Virginia Contractor Tax Obligations: State and Local Considerations

Virginia contractors operate within a layered tax structure that spans state-level sales and use tax, local business license taxes, and federal self-employment obligations — each with distinct rules that depend on contractor classification, project type, and the jurisdictions where work is performed. Misclassifying taxable transactions or overlooking local license tax filings are among the most common compliance failures that trigger audits or penalty assessments against Virginia-licensed contractors. The treatment of materials, labor, and subcontractor payments differs materially between Virginia's Retail Sales and Use Tax statutes and the rules most contractors encounter in other states, making Virginia-specific guidance essential.

Definition and scope

Virginia contractor tax obligations refer to the full set of tax reporting, payment, and registration requirements imposed on contractors — whether individuals, sole proprietors, or business entities — who perform construction, renovation, repair, or installation work within the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Scope coverage: This page addresses tax obligations arising under Virginia state law and local county or municipal ordinances, specifically as they apply to licensed and unlicensed contractors performing work in Virginia. The applicable primary statute is the Virginia Retail Sales and Use Tax Act (Virginia Code § 58.1-600 et seq.), administered by the Virginia Department of Taxation (Virginia Tax).

Not covered by this page's scope: Federal income tax obligations (IRS jurisdiction), payroll tax mechanics beyond framing context, tax obligations arising exclusively from work performed outside Virginia's borders, and multi-state nexus analysis for contractors with operations in other states. Contractors holding licenses in multiple states should consult Virginia Tax guidance in conjunction with the relevant authority in each additional jurisdiction.

The contractor category most directly affected by Virginia's unique tax structure is the real property contractor — an entity that contracts to improve real property by incorporating tangible personal property (materials) into the structure or land. Under Virginia Tax's classification framework, such contractors are treated as the consumer of the materials they purchase, not as resellers.

How it works

Retail Sales and Use Tax: The Contractor as Consumer

Virginia law treats real property contractors as end-consumers of the materials incorporated into a project (Virginia Tax Ruling 21-56). This means:

  1. Contractors pay sales tax at purchase — when buying lumber, pipe, electrical components, or other materials from a supplier, the contractor owes Virginia sales tax (the state rate is 4.3%, with a 1% local add-on, for a combined 5.3% statewide minimum rate, per Virginia Code § 58.1-603) at the point of purchase. Contractors generally cannot issue a resale exemption certificate for materials that will be physically incorporated into real property.
  2. Contractors do not collect sales tax from the property owner — because the transaction between contractor and property owner is a real property improvement contract, not a retail sale of tangible goods. The contractor's charge for labor and the overall contract price are not subject to Virginia sales tax collection from the client.
  3. Use tax applies when tax was not collected at purchase — if materials are purchased out-of-state or from a vendor that did not collect Virginia sales tax, the contractor owes Virginia Use Tax on those materials at the same rate.

Local Business License Tax (BPOL)

Virginia localities — cities, counties, and towns — are authorized under Virginia Code § 58.1-3700 et seq. to impose a Business, Professional, and Occupational License (BPOL) tax on contractors doing business within that locality. BPOL rates vary by locality and business category. For contractors, the tax is typically assessed on gross receipts from work performed in that jurisdiction. A contractor working across Fairfax County, the City of Richmond, and Virginia Beach faces three separate BPOL filings — each locality sets its own rate, due date (commonly March 1), and threshold for exemption.

Subcontractor and Independent Contractor Payments

Contractors who engage subcontractors must evaluate worker classification under both Virginia Tax rules and IRS criteria. Misclassifying employees as independent contractors can produce liability for unpaid payroll taxes and associated penalties. The Virginia Employment Commission (VEC) enforces worker classification standards independently of federal IRS determinations.

Common scenarios

Scenario 1 — Residential remodeling contractor: A contractor purchases $40,000 in materials for a kitchen renovation in Loudoun County. The contractor pays Virginia sales tax (5.3% + any applicable Loudoun local rate) at the supplier. The total contract price billed to the homeowner — including labor — is not subject to sales tax collection. The contractor also files a BPOL return with Loudoun County based on gross receipts from that project.

Scenario 2 — Specialty trade contractor working across localities: An HVAC contractor (Virginia specialty contractor trades) with jobs in Arlington County and the City of Alexandria maintains separate BPOL registrations in both jurisdictions and allocates gross receipts accordingly. Materials purchased with a supplier's Virginia dealer certificate are taxed at point of sale.

Scenario 3 — Home improvement contractor with mixed transactions: A Virginia home improvement contractor who also sells and delivers appliances separately from installation faces a split transaction: the separately stated appliance sale may be taxable at retail, while the installation labor is not — provided the invoice clearly segregates the two charges. Bundled charges are generally taxed on the full amount.

Scenario 4 — Public procurement contractor: Contractors working on government projects through Virginia public procurement channels are still responsible for sales and use tax on materials, as the tax is incurred at purchase, not at billing.

Decision boundaries

The critical classification question in Virginia contractor taxation is whether a transaction constitutes:

Factor Real Property Contract Tangible Property Service
Materials become part of real estate Yes No — item remains removable
Sales tax collected from client No Generally yes
Contractor pays tax on materials At purchase May depend on transaction structure
Example Foundation pour, roofing Appliance repair, equipment rental

Contractors unsure of classification should consult Virginia Tax's guidance on contractors and real property or request a ruling before structuring contract terms.

Additional compliance touchpoints for Virginia contractors include:

  1. Virginia Department of Taxation — registering for a sales tax account if any transactions may be taxable retail sales.
  2. Local Commissioner of the Revenue — BPOL registration in each locality where work is performed.
  3. Virginia Employment Commission — payroll tax account if the contractor employs workers.
  4. IRS Form 1099-NEC — required reporting for subcontractor payments of $600 or more in a calendar year (IRS threshold, not a Virginia-specific rule).

Understanding these boundaries connects directly to broader contractor compliance considerations — including Virginia contractor license requirements, contractor bond requirements, and contractor violations and penalties that can compound tax non-compliance. The full Virginia contractor regulatory landscape is indexed at virginiacontractorauthority.com.

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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