Example: A company purchases a computer system which is used 90% of the time for research purposes. The remaining 10% of the time, the computer is used to maintain accounting records and generate monthly financial statements. The computer system is taxable on the full purchase price.
Example 1. A company purchases a computer system which it uses directly for research. However, a management report is generated which addresses the progress of a research project. It takes two days to generate the report. No other taxable usage was made of the computer. Although the generation of management reports is typically a taxable usage of research equipment, this use of the computer to generate a management report is considered de minimis as it is not a continuous operation, it occurred one time, and took less than three days to complete. Therefore, although de minimis taxable usage of the computer system is made, it will continue to be exempt from the tax.
Example 2. Facts are the same as Example 1, except that instead of generating a management report, the computer is used to generate weekly payroll and employment tax return reports, which consumes 2.0% of the computer's time. The generation of payroll and employment reports is not a de minimis taxable usage of the computer as the reports are generated on an ongoing basis. Therefore, the computer is not considered used exclusively for research and is taxable.
Example: A company hires an institution to conduct research on its behalf. The company purchases research equipment which it donates to the institution to conduct the research. The company is taxable on the purchase price of the equipment because it is not actually conducting the research activities.
23 Va. Admin. Code § 10-210-3071
Statutory Authority
§§ 58.1-203 and 58.1-609.3(5) of the Code of Virginia.