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Bill

SB 1045

Requires certain topics in Native American and African American history to be included in the seventh through twelfth grade history curriculum in public schools

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Angela Mosley

Expands Maryland sales tax to 2.5% on select B2B services (NAICS-based) when both parties are businesses; effective July 1, 2025, increasing state revenue and compliance costs.

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Bill Summary · SB 1045

SB 1045 — Sales and Use Tax: Taxable Business Services — Alterations

Status: Hearing scheduled March 12, 2025 (3:00 p.m.) — referred to Budget & Taxation
Introduced: February 15, 2025 (Sen. Hettleman). Companion: HB 1554. Effective date in bill: July 1, 2025.

Purpose / Intent

To expand Maryland’s State sales and use tax base by designating a defined set of business-to-business (B2B) services as taxable and to impose a 2.5% State sales and use tax on those services. The change is intended to raise revenue and bring certain service transactions into the sales tax base.

Key provisions

  • Adds a NAICS‑based list of specified services to the statutory definition of “taxable service” when BOTH the provider and the purchaser are business entities.
  • Imposes a specific tax rate for these services: 2.5% of the taxable price (Section 11–104(l)).
  • Expands the statutory definition of “taxable price” to explicitly include labor or service consideration (subject to enumerated exclusions).
  • If another (higher) sales tax rate already applies to a sale of tangible property, digital products, or other taxable services, the higher rate controls.

Enumerated services to become taxable (selected, by NAICS descriptions):
- Accounting, bookkeeping, billing, payroll (NAICS 5412)
- Office support services (NAICS 561110, 5614, 561910) (with some current exceptions)
- Employee/contractor placement (NAICS 5613)
- Data & IT services; system/app software publishing (NAICS 518, 519, 5415)
- Consulting (NAICS 5416) and experimental development (NAICS 5417)
- Photography, design, printing (NAICS 541420, 541430, 541490)
- Lobbying, public relations, marketing (NAICS 5418)
- Landscaping and nonresidential building/property maintenance (NAICS 561210, 5616, 5617) (subject to current exclusions)
- Heavy truck/bus repair (8111); other repair services (8112, 8113)
- Financial planning, tax preparation (5239, 5412); appraisal (541990)
- Sports/performing arts advertising; valet/parking services (812930) (excluding public parking garages)
(Full statutory text uses NAICS codes to delineate covered services.)

Fiscal impact (per Maryland Department of Legislative Services)

  • Large revenue increase to State funds:
    • General Fund: +$833.6 million (FY2026), rising to +$1,245.3 million (FY2030).
    • Blueprint for Maryland’s Future Fund (BMFF): +$110.5 million (FY2026), rising to +$171.4 million (FY2030).
  • State administrative costs: modest ($~$0.48 million FY2026; ~$0.31 million FY2030) for implementation/administration.
  • Local government: estimated NO direct fiscal effect.
  • Small businesses: potentially meaningful impact (increased costs, administrative/compliance burdens).

The revenue estimate accounts for partial first‑year collections (assumes 75% of steady‑state collections in FY2026) and potential behavioral responses (reduced purchases, cross‑border diversion).

Who is affected

  • Businesses that PROVIDE or PURCHASE the enumerated services in Maryland; tax applies only when both parties are business entities.
  • End customers who may face pass‑through price increases if businesses raise prices to cover tax.
  • State budget/education funding (BMFF) will receive additional revenue; state tax administration costs will increase marginally.

Implementation, timing, and procedural notes

  • Bill sets July 1, 2025, as the effective date for the tax expansion.
  • Uses NAICS (2022 edition) to define covered services, which provides specificity but may require taxpayers to map activities to codes.
  • Procedural status at time of summary: referred to Budget & Taxation with a March 12th hearing. Companion bill HB 1554 is pending in the House.

Considerations / likely effects

  • Broadens the sales tax base toward B2B services, raising substantial new revenue but increasing compliance needs for service providers and purchasers.
  • Because the tax is limited to transactions where both parties are businesses, many consumer‑facing services and some professional services (unless specifically listed) remain untaxed.
  • Potential for economic behavior changes (service purchases from out‑of‑state providers, pricing adjustments, contract renegotiation).

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

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