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Bagel Tax

August 26th, 2010 · 3 Comments

Jacob Gershman  says that New York imposes a special sales tax depending on how you eat your bagel:

What’s the tax on a bagel? It depends how you slice it — or in the case of New York, if you slice it, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

State tax officials, under orders from cash-strapped Albany to ramp up their audit and compliance efforts, have begun to enforce one of the more obscure distinctions within the state’s sales tax law.

In New York, the sale of whole bagels isn’t subject to sales tax. But the tax does apply to “sliced or prepared bagels (with cream cheese or other toppings),” according to the state Department of Taxation and Finance. And if the bagel is eaten in the store, even if it’s never been touched by a knife, it’s also taxed.

That was news to one New York bagel-store owner, who found out he was out of compliance with the policy this summer when the state audited his company.

Kenneth Greene, the owner of 33 Bruegger’s Bagel franchises throughout New York, says the state demanded that he start charging taxes on all bagels, except for those that remain intact and are consumed off premises, and forced him to pay a “significant” sum in taxes that the state estimated he owed.

Greene says the extra charge, about eight cents a bagel, depending on the local rate, filled his customers with boiling rage. “They felt we were nickel-and-diming them. They thought we were charging them to slice a bagel,” he said.

To clear things up, he posted signs at the cashier informing customers that it was Albany, not Bruegger’s, to blame. “We apologize for this change and share in your frustration on this additional tax,” the signs read.

Tags: State Taxes

3 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Bagel Tax at Taxes // Aug 26, 2010 at 3:43 pm

    [...] [...]

  • 2 LawStudent // Aug 26, 2010 at 7:04 pm

    I just read Old Colony Trust v. Commissioner; entering the infuriating world of individual income taxation.

  • 3 Lorne Marr // Aug 29, 2010 at 10:50 am

    Bagels are one of the few kinds of good bread one can get around here. I wonder which “regular” bread bakery lobbied to have this law enforced…
    What if I cut my bagel myself, on my own chair? What if the premises are owned by another company? Such as in a shopping mall food court? Does the tax apply if I cut my bagel myself in a shopping mall? Hmmm…

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