Upcoming CT DRS webinar: Select to register for the upcoming Withholding Forms W-2 and 1099 Annual Filing Webinar on Wednesday, January 15, 2025, at 10:00 a.m.

SN 2012(2)

2011 Legislative Changes to the Procedures Governing Nonresident Contractors


Purpose: This Special Notice explains the amendments made to Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7) during the 2011 regular session of the Connecticut General Assembly affecting the requirement for nonresident contractors to provide bonds.

This Special Notice has been updated from a previous version to include guidance on remitting to the Department of Revenue Services (DRS) amounts held back from an unverified subcontractor by a prime or general contractor.


Effective Date: Effective for contracts commencing on and after October 1, 2011.


Statutory Authority: Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7) as amended by 2011 Conn. Pub. Acts 61, §66; Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-35; Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-415; Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(1).


Overview: The law requiring nonresident construction contractors to furnish security for Connecticut taxes arising from jobs performed in Connecticut has been changed in the following major ways:

  • Under the law as amended, there are two classes of nonresident contractors: verified and unverified. A nonresident prime or general contractor may gain verified status and thus eliminate the requirement to file a surety bond with DRS, and a nonresident subcontractor may become verified and thus eliminate the requirement for the prime or general contractor to hold back a portion of the amount owed the subcontractor under the contract.
  • Under the law as amended, a single surety bond for 5% of the entire project price is required to be filed with DRS by an unverified prime or general contractor where the contract price for the entire project is $250,000 or more. A person doing business with an unverified prime or general contractor for such a project must obtain proof that the contractor has filed a bond with DRS, but is no longer required to withhold an amount from payment due to the contractor under the contract.
  • A prime or general contractor must hold back 5% of the amount due an unverified subcontractor until the subcontractor obtains and furnishes Form AU-968, Certificate of Compliance, from DRS. A Form AU-968 authorizes the prime or general contractor to release all or a portion of the amounts held back from payment to the unverified subcontractor.
  • Compliance with the provisions of Conn. Gen. Stat. § 12-430(7) relieves the person doing business with a nonresident contractor from liability for the nonresident contractor’s withholding tax liability or liability for sales or use tax on materials and consumables. It does not relieve the person doing business with a nonresident contractor from liability for sales or use tax on purchases of services.

Prior law required compliance with one of three options to secure payment of Connecticut taxes for each contract with a nonresident prime or general contractor and with a nonresident subcontractor. This is now replaced by the procedures described above.

As under prior law, owners or tenants of residential real property are excluded from the requirements of Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7).


Definitions:

Nonresident contractor means a contractor or subcontractor who does not maintain a regular place of business in Connecticut.

Resident contractor means a contractor or subcontractor who maintains a regular place of business in Connecticut.

Regular place of business means:

  • Any bona fide office, factory, warehouse, or other space in Connecticut at which a contractor is doing business in its own name in a regular and systematic manner; and that is
  • A place continuously maintained, occupied, and used by the contractor in carrying on its business through its employees regularly in attendance to carry on the contractor's business in the contractor's own name.

A regular place of business does not include:

  • A place of business for a statutory agent for service of process or a temporary office whether or not it is located at the site of construction;
  • Locations used by the contractor only for the duration of the contract, such as short-term leased offices, warehouses, storage facilities, or facilities that do not have full time staff with regular business hours; or
  • An office maintained, occupied, and used by a person affiliated with a contractor.

Verified contractor means a nonresident contractor or subcontractor who:

  • Is registered for all applicable taxes with DRS;
  • Has filed all required tax returns with DRS;
  • Has no outstanding tax liabilities to DRS; and
  • Has submitted a Form AU-960, Nonresident Contractor Request for Verified Contractor Status, and has been verified by DRS to meet the above requirements, plus either:
    1. Has been registered for all applicable taxes with DRS for at least three years preceding the contract; or
    2. Posts with DRS a good and valid verification bond using Form AU-961, Verification Bond.

Unverified contractor means a nonresident contractor or subcontractor who is not a verified contractor.

Subcontractor means a person who is engaged in contracting real property work and who contracts with a prime or general contractor to perform all or any part of the contract of the prime or general contractor, or who contracts with a subcontractor who has contracted to perform any part of the contract entered into by the prime or general contractor.

