobiles. On occasion, ABC Auto Inc. will itself finance sales for some of its customers and pay the full amount of sales tax upfront so that its customers can obtain license plates. In 2020, ABC Auto Inc. financed a sale to a customer and paid the sales tax upfront. The customer never made a payment, and in 2021 the debt was found to be worthless. If ABC Auto Inc. reported on the accrual method, the debt would be eligible to be both charged off as a bad debt in the retailer's books and records and claimed as a deduction pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code. Therefore, ABC Auto Inc. can file a claim for the sales taxes it paid out-of-pocket to the Department. For purposes of filing a claim with the Department, the bad debt will be considered claimed as a deduction pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code on the 2021 income tax return filed byABC Auto Inc.
Example: ABC Retailer Inc. allows customers to finance purchases using a private label credit card. During the time the card was active, the customer had the following charges added to the customer's account:
Charge | Amount | Percentage |
Taxable Merchandise: | $10,000 | 87.7 % |
IL State and local sales taxes: | $800 | 7.0 % |
Interest fees: | $500 | 4.4 % |
Late fees: | $100 | 0.9 % |
Total: | $11,400 |
The outstanding balance at the time of the charge off was $1,000. Applying the 87.7% merchandise proration percentage to the $1,000 charge off amount results in an uncollectible taxable amount of $877. (The merchandise proration percentage is calculated by dividing the charge item amount by the total charge amount).
Example: XYZ Auto Inc. sells an automobile for $20,000. The tax due on the sale at 6.25 % is $1,250. The customer makes a $1,000 down payment and finances the remaining amount of the purchase price plus the sales taxes through XYZ Auto Inc. The applicable loan details are as follows:
Total Amount Financed: | $20,250 |
Taxable Amount Financed: | $19,000 |
Total Interest Payments: | $10,000 |
Total Finance Contract: | $30,250 |
The customer makes $5,000 in payments but then stops paying with the unpaid balance of the total finance contract being $25,250. ($30,250 - $5,000). XYZ Auto Inc. determines the loan is uncollectible. The uncollectible taxable amount is calculated as follows:
Uncollectible Taxable Amount | = | (unpaid balance when charged off / total amount of the finance contract) x taxable amount financed |
Uncollectible Taxable Amount | = | $25,250/$30,250 x $19,000 |
Uncollectible Taxable Amount | = | $15,860 |
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 130.1960
Amended at 24 Ill. Reg. 18376, effective December 1, 2000