The minimum nexus thresholds described in this rule and used in examples are unadjusted for consumer price index changes applicable for years after 2017.
Example 1. Company C is commercially domiciled in Washington and has one employee in Washington who earns $30,000 per year. Company C has substantial nexus with Washington because it is commercially domiciled in Washington. The minimum nexus thresholds for property, payroll, and receipts do not apply to a business entity commercially domiciled in this state.
Example 2. Assume Corporation N, which is not commercially domiciled or organized in Washington, earns receipts attributable to Washington in 2017 that exceed the minimum nexus receipts threshold for determining substantial nexus. If Corporation N's 2018 and later payroll, property, and receipts do not exceed any of the minimum nexus thresholds for determining substantial nexus, its B&O tax reporting obligation for any gross receipts attributable to Washington continues through the calendar year 2018.
Example 3. Company Q is organized and domiciled outside of Washington. Company Q maintains an office in Washington which housed a single employee in the immediately preceding calendar year. In 2016, Company Q had $40,000 in property located in Washington, paid $45,000 in compensation to the Washington employee, and had $200,000 in apportion-able receipts attributed to Washington and $0 wholesaling or retailing receipts sourced to Washington. In 2016, Company Q's total property everywhere was valued at $200,000, total payroll was $400,000, and total apportionable and wholesaling or retailing receipts were $5,000,000. In 2017, Company Q had $45,000 in property located in Washington, paid $48,000 in compensation to the Washington employee, and had $200,000 in apportionable receipts attributed to Washington and $0 wholesaling or retailing receipts sourced to Washington. In 2017, Company Q's total property everywhere was valued at $225,000, total payroll was $420,000, and total apportionable and wholesaling or retailing receipts were $6,000,000. Although Company Q has physical presence in Washington, as described in RCW 82.04.067(6), it is not treated as having substantial nexus with Washington with respect to its apportionable and wholesaling activities because (a) it is not organized or domiciled in Washington and (b) it did not have sufficient property, payroll, or receipts in the current or immediately preceding calendar year to exceed the minimum nexus thresholds identified in subsection (3)(a)(iii) of this rule.
A loan is located in this state if:
Examples 4 and 5 assume the businesses depicted are not engaged in retailing activity. Therefore, the businesses' mere physical presence in Washington is not used as the basis for determining whether they have nexus with Washington.
Example 4. In January 2013, ABC Corp. bought Machinery for $65,000 for use in State X. On March 1, 2018, ABC Corp. brought that Machinery into Washington for the remainder of the year. ABC Corp. has nexus with Washington beginning on March 1, 2018, based on Machinery's original cost basis value of $65,000. The value is $65,000 even though the property has depreciated prior to entering the state.
Example 5. In 2018, out-of-state Business X rented office space in Washington for $6,000 and had $7,000 of office furniture and equipment in Washington. Business X has nexus with Washington in 2018 because the value of the rented office space ($6,000 multiplied by eight, which is $48,000) plus the value of office furniture and equipment exceeds the $53,000 property threshold.
Example 6. Company Y has property in Washington valued at $90,000 on January 1st and $20,000 on December 31st. The value of property in Washington is $55,000 ((90,000 + 20,000)/2). Company Y exceeds the property threshold in this calendar year because it exceeds the $53,000 property threshold.
Example 7. Company A had no property located in Washington on January 1st or on December 31st. However, it brought $100,000 in property into Washington on January 15th and removed it from Washington on November 15th of that calendar year. In this situation, the department may compute the value of Company A's property over the period of time it was in the state during the calendar year in order to properly reflect its average value ($100,000 multiplied by ten (months) divided by 12 (months), which is $83,333). Company A exceeds the $53,000 property threshold in this calendar year.
Example 8. Company B had no property located in Washington on January 1st or on December 31st of 2018. However, it brought $100,000 in property into Washington on January 15th and removed it from Washington on February 15th of that calendar year. In this situation, the department may compute the value of Company B's property over the period of time it was in the state during the calendar year to properly reflect its average value, $8,333. ($100,000 multiplied by one (month) divided by 12 (months).) Company B also had no property located in Washington on January 1st or on December 31st of 2019. However, it brought $100,000 in property into Washington on January 15th and removed it from Washington on October 15th of that calendar year. For 2019, the average value of Company A's property is $75,000 ($100,000 multiplied by nine (months) divided by 12 (months)). Company B exceeds the property threshold in 2019 based on the average value of its property in Washington during 2019, but it did not exceed the property threshold based on the average value of its property in Washington during 2018.
