The New York Division of Tax Appeals determined that an online loan marketplace was not a taxable information service. The taxpayer operates an online loan marketplace where it connects and matches prospective borrowers seeking loans (and other credit-based products) with lenders that are seeking qualified borrowers. The taxpayer generated revenue through agreements with each lender
New York
The quadcast: An East/West/Middle comparative look at protesting an assessment
In this episode of the SALT Shaker Podcast, host and Eversheds Sutherland Associate Jeremy Gove rolls out a new discussion format—East/West/Middle. Joining Jeremy for this discussion are Partners Nikki Dobay and Breen Schiller, and Counsel Michael Hilkin, and the four discuss the similarities and differences of protesting an assessment in New York (East),…
New York issues advisory opinion that creation and maintenance of mobile apps are nontaxable
The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance recently released advisory opinion TSB-A-20(70)S, concluding that a taxpayer’s service of creating and hosting websites and applications (apps) for mobile devices is nontaxable. The taxpayer’s customers are retailers of consumer goods, and the customer’s users access the website or app to purchase items from the…
Signs of life: Membership fees for access to online health services not subject to New York sales tax
A New York Division of Tax Appeals administrative law judge determined that a California-based company’s sale of memberships to access its online medical technology platform was the provision of a nontaxable service rather than a taxable sale of prewritten software. The company offered membership-based “care navigation services” to patients of physician-owned medical practices through a…
Legal Alert: SCOTUS denies certiorari in New York opioid stewardship payment challenge
On October 4, 2021, the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari in an appeal from a decision of the Second Circuit which held that New York’s opioid stewardship payment, required as part of the New York Opioid Stewardship Act constituted a tax and not a fee for purposes of the Tax Injunction Act, barring federal…
Already home: New York ALJ determines taxpayer is a statutory resident in same year of establishing domicile
A New York Administrative Law Judge recently determined that a taxpayer was liable for income tax as a statutory resident of New York State and New York City for the entire 2014 tax year, as he maintained a permanent place of abode in New York City and was physically present in New York State and…
Legal Alert: Department of Taxation and Finance releases long awaited guidance addressing pass-through entity tax
On August 25, 2021, the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance released guidance (Technical Memorandum, TSB-M-21(1)C, (1)I) addressing the recently enacted optional pass-through entity tax (PTET) that partnerships and New York S corporations may elect to pay for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2021.
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Consulting service not taxable even if it provides access to software in New York
The Department of Taxation and Finance recently issued advisory opinion numbered TSB-A-20(63)S (dated November 17, 2020) in which it concluded that the primary purpose of a marketing-consulting service was a nontaxable service, even though the taxpayer’s customers had access to software. The taxpayer assists automotive industry clients in designing and launching effective marketing campaigns and…
New York Slice: Executive orders create continued administrative tax appeals deadline confusion
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo issued a series of executive orders beginning on March 20, 2020, tolling statewide legal filing deadlines from March 20, 2020, to Nov. 3, 2020.
In their column for Bloomberg Tax, Eversheds Sutherland attorneys Michael Hilkin and Jeremy Gove note there is confusion over whether the executive orders apply to…
Application of the Pension Source Law to excess benefit plans
In the latest SALT@Work column for the Journal of Multistate Taxation and Incentives, Eversheds Sutherland Partner Charlie Kearns provides an overview of the Pension Source Law, specifically its treatment of excess benefit plans, as well as recent guidance from New York that applies those provisions.



