Forum Discussion
Thanks Maratsade. HugesNet was the one who informed the government I was receiving the phone service so they could tax me. I was told the tax was on the phone service when I called about the taxes going up. At that point I discontinued the service since I was at the end of the contract and the lag in the service caused a lot of talking over the other person on the line. If HughesNet informed the government I was receiving the service they should be able to inform them I am no longer receiving it? Now I am wondering how many others are still paying a state tax while no longer receiving a service. I have also been informed on two seperate occasions that the issue had been resolved by HughesNet and this was not so.
Patty,
After researching, the telecommunication taxes are not related to the phone service, it is actually relative to the internet service itself. I hope this helps. :)
Thanks,
Felicia
- GabeU6 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
Hardy wrote:Patty,
After researching, the telecommunication taxes are not related to the phone service, it is actually relative to the internet service itself. I hope this helps. :)
Thanks,
Felicia
That's what I was wondering. I know that the term "telecommunications" can be a bit confusing when it comes to taxes and such, especially state to state. It seems that it would only apply to something having to do with phones, whether home, cell or some type of VOIP service, like HughesNet Voice, but in practice it can mean internet service, too.
- BirdDog6 years agoAssistant Professor
GabeU wrote:
Hardy wrote:Patty,
After researching, the telecommunication taxes are not related to the phone service, it is actually relative to the internet service itself. I hope this helps. :)
Thanks,
Felicia
That's what I was wondering. I know that the term "telecommunications" can be a bit confusing when it comes to taxes and such, especially state to state. It seems that it would only apply to something having to do with phones, whether home, cell or some type of VOIP service, like HughesNet Voice, but in practice it can mean internet service, too.
Thought OP might have been referring to the telecommunication charge, I have that on my bill also with no phone. It is a confusing catch all word for many data things that are not necessarily telephone related.
- maratsade6 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
OP wrote that "I was told the tax was on the phone service when I called about the taxes going up." HN also seems to have acknowledged the existence of an error, twice. Something doesn't seem quite right.
- BirdDog6 years agoAssistant Professor
maratsade wrote:OP wrote that "I was told the tax was on the phone service when I called about the taxes going up." HN also seems to have acknowledged the existence of an error, twice. Something doesn't seem quite right.
Well, unless a pic of exactly what charge is being referred to gets posted, I'm taking a seat on this one.
- pattymotley6 years agoFreshman
OK, my bill for hughesnet was $108.70 every month. I have automatic draft and when it was taken out at the end of Sept for my oct payment they took out $114.07, an increase of $5.37. When I called about the increase I was told it was due to taxes on the phone service, NOT the internet. Since my contract on the phone was up I had it discontinued. I received a refund for the phone service for Oct. which posted as $29.99 on my phone app as a refund. When I called back to ask about the taxes I was told the government took those out and HughesNet had no controll of that although the tax came out with their withdrawel. The taxes at that time reduced to $2.72 which was in keeping with what the rep on the phone said it would be, between $2 and $3. He even gave me a breakdown of how much went to federal, state and local taxes at the time. It has since went back up to $5.26. When I called back to ask about it I was told it was the phone tax. That came from HughesNet. They said they would take care of it. If it was not a tax on the phone they should have told me that but each time I was told it was the phone service. I am simply going by what HughesNet told me. At no time was I told the tax was on the internet. I can understand if one rep got it wrong but not 3 in a row.
- maratsade6 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
You should email the state and explain the situation to them -- their response may likely be useful to you.
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