With Veto Override, Maryland Becomes First U.S. State to Enact Digital Advertising Tax.

Amidst significant economic and legal concerns, on February 12, 2021, the Maryland Senate joined the House in voting to override Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s veto of House Bill 732 (HB 732) to adopt a Digital Advertising Gross Revenues Tax (Tax), the nation’s first tax targeting digital advertising. The override was successful despite significant pushback from a coalition of more than 200 businesses and Republican legislators who sought to sustain the veto. HB 732 is intended to provide significant revenues to support education reforms in the state.

The Tax is likely to affect large technology-based and online companies that derive revenue from advertisements on their websites and platforms (rather than companies deriving their revenues entirely from subscription services). Thus such companies, as well as their owners and sponsors, should carefully consider the information below and the impact of the Tax on their business models.

The Tax

The Tax is not a net income tax; rather, it is imposed on the “annual gross revenues of a person derived from digital advertising services in the state.”1 “Digital advertising services” include “advertisement services on a digital interface, including advertisements in the form of banner advertising, search engine advertising, interstitial advertising, and other comparable advertising services.”2 The determination of annual gross revenues derived from services in Maryland ultimately subject to the Tax is calculated based on a fraction that compares the annual gross revenues derived from digital advertising services in Maryland to the annual gross revenues derived from digital advertising services in the United States.3

The Tax is imposed on a graduated rate scale, based on the taxpayer’s global annual gross revenues, as follows:

Initial Observations and Considerations

Despite the passage of HB 732 by the Maryland General Assembly, a number of significant questions have been raised as to the legality and economic impact of the Tax

The Tax is intended to apply to large technology-based and online companies with advertising-based revenue models (as opposed to companies with subscription-based revenue models). Thus, pending the outcome of expected legal challenges, such companies, as well as their owners and sponsors, will need to consider the impact of the Tax on their business models and their potential tax obligations to Maryland, while at the same time protecting any and all refund opportunities should any of the expected legal challenges that have been and likely will be filed against the Tax in the coming weeks and months prove successful.

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1 Md. Code, Tax-Gen. § 7.5-102(a). Citations are to the sections as proposed in HB 732.
2 Md. Code, Tax-Gen. § 7.5-101(d).
3 Md. Code, Tax-Gen. § 7.5-102(b).
4 Md. Code, Tax-Gen. § 7.5-103.
5 On February 18, 2021, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Internet Association, NetChoice, and the Computer and Communications Industry Association filed suit in federal court in Maryland, asserting that the Tax is “illegal in myriad ways and should be declared unlawful and enjoined.”
6 The potential proliferation of digital advertising taxes at the state level is especially interesting considering the recent conflict between the United States and France over France’s digital services tax, as well as the calls for global negotiations to create a uniform system governing taxation of digital services.

February 19, 2021

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