Prime or general contractor includes (i) any person who contracts with the owner, lessee or other person having authority to enter into a contract involving the premises or property that is the subject matter of the contract, to perform services or furnish materials, or both, for the construction, alteration or improvement of any real property or project, or (ii) any person who owns or leases real estate for the purpose of developing the real estate other than for his or her own occupancy, and who, in the development of the real estate, contracts, alters or makes improvements on it.

Contract price means the total contract price, including deposits, amounts held as retainage, costs for any change orders, or charges for add-ons.

Person doing business with a nonresident contractor (referred to below as customer) means any person who makes payments of the contract price to a nonresident contractor, and includes, but is not limited to property owners, governmental, charitable or religious entities, and resident or nonresident general contractors or subcontractors. An owner or tenant of residential real property is not a person doing business with a nonresident contractor and is not required to comply with the provisions of Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7).

Commencement of the contract means the time when the nonresident contractor signs the contract, but, in any event, occurs no later than when the work under the contract actually starts. If a change order is made after the commencement of the original contract, the change order commences when it is signed by the nonresident contractor, but, in any event, occurs no later than when the work under the change order actually starts.

Completion of the contract means the time when the nonresident contractor makes the final periodic billing for the contract. The final periodic billing may be due before payment of any retainage becomes due. If a change order is made after the final periodic billing for the original contract, the change order is complete when the nonresident contractor bills for the change.

Residential real property means real property used exclusively for residential purposes and consisting of three or fewer dwelling units in one of which the owner or tenant resides.

Certificate of compliance means a certificate issued to an unverified subcontractor by DRS, exonerating the subcontractor from sales or use taxes owed by the subcontractor under Chapter 219 of the Connecticut General Statutes and any income tax withholding owed by the subcontractor pursuant to Chapter 229 of the Connecticut General Statutes, but only to the extent that these taxes arise from the activities of the subcontractor on the project for which the certificate was required.


Customer of an Unverified Prime or General Contractor: The customer of an unverified prime or general contractor must obtain proof that the contractor has posted a surety bond with DRS. Failure to do so leaves the customer liable for payment of any sales and use taxes and any income tax withholding owed by the unverified contractor arising from the activities of the contractor on the project, up to 5% of the contract price required to be paid to the unverified contractor.

However, compliance with the provisions of Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7) does not relieve the customer of the customer’s liability for use taxes due on purchases of services from the unverified contractor.


Unverified Prime or General Contractor Must File a Bond: An unverified prime or general contractor must file a surety bond with DRS in an amount equal to 5% of the contract price. DRS has issued Form AU-964, Surety Bond and Release, which must be used to post that bond.

DRS will release the surety bond once the contract is complete and the unverified prime or general contractor establishes that it has paid all taxes it owes in connection with the contract and that its unverified subcontractors have paid all of the taxes that they owe in connection with the contract.

Otherwise, DRS will release the surety bond once the contract is complete and the unverified prime or general contractor establishes that it has:

  1. Paid all taxes it owes in connection with the contract;
  2. Held back an amount equal to 5% of the payments being made by the contractor in connection with the contract to its unverified subcontractors; and
  3. Paid over amounts held back from unverified contractors to the extent that DRS has issued certificates of compliance for full or partial release of such amounts, and remitted to DRS any amounts held back that have not been authorized by DRS to be released to the unverified contractors. See the section of this publication titled Release or Remittance of Amounts Held Back, for the procedures to release held back payments to the unverified subcontractors.


Hold Backs Required by All Prime or General Contractors from Payments to Unverified Subcontractors: Prime or general contractors, whether resident, verified, or unverified, doing business with unverified subcontractors on projects over $250,000 must hold back an amount equal to 5% of the payments required to be made to the subcontractor until the subcontractor provides a Certificate of Compliance authorizing full or partial release of the amount held back.

The prime or general contractor must provide notice of the requirement to hold back to the unverified subcontractor not later than the time of commencement of work under the contract by the subcontractor.

The amount held back from unverified subcontractors is deemed to be held in a special fund in trust for the state. An unverified subcontractor does not have any right of action against a prime or general contractor with respect to any amount held back in compliance or intended compliance with Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7).


