Pennsylvania Code & Bulletin
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA

• No statutes or acts will be found at this website.

The Pennsylvania Code website reflects the Pennsylvania Code changes effective through 54 Pa.B. 6234 (September 28, 2024).

61 Pa. Code § 60.23. Electric utility services.

§ 60.23. Electric utility services.

 (a)  General. Chapter 28 of 66 Pa.C.S. (relating to The Electricity Generation Customers Choice and Competition Act) (act) became effective on January 1, 1997. The act includes two major changes. First, section 2804 of the act (relating to standards for restructuring of electric industry) gives the retail customer the choice of an electric generation supplier. Second, section 2804 of the act gives the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission the authority to require the unbundling of electric utility services, tariffs and customer bills to separate the charges for generation, transmission and distribution. This statement of policy sets forth the policy of the Department in taxing unbundled charges relating to the sale to or use of electricity by nonresidential users under Article II of the TRC (72 P. S. § §  7201—7281.2).

 (b)  Article II of the TRC.

   (1)  The TRC became effective on March 4, 1971. Article II of the TRC imposes Sales and Use Tax upon certain tangible personal property and selected services.

     (i)   Section 201(m) of the TRC (72 P. S. §  7201(m)) defines tangible personal property to include ‘‘electricity for nonresidential use.’’

     (ii)   Section 202 of the TRC (72 P. S. §  7202) imposes Sales or Use Tax upon the ‘‘purchase price’’ of each ‘‘sale at retail’’ or ‘‘purchase at retail’’ of tangible personal property within this Commonwealth.

     (iii)   The term ‘‘sale at retail’’ is defined in section 201(k) of the TRC as any transfer for a consideration, of the ownership, custody or possession of tangible personal property.

     (iv)   The term ‘‘purchase at retail,’’ is defined in section 201(f) of the TRC as the acquisition for a consideration of the ownership, custody or possession of tangible personal property when the acquisition is made for the purpose of consumption or use.

     (v)   Section 201(g) of the TRC defines ‘‘purchase price’’ as the total value of anything paid or delivered or promised to be paid or delivered in the complete performance of a ‘‘sale at retail’’ or a ‘‘purchase at retail.’’

   (2)  Since the enactment of the TRC, the bundled charges for the generation, transmission and distribution of ‘‘electricity for nonresidential use,’’ together with other charges representing reimbursements to the seller for taxes, fuel adjustment costs and similar charges, have been subject to tax.

 (c)  Revenue-neutral reconciliation. Section 2810 of the act (relating to revenue-neutral reconciliation) provides: ‘‘It is the intention of the General Assembly that the restructuring of the electric industry be accomplished in a manner that allows Pennsylvania to enjoy the benefits of competition, promotes the competitiveness of Pennsylvania’s electric utilities and maintains revenue neutrality to the Commonwealth.’’ In maintaining revenue neutrality, section 2810 of the act further provides that it is the intention of the General Assembly not ‘‘to cause a shift in proportional tax obligations among customer classes or individual electric distribution companies’’ but ‘‘to establish this revenue replacement at a level necessary to recoup losses that may result from the restructuring of the electric industry and the transition thereto.’’ Among the taxes to which the General Assembly makes reference are the sales and use taxes collected under Article II of the TRC. To maintain revenue neutrality, both bundled and unbundled charges relating to the sale or use of ‘‘electricity for nonresidential use’’ will continue to be subject to Sales and Use Tax under Article II of the TRC to the same extent as receipts from bundled charges for ‘‘electricity for nonresidential use’’ were taxable during the Fiscal Year 1995—1996.

 (d)  Taxability of unbundled charges. To fulfill its responsibilities under Article II of the TRC, as well as, the recognition of the intention of the General Assembly, as provided under the act, the Department is required to impose Sales and Use Tax upon the total purchase price charged upon each separate charge for the generation, transmission or distribution in connection with providing nonresidential electric utility services as well as all related charges, services or costs for the generation, production, transmission or distribution of electricity whether or not the total amount charged is billed as a single charge by one vendor or billed separately by one or more vendors.

Source

   The provisions of this §  60.23 adopted July 17, 1998, effective July 18, 1998, 28 Pa.B. 3418.

Notes of Decision

   Electricity Services Taxable

   Transmission, distribution, and transition services associated with taxpayer’s purchase of electricity was not exempt from Pennsylvania sales tax even though taxpayer purchased electricity from third party generator which was delivered by a separate utility; utility that delivered electricity to taxpayer was not a mere delivery carrier, but with electricity generator, were together the ‘‘vendor’’ and therefore the services were not separate and exempt from sales tax. Spectrum Arena L.P. v. Com., 983 A.2d 641, 650-651 (Pa. 2009).



No part of the information on this site may be reproduced for profit or sold for profit.


This material has been drawn directly from the official Pennsylvania Code full text database. Due to the limitations of HTML or differences in display capabilities of different browsers, this version may differ slightly from the official printed version.