Miami Herald

Need a break on back-to-school shopping? What to know about a tax holiday starting soon

- BY HOWARD COHEN hcohen@miamiheral­d.com Howard Cohen: 305-376-3619, @HowardCohe­n

is poised to enter its second fall semester of school under the cloud of a pandemic.

And while there is renewed discussion and some confusion as to exactly how classrooms will look and function in terms of masking, social distancing and other precaution­s as COVID-19 once again surges in the state, there is one thing we know:

The familiar back-toschool tax-free week is happening again this year.

The savings apply from July 31 to Aug. 9. Yes, it’s slightly longer than a week. Be grateful for the generous math.

The savings apply to clothes, school supplies and other items and the taxes off the first $1,000 of the sales price of a computer.

Note the exceptions, though.

For instance, things break and the sales-tax holiday does not apply to the cost of repairing the qualified items. (Or renting, so don’t be rushing to get a jump start on that prom tux or dress — plus, its sales price would take you over the allowed limit, anyway.)

Additional­ly, the salestax holiday does not apply to sales in theme parks, such as Orlando’s Disney World or Universal, entertainm­ent complexes, public lodging or airport shops.

So what can you get a break on? Here are some savings:

CLOTHING

Clothing has to have a sales price of $60 or less per item. It’s school, not the set of HBO Max’s “White Lotus.”

The tax-free offer also applies to wallets, bags, backpacks — but not briefcases, suitcases or garment bags — also having a sales price of $60 or less per item.

Clothing includes footwear but excludes watches, watchbands, jewelry, umbrellas, handkerchi­efs, skis, swim fins and roller blades and skates.

SCHOOL SUPPLIES

School supplies must have a sales price of $15 or less per item. You can use the tax break on things like pens, pencils, erasers, crayons, notebooks, notebook filler paper, legal pads, binders, lunch boxes, constructi­on paper, markers, folders, poster board, compositio­n books, poster paper, scissors, cellophane tape, glue or paste, rulers, computer disks, staplers and staples you use on paper products — not staples for construcFl­orida tion, however.

Also, protractor­s, compasses and calculator­s are part of the deal, as long as they fit into the price range.

PERSONAL COMPUTERS

The sales-tax holiday takes into considerat­ion computers and personal computer-related accessorie­s such as the first $1,000 of the sales price of the applicable items.

Personal computers include electronic book readers, laptops, desktops, handhelds, tablets or tower computers. But the sales-tax holiday does not include cellphones, videogame consoles, digitalmed­ia receivers or devices that are not primarily designed to process data.

Personal computerre­lated accessorie­s include keyboards, the computer mouse, personal digital assistants, monitors, other peripheral devices, modems, routers and nonrecreat­ional software. But computer furniture or systems, devices, software, monitors with a television tuner or peripheral­s that are designed or intended primarily for recreation­al use will be taxed as usual.

Enjoy your shopping!

 ?? ROBERTO KOLTUN
el Nuevo Herald file ?? Backpacks are among the items that can be purchased tax-free in Florida from July 31 to Aug. 9. The taxes are also waived for the first $1,000 of the sales price of a computer.
ROBERTO KOLTUN el Nuevo Herald file Backpacks are among the items that can be purchased tax-free in Florida from July 31 to Aug. 9. The taxes are also waived for the first $1,000 of the sales price of a computer.

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