Example 9. IT Co. is commercially domiciled in State X with Employee located in Washington who works from a home office. In 2018, IT Co. provided to Employee $5,000 of office supplies and $50,000 of equipment owned by IT Co. In 2019, the employee returned an unneeded portion of the equipment and IT Co. provided no other equipment to the employee. The cost of returned equipment was $25,000 of the total $50,000 of equipment. IT Co. is treated as having substantial nexus with Washington in both 2018 and 2019 based on the $53,000 property threshold because the value of its property in this state in 2018 ($55,000) exceeded $53,000. For 2018, IT Co. exceeded the threshold for the current year, and in 2019, IT Co. exceeded the threshold for the immediately preceding calendar year. If IT Co. does not exceed the property threshold in 2020, beginning in 2020 it will no longer have substantial nexus unless it exceeds another threshold.
Examples 10 and 11 assume the businesses depicted are not engaged in retailing activity. Therefore, the businesses' physical presence in Washington is not relevant in determining whether they have nexus with Washington.
Example 10. Company D is commercially domiciled in State X and has a single Employee whose pay of $80,000 2018 and 2019 was properly reportable in Washington for unemployment compensation purposes. Company D has substantial nexus with Washington during 2018 and 2019 because the compensation paid to Employee during the current or immediately preceding calendar year exceeds the $53,000 payroll threshold in both years. Company D will also have substantial nexus in 2020 because the payroll in the immediately preceding year (2019) exceeded the $53,000 payroll threshold.
Example 11. Assume the same facts as Example 9 except only 50% of Employee's pay for 2018 and 2019 was properly reportable in Washington for unemployment compensation purposes. Employee's Washington compensation of $40,000 does not exceed the $53,000 payroll threshold to establish substantial nexus with Washington during the current or immediately preceding calendar year, unless this amount exceeds 25% of total payroll compensation in the current or immediately preceding calendar year.
Example 12. Company E is organized and commercially domiciled in State X. In a calendar year it had $50,000 in receipts from wholesale sales sourced to Washington in accordance with RCW 82.32.730, $50,000 in receipts from retail sales sourced to Washington in accordance with RCW 82.32.730, $50,000 in royalty receipts attributed to Washington per WAC 458-20-19403, and $150,000 in gross receipts from other apportionable activities attributed to Washington per WAC 458-20-19402. Company E has substantial nexus with Washington in the calendar year because its total of $300,000 in receipts from apportionable activities attributed to Washington and retail and wholesale sales sourced to Washington in a calendar year exceeded the $267,000 receipts threshold. It does not matter that a portion of the receipts were from apportionable activities that are subject to tax under different B&O tax classifications or that the receipts from apportionable activities or wholesaling or retailing activities did not separately exceed the receipts threshold. The receipts threshold is determined by the totality of the taxpayer's apportionable and selling activities in Washington.
Example 13. Company G is organized and commercially domiciled in State X. In 2018 it had $45,000 in property, $45,000 in payroll, and $240,000 in gross receipts attributed to Washington. In 2018, its total property was valued at $200,000; its worldwide payroll was $150,000; and its gross receipts , all from apportionable activities, totaled $2,000,000. Company G had twenty-two and a half percent of its property, thirty percent of its payroll, and twelve percent of its receipts attributed to Washington. With respect to its apportionable activities, Company G has substantial nexus with Washington in 2018 because at least twenty-five percent of its payroll in 2018 was located in Washington. Based on its payroll in 2018, Company G will also have substantial nexus in 2019.
Example 14. Company E was organized and commercially domiciled in State X. In 2013 it had $275,000 in gross receipts from apportionable activities attributed to Washington per WAC 458-20-19402. Company E had substantial nexus with Washington in 2013 because its total receipts from apportionable activities attributed to Washington in that calendar year, $275,000, exceeded the receipts threshold. Therefore, Company E was subject to B&O taxes for the entire 2013 calendar year and its substantial nexus continued through at least the 2014 calendar year.
Wash. Admin. Code § 458-20-19401