Luxury goods sales tax
The introduction of a sales tax applied at the point of purchase of automobiles and aircraft valued over $100,000 and vessels valued over $250,000. The tax will only apply to new vehicles purchased for personal use. The tax rate will be the lesser of 10 per cent of the full value of the vehicle, or 20 per cent of the value above the threshold.
This tax will come into effect on January 1, 2022.
This is an independent cost estimate of a budgetary measure contained in the federal government’s Budget 2021. A list of the PBO’s cost estimates of components of the Budget can be viewed on its website.
The introduction of a sales tax applied at the point of purchase of automobiles and aircraft valued over $100,000 and vessels valued over $250,000. The tax will only apply to new vehicles purchased for personal use. The tax rate will be the lesser of 10 per cent of the full value of the vehicle, or 20 per cent of the value above the threshold.
This tax will come into effect on January 1, 2022.
The total sales volume of automobiles and aircraft valued over $100,000
and vessels valued over $250,000 for personal use was approximated using publicly available data. Sales volumes were linked to the assumed corresponding vehicle prices to determine the potential tax base. PBO assumed an elasticity of -2.4 based on academic studies of consumers of luxury vehicles. The PBO assumed no impact on GST/HST revenues.
The following tax rates were applied to determine the potential tax revenues:
Automobiles and aircraft:
-
20 per cent of the value above the threshold ($100,000) for automobiles and aircraft valued over $100,000 to $200,000; and
-
10 per cent of the full value of the automobile or aircraft valued above $200,000.
Vessels:
-
20 per cent of the value above the threshold ($250,000) for vessels valued over $250,000 to $500,000; and
-
10 per cent of the full value of the vessel valued above $500,000.
The PBO assumed that the sales of luxury vehicles would recover from the economic impact of COVID-19 by 2022. For 2022 and beyond, potential tax revenues were grown in-line with inflation projections in PBO’s economic model.
Actual sales volumes for vehicles in this tax base are not known. For
vessels and aircraft, PBO used registry and license data as a proxy for sales
volume. The estimated revenues are highly sensitive to the price
distribution of the total volume of sales. PBO used publicly available listings and MSRPs to
approximate the distribution of prices and sales volumes. Actual distributions could differ from these samples.
This cost estimate is dependent on the assumed recovery path of the sales of luxury goods. Due to the uncertainty surrounding COVID-19, the recovery path could differ. The estimate is also sensitive to exchange rates and uncertainty in the economic outlook.
A behavioural response is expected. The exact magnitude of this response is uncertain and depends on the price sensitivity of consumers.
- Estimates are presented on an accrual basis as would appear in the budget and public accounts.
- A positive number implies a deterioration in the budgetary balance (lower revenues or higher spending). A negative number implies an improvement in the budgetary balance (higher revenues or lower spending).
- “-“ = PBO does not expect a financial cost.
- Totals may not add due to rounding