Arizona 2022 2022 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2749 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/25/2022

                    Assigned to APPROP 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Fifth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2749 
 
TPT; prime contracting; exemption; alterations 
Purpose 
Effective January 1, 2023, modifies the definitions of alteration and modification for the 
purposes of the prime contracting classification and removes the residential contract value cap of 
25 percent of the most recent full cash value (FCV) of the property from the criteria for a project 
to qualify as an alteration.  
Background 
Transaction privilege tax (TPT) is imposed on the gross receipts of taxable businesses, with 
the exception of prime contractors. The tax base for the prime contracting classification is 65 
percent of the gross proceeds of sales or gross income derived from the business and certain 
amounts must be deducted before computing the tax base. A prime contractor is not subject to TPT 
on the gross proceeds of sales or gross income derived from a contract with an owner of real 
property for the maintenance, repair, replacement or alteration of real property if such contracts do 
not include modification activity. Modification is construction, grading and leveling ground, 
wreckage or demolition 
Alteration is an activity or action that causes a direct physical change to existing property 
and does not include maintenance, repair or replacement. For a residential project contract to 
qualify as an alteration, the contract amount may not exceed 25 percent of the most recent FCV of 
the property as of the date of any bid for the work or the date of the contract, whichever value is 
higher. If a project, at the inception of the contract, would be treated as an alteration based on the 
project cost and, on completion of the project, the project exceeded the statutory contract cost cap 
by up to 25 percent of the cap, the work performed under the contract qualifies as an alteration. 
Project elements may not be artificially separated from a contract to cause a project to qualify as 
an alteration and the Arizona Department of Revenue (ADOR) has the burden of proving that 
project elements have been artificially separated (A.R.S. ยง 42-5075). 
The Joint Legislative Budget Committee (JLBC) fiscal note states that due to a lack of 
detailed contracting data, JLBC is not able to determine the fiscal impact of H.B. 2749. The fiscal 
note contains example scenarios but JLBC cannot determine in advance whether the aggregate net 
impact to the state General Fund would be positive or negative (JLBC fiscal note). 
Provisions 
1. Adds, to the definition of alteration, the criteria that the activity or action does not increase the 
square footage of the existing residential property. 
2. Removes, from the criteria for a project to qualify as an alteration, the residential contract value 
cap of 25 percent of the most recent FCV.   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2749  
Page 2 
 
 
3. Includes, in the definition of modification, other activities or actions that increase the square 
footage of an existing property. 
4. Removes the stipulation that a contract qualifies as an alteration if, on completion of the 
project, the project exceeds the contract cost by 25 percent of the statutory contract cost cap.  
5. Removes the prohibition on project elements being artificially separated from a contract to 
cause a project to qualify as an alteration and removes ADOR's burden of proving the 
separation.  
6. Removes the requirement that a change order that directly relates to the scope of work of the 
original alteration contract be treated as part of the original contract and that the contract 
amount include any amount attributable to the change order.  
7. Applies the modified definitions of alteration and modification to contracts, bids or other 
binding obligations entered into beginning January 1, 2023.  
8. Makes technical changes.  
9. Becomes effective January 1, 2023.  
House Action 
WM 2/16/22 DP 7-2-1-0 
3
rd
 Read 2/24/22  42-17-1 
Prepared by Senate Research 
March 25, 2022 
MG/slp