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HB 578

Criminal Offenses - As enacted, adds certain criminal offenses to the list of dangerous felonies for purposes of the offense of possessing a firearm or antique firearm during commission or attempt to commit a dangerous felony. - Amends TCA Title 39, Chapter 17, Part 13.

114th Regular Session (2025-2026) Introduced by Clay Doggett

The bill creates a direct‑pay permit allowing buyers of ultra‑premium single bottles ($50,000+) to avoid sales/excise tax at purchase, with a capped use tax of $1,000.

Pub. Ch. 492
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 578

HB 578 — "Incentivize Space Spirits" — Bill Summary

Status: Introduced / Passed First Reading (various actions listed)
Introduced: Effective date (per text): January 1, 2024 (applies to purchases on/after that date)
Primary subject areas: Alcoholic beverages, Distilleries, Excise & use taxation, Manufacturing / emerging technologies

Purpose / Intent

The bill creates a tax incentive for very high‑value spiritous liquor—explicitly targeting luxury or novel products (for example, bottles aged in orbit or other advanced manufacturing methods). It limits the tax burden on single‑container purchases whose retail price is extremely high, with the stated intent of encouraging innovation in distilling and attracting premium product investment.

Key provisions

  • Defines “qualifying spiritous liquor” as a single container of spiritous liquor (per G.S. 18B‑101) with a purchase price of $50,000 or more.
  • Establishes a direct‑pay permit process (new G.S. 105‑164.27A(a4)):
    • A purchaser may apply to the Secretary for a direct pay permit that allows the purchaser to buy qualifying spiritous liquor without the seller collecting sales/excise tax at point of sale.
    • Permit holders must file returns and pay the tax due directly to the Secretary under existing procedures (G.S. 105‑164.16).
    • Caps the maximum use tax on qualifying spiritous liquor at $1,000 per qualifying container.
  • Amends exemption rules (G.S. 105‑113.81):
    • Distilleries are not required to remit excise taxes on spiritous liquor sold in single containers priced at $50,000 or more; instead, the purchaser is responsible for paying the capped use tax under the direct‑pay scheme.
  • Effective date provision: takes effect January 1, 2024 and applies to purchases on or after that date.

Who is affected

  • Purchasers/collectors of ultra‑high‑value spirits (single‑bottle price ≥ $50,000).
  • Distilleries and sellers of luxury spirit products—sellers may be relieved of excise collection responsibility if the buyer holds a direct‑pay permit.
  • State revenue/Tax administration—requires permitting, return processing, and enforcement by the Secretary of Revenue.

Fiscal and administrative implications

  • Revenue effect: likely reduces excise/sales tax liability on qualifying sales relative to standard taxes (the use tax is capped at $1,000 per container). The overall fiscal impact depends on the scale of such sales; if rare, total revenue loss may be modest, but per‑item tax foregone could be substantial.
  • Administrative impact: tax agency must implement a direct‑pay permit program, process returns, and monitor compliance; sellers must verify permits and adjust collection practices.
  • Enforcement considerations: responsibility shifts to purchasers to remit use tax; audit and compliance workload could increase for high‑value transactions.

Scope & limits

  • Applies only to single containers with purchase price ≥ $50,000.
  • Does not change taxes or procedures for ordinary spirit purchases.
  • Does not alter other permitting or regulatory requirements for distilleries beyond tax treatment.

Practical example

If a collector purchases a single bottle priced at $75,000 and obtains a direct‑pay permit, the purchaser would not have sales/excise tax collected at sale; instead the purchaser’s maximum use tax liability under this bill would be $1,000, paid to the Secretary per statutory filing rules.

This summary focuses on the tax changes the bill would make for ultra‑premium spiritous liquor and the likely practical effects on buyers, sellers (distilleries), and state tax administration.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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