EXAMPLE 1: A religious organization is organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes and has an active ExIN. It operates a retreat center and organizes and conducts a 3-day marriage counseling seminar and rents rooms to the participants of the seminar. The seminar is in furtherance of its organizational purposes. The receipts from these rentals are not subject to the hotel operators' occupation tax under subsection (c)(2).
EXAMPLE 2: Religious Organization A is organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes and has an active ExIN. It operates a retreat center and rents a block of rooms to Religious Organization B. Religious Organization B is organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes, possesses an active ExIN, and provides rooms to the participants of a spiritual seminar it has organized and will conduct. The seminar furthers the organizational purposes of Organization B. Organization A's receipts from these rentals are not subject to the hotel operators' occupation tax under subsection (c)(2). In this Example, if the rooms are paid for by the individual participants and not by Organization B, Organization A must keep records demonstrating that the individual to whom the room was rented was a participant in the seminar conducted by Organization B. If Organization A does not keep these records, the receipts from those rentals are taxable.
EXAMPLE 3: Religious Organization A is organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes and has an active ExIN. It operates a retreat center. Religious Organization A's organizational documents demonstrate it is organized, in part, to partner with school districts to provide one-on-one support to students to help them overcome the educational and societal challenges they face both in and out of school. Organization B is a not-for-profit organization that provides funds and support to school districts that serve at-risk students. Religious Organization A rents a block of rooms to Organization B for participants attending a seminar conducted by Organization B for educators of at-risk youth. Because the seminar conducted by Organization B is in furtherance of Organization A's organizational purposes, the receipts from the rental to Organization B are not subject to the hotel operators' occupation tax under subsection (c)(2). In this Example, Religious Organization A must keep records demonstrating that the seminar was in furtherance of its organizational purposes (e.g., a copy of its charter, mission statement, and by laws, as well as any brochures or agendas pertaining to the seminar). In addition, if the rooms are paid for by the individual participants and not by Organization B, Religious Organization A must keep records demonstrating that the individual was a participant in the seminar conducted by Organization B (e.g., a copy of the seminar's sign-in sheet).
EXAMPLE 4: A religious organization operates a retreat center, is organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes, and has an active ExIN. It rents a block of rooms to persons attending a wedding reception at the center or rents a block of rooms to a not-for-profit organization that conducts a sports-medicine seminar. The receipts from either of these rentals do not qualify for the exemption in subsection (c)(2) because the rentals are neither made in furtherance of the organizational purposes of the religious organization operating the retreat center, nor made to a religious organization organized and operated exclusively for religious purposes that has an active ExIN.
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 480.101
Amended at 24 Ill. Reg. 17814, effective November 28, 2000