Effective May 15, 2000, and retroactive to March 15, 1995, the gross receipts from the service of the sale or rental of information services are exempt from tax. This exemption does not repeal by implication the tax on the performance of the services of investment counseling, of all financial institutions, private employment agencies, test laboratories, detective services, or any other services enumerated by statute. They remain taxable; see 701-Chapter 26, generally.
"Information services" means every business activity, process, or function by which a seller or its agent accumulates, prepares, organizes, or conveys data, facts, knowledge, procedures, and like services to a particular buyer (or its agent) of the information through any tangible or intangible medium. Information accumulated, prepared, or organized for a particular buyer, its agent, a group of buyers, or their agent, is an information service even though it may incorporate preexisting components of data or other information.
Information services include, but are not limited to, database files, mailing lists, subscription files, market research, credit reports, surveys, real estate listings, bond rating reports, abstracts of title, bad check lists, broadcasting rating services, wire services, scouting reports, white and yellow page listings, and other similar items of compiled information prepared for a particular customer The furnishing of artwork (including musical compositions and films), drawings, illustrations, or other graphic material is not the performance of an "information service"; nor does the term include information prepared for general dissemination to the public in the form of books, magazines, newsletters, video or audio tapes, compact disks, or any other medium commonly used to communicate with large numbers of customers. The sale of a book, magazine, or similar item is not the sale of an information service, even if the item contains material of practical use (e.g., in conducting a private, for-profit business) to its purchaser
The following specific examples illustrate the general principles set out above.
Example A. John Doe buys a packaged set of preprinted documents and instructions which anyone may purchase and which is entitled "Legal Eagle." Mr. Doe prepares his own will by reading the instructions, making choices and filling in the blanks on the preprinted documents. Mr. Doe has purchased tangible personal property and not an information service. His purchase is taxable.
Example B. A taxpayer buys a book entitled "Doing Your Own Iowa Individual income Tax," which is written by an accountant and is available to any buyer The taxpayer uses the book to prepare her own lA 1040. Since her purchase contains information prepared for general dissemination to the public in the form of a book, that purchase is a taxable sale of tangible personal property and not an exempt sale of an information service.
Example C. The seller provides, for a fee, a weekly bulletin listing information on real estate of use to brokers selling homes in a certain Iowa county. The seller secures the information from a multiple listing service without applying any independent thought during the compiling of that information. The bulletin is useful only to those brokers and not to the general public. Since the bulletin is a "real estate listing" and has been prepared for a particular group of customers and not for the general public, its sale is the sale of an information service rather than the sale of tangible personal property and is thus exempt from tax.
Example D. A-1 Corporation sells gourmet meats through the mail. A-1 rents its list of customers to whom it mails its catalog to other retailers who specialize in sales of goods or services to the wealthy. Since the list is a "mailing list" and made available only to a particular group of buyers, its rental is the performance of an exempt information service and not the taxable rental of tangible personal property.
Example E. company E is a tariff bureau which specializes in compiling and preparing tariff schedules. E acquires these schedules from various companies throughout the country. E then provides these schedules to common carriers who subscribe to its service. Its printed tariff schedules are published in bound and loose-leaf form; they may be updated daily. E's providing the schedules is the performance of an exempt information service because the schedules are compiled for a particular group of customers and they are items of compiled information similar to the files, lists, reports, and other information services named above.
Example F. company F compiles and prints telephone directories. F purchases white and yellow page listings from various telephone companies and uses those listings to make up its directories. F's purchases of the white and yellow page listings are purchases of an exempt information service. Any sales on F's part of the directories to the general public would be sales of tangible personal property subject to tax.
Example G. company G purchases the assets of four businesses. The primary asset of each of the businesses is a database containing names, addresses, and other customer information of use to G but not to anyone other than a company similar to G. G transfers the lists to its own computers by way of paper or magnetic tape. G has purchased an exempt information service with its purchases of the four databases.
This rule is intended to implement Iowa Code Supplement section 422.45 as amended by 2000 Iowa Acts, chapter 1195, section 3.
Iowa Admin. Code r. 701-17.36