I was totally confused about what the excise tax was and how...
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I was totally confused about what the excise tax was and how I will have to file it quarterly. Darn. I'd rather file once a...
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Airbnb Tax Tutorial – State of Florida, Revised April 9, 2024
To ALL Florida Hosts,
There seems to be a lot of confusion over the topic of tax, so I wrote a Florida Tax Tutorial. This information is accurate as of April 2024.
Where Do I Find My Airbnb Earnings and Taxes Collected?
This link will take you to an article that will help you find your taxable earnings: Where do I find my Airbnb earnings for tax purposes? - Airbnb Help Center.
Each Airbnb confirmation email you receive will have the amount of tax collected for that reservation. To find a summary of the collected taxes, open Airbnb, Switch to Hosting / Menu/ Earnings/. You can filter for a custom date range by clicking on “Show All Paid”/ “All Dates”/ Custom Dates. Enter your date range and “Apply”. You can create a spreadsheet report of transaction details within this date range by clicking on “Get Report”.
Basic Florida Tax Info:
Sales Tax in the State of Florida for short-term rentals (housing rented for 182 days or less) is called Transient Rental Tax. This amount varies per county and consists of the Florida-based Sales Tax of 6% plus your county's Discretionary Surtax. Each county may or may not have a Discretionary Surtax. This tax ranges from .5 to 1.5%. The 2024 Discretionary Surtax by county can be found here: 2024-Discretionary-Sales-Surtax-Rates
Additionally, each county may tax your short-term rental with a Tourist Development Tax by county can be found here: 2024 - Local Tourist Development Tax.
What tax does Airbnb collect and pay?
Transient Rental Tax is based on your nightly rate plus your cleaning fee. Airbnb collects and remits the Transient Rental Tax (the 6% plus your county's Discretionary Surtax) for all Florida Airbnb properties. This tax is paid in a lump sum by filing one tax return per jurisdiction, with the total combined reservation revenue. Airbnb will not be filing individual forms (such as the DR-1C form) on behalf of hosts.
Additionally, Airbnb collects the Tourist Development Tax in SOME counties because that tax is administered by the State for those counties. Currently the counties are: Bradford, Citrus, Columbia, Desoto, Dixie, Franklin, Gadsden, Gilchrist, Glades, Hamilton, Hardee, Hendry, Highlands, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Levy, Madison, Okeechobee, Sumter, Wakulla, and Washington.
Other counties have entered into their own agreements with Airbnb. Tourist Development Tax is now also collected and remitted by Airbnb for Brevard, Broward, Charlotte, Clay, Collier, Hernando, Hillsborough, Indian River, Lake, Lee, Leon, Miami-Dade, Orange, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Putnam, Sarasota, Taylor, Volusia, and the city of Surfside. Please check the source below for more details.
What tax do you have to collect and submit?
At minimum, nothing (depending on your county) and at maximum, your county's Tourist Development Tax.
If you rent your Florida property as a Short-Term Rental, you need a Florida Business License from Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Apply online here: Florida Vacation Rental Buisness Licence
You also need an account with the Florida Department of Revenue (FL DOR). Create your account online here: Florida Business Tax Application However, if you rent through Airbnb only, call the Florida Department of Revenue (850-488-6800) and ask that your account be changed to “Active, but not required to file. If you offer your property on other platforms where taxes are not paid for you, you will need to file and submit taxes every month with the FL DOR account.
If your county is not listed as one where Airbnb collects and submits Tourist Development Tax, then call or visit your county's Tax Collector's Office. They may require you to apply for an Occupational License and they will instruct you on how to pay the Tourist Development Tax.
You can add a tax to be collected on your listing(s) by using Airbnb’s Professional Tools. (See “How to add tax” source below.) If you do not use the Professional Tools, you will need to either ask your guests for this tax, or you can absorb the cost in your rental amount. You will need to submit a form on a monthly basis to your county (even if you have zero rent for a month) along with your payment.
Sources:
Occupancy tax collection and remittance by Airbnb in Florida - Airbnb Help Center
My apologies. I did misspeak; Airbnb collects and submits FL state sales tax on behalf of its hosts, not the FLDoR.
However, whatever you were paid for this booking did not include the taxes that Airbnb collected. You should only refund up to the amount you received from Airbnb. Or, some host only refund up to the amount that they received on their re-booking. If the guests are not happy with this and ask for their taxes back, I would have them contact Airbnb.
No worries, Karen, thank you for that clarification. I do actually receive the 6% TDT that I must remit to Okaloosa County as a pass-through tax. That's why I'm trying to clarify this, because not sure if I'm even required by law to remit it on the non-refundable portion because it is actually a cancellation fee. (FYI, I too, only refund what I made on the booking that I actually received, ie. I take out my host fee.)
Hope this makes sense.