Release or Remittance of Amounts Held Back: When all work is completed under a contract, the amount held back will be released to the unverified subcontractor or remitted to DRS depending on the following:

  1. Unverified subcontractor DOES submit Form AU-967, Request for Certificate of Compliance, to DRS:

An unverified subcontractor requests DRS to issue Form AU-968 by submitting Form AU-967. DRS will review the request in the context of generally accepted construction industry cost guidelines for the scope and type of construction project. DRS will issue one of the following not later than 120 days after Form AU-967 and all required documents are received:

A.  Certificate of Compliance (AU-968):

If DRS issues Form AU-968, to the unverified subcontractor and the prime or general contractor authorizing full or partial release of held back amounts, the prime or general contractor must pay over the released amount to the subcontractor and must remit any unreleased amount to DRS. The prime or general contractor remits the unreleased amount on Form OS-114, Sales and Use Tax Return, Line 6 on the first return due after the issuance of the Certificate of Compliance.

B.   Denial of Certificate of Compliance and Remittance of Holdback (AU-970):

If DRS denies the request a Form AU-970, Denial of Certificate of Compliance and Remittance of Holdback, will be issued to the unverified subcontractor and the prime or general contractor. The prime or general contractor must remit the total amount held back to DRS on Form OS-114, Line 6. This held back amount must be reported on the first return due after the issuance of the Denial of Certificate of Compliance and Remittance of Holdback.

2.      Unverified subcontractor DOES NOT submit Form AU-967 to DRS.

If the unverified nonresident subcontractor does not submit Form AU-967 to the prime or general contractor for endorsement within 90 days of the completion date, then the prime or general contractor must remit the amount held back to DRS on Form OS-114, Line 6, on the first return due after the 90 day period following the completion of the contract.

The calculation used to arrive at the amount to be included on Form OS-114, Line 6 is:

Amount Held Back
.0635

= Taxable Amount to be included on Line 6

Example: If the Total Contract Amount is $300,000, then the Amount Held Back is $15,000 (300,000 X .05). The amount to be included on Line 6 is $236,220.47 (15,000 / .0635).

The prime or general contractor will not be liable for any claim by DRS for taxes of the unverified subcontractor arising from the activities of the subcontractor on the project when the prime or general contractor pays over to the subcontractor the amount authorized by the Form AU 968. Furthermore, when the prime or general contractor pays over to DRS the unreleased hold back amount, the prime or general contractor will not be liable for any claim by the subcontractor for the amount paid over to DRS.

The prime or general contractor doing business with the nonresident contractor must keep supporting documentation with the tax return on which it was reported. If the prime or general contractor fails to timely remit to DRS any amount that was unclaimed by, or not released by DRS to the unverified subcontractor, the prime or general contractor will be subject to applicable interest and penalties under Chapter 219 of the Connecticut General Statutes.


Disclosures by DRS Authorized under Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7): Notwithstanding the provisions regarding confidentiality of tax return information under Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-15, DRS is authorized to:

  • Verify whether or not a nonresident contractor or subcontractor is a verified contractor;
  • Disclose to a person doing business with an unverified subcontractor who is required to hold back amounts from payments to the unverified contractor whether a Form AU-986 has been requested by or issued to the subcontractor by DRS; DRS may disclose a copy of the certificate to the person doing business with the unverified subcontractor;
  • Disclose to a person doing business with an unverified prime or general contractor whether a good and valid surety bond has been posted with DRS; and
  • Verify whether or not any contractor or subcontractor is a resident contractor.


Effect on Other Documents: This Special Notice modifies and supersedes Special Notice 2011(17), 2011 Legislative Changes to the Procedures Governing Nonresident Contractors, and modifies and supersedes Informational Publication 2006(35), Building Contractors’ Guide to Sales and Use Taxes, to the extent it discusses the provisions of Conn. Gen. Stat. §12-430(7).


Effect of This Document: A Special Notice announces a new policy or practice in response to changes in state or federal laws or regulations or to judicial decisions. A Special Notice indicates an informal interpretation of Connecticut tax law by DRS.


For Further Information: Call DRS during business hours, Monday through Friday:

  • 1-800-382-9463 (Connecticut calls outside the Greater Hartford calling area only); or
  • 860-297-5962 (from anywhere).

TTY, TDD, and Text Telephone users only may transmit inquiries anytime by calling 860-297-4911

For questions regarding the nonresident contractor bond law, call 860-541-7538.


SN 2012(2)
Sales and use taxes
Withholding tax
Contractor bonds
Issued: 03/22/2012