Hello uc1bear,
I should emphasize the disclaimer at the bottom of this page, which
indicates that answers and comments on Google Answers are general
information, and not intended to substitute for informed professional
tax or legal advice. If you need up-to-date professional tax or legal
advice on this issue, you should contact a tax advisor or lawyer.
The IRS does provide one indication as to the tax treatment of domain
names. A report by its Upstate New York district notes the "current
approach by the practitioner community" as to the costs of web site
development. In particular, as to domain names:
"Domain names are being considered as being analogous to trade mark or
trade names and, accordingly, and may be eligible for recovery under
IRC 197. See: MacNeil, C. Ellen and Sandra K. Van DeWalle, eBusiness ?
Tax Treatment of Web Site Development Costs, 2000 TNT 49-107 Special
Reports (2000); Hardesty, David E., Electronic Commerce Taxation and
Planning, Chapters 7, 8 (1999)."
"Electronic Commerce: Challenges & Opportunities" (Research Project 50.31
Research & Analysis Division, Upstate New York District, October
2000), pp. 29-30 n. 55
U.S. Internal Revenue Service
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-utl/ecomfinalreport.pdf
In case you are interested, the first citation in that footnote is
available on the Web, though it does not seem to relate to this issue.
(I presume that it relates to other aspects of the footnote.)
"eBusiness -- Tax Treatment of Web Site Development Costs", by C.
Ellen MacNeil and Sandra K. Van De Walle
Tax Analysts
http://www.taxanalysts.com/www/readingsintaxpolicy.nsf/WebSubjects/3C6C3A7B48FA20898525692F00729F21?OpenDocument
The second citation in that footnote can be obtained in its updated
version from the following web page, apparently on a trial or purchase
basis:
"Electronic Commerce: Taxation and Planning"
E-Commerce Tax News
http://www.ecommercetax.com/ECTP.htm
For the tax treatment of a trademark or trade name, you can search for
each of those terms in this document:
"Publication 535: Business Expenses (For use in preparing 2003 Returns)"
U.S. Internal Revenue Service
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p535.pdf
Since both of the articles cited by my fellow Researchers discuss
Network Solutions Inc. v. Umbro International Inc., I thought that you
might like to see the actual decision:
"Network Solutions Inc. v. Umbro International Inc." (April 21, 2000)
Virginia Lawyers Weekly
http://www.valawyersweekly.com/archives/va/opin/sup/1991168.htm
One article (cited by Pafalafa) says that the Virginia Supreme Court
ruled that "a domain name is not 'intellectual property,' but rather
is a 'contract for services.'" The other article (cited by Mvguy)
says similarly that the Supreme Court of Virginia held that "domain
names should be considered services rather than property." However,
this article also notes that the Supreme Court of Virginia
acknowledged that "the right to use a domain name is a form of
intangible personal property" but did not find that fact to be
dispositive.
What the court actually says is "we do not believe that it is
essential to the outcome of this case to decide whether the circuit
court correctly characterized a domain name as a 'form of intellectual
property.'" As noted at the outset, I cannot provide an expert legal
opinion; but it seems to me that neither article is correct about the
Umbro opinion. It appears that the court did not decide this issue at
all; at best, it provides hints as to whether a domain name is or is
not property.
I would suggest that you take the foregoing information to a tax
and/or legal expert, to determine whether a domain name should be
treated in the same way as a trademark or trade name when you file.
- justaskscott
Search terms used on Google:
"domain name" site:irs.gov
"2000 TNT 49"
"electronic commerce taxation and planning"
I also browsed Findlaw to locate the site with Virginia court
opinions; searched that Virginia site for "umbro"; searched the Tax
Analysts site for "web site development costs"; and searched the IRS
site for "trademark". |