Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
California sales for resale audits are CDTFA examinations focused on resale certificate (CDTFA-230) validity and compliance. The IRS of California sales tax, these audits produce the majority of CDTFA assessments. The short version is that a valid resale exemption requires: (1) CDTFA-230 in good faith at time of sale; (2) buyer has valid California seller’s permit; (3) property is actually resold; and (4) conversion of resale inventory to own use triggers use tax. Common audit findings include missing certificates, expired certificates, invalid permits, and converted inventory.1
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Resale audits drive the majority of CDTFA sales tax assessments. Understanding the four requirements and common audit findings is essential.
The Four Resale Audit Issue Categories
| Issue | Impact2 |
|---|---|
| Missing / Expired Certificate | Sales tax assessed on claimed exempt sales |
| Invalid Buyer Seller’s Permit | Exemption disallowed |
| Good Faith Challenge | Certificate rejected for reasonable basis |
| Converted Inventory | Use tax on converted property |
Quick Reference
Jump to issue: missing certificates, invalid permit, good faith, or converted inventory.
1. Missing / Expired Certificates
Missing or expired CDTFA-230 certificates produce the most common resale audit finding.
If this is you: Auditor asks for resale certificates. Gather all on file. Missing certificates for claimed exempt sales produce assessments. Reconstruct if possible.
Missing Certificate Strategy
- Compile all certificates.
- Request replacements from customers.
- Document good faith acceptance.
- Challenge assessments lacking factual basis.
- Negotiate partial concessions.
2. Invalid Buyer Seller’s Permit
Invalid or revoked buyer seller’s permits invalidate the resale exemption.
If this is you: Buyer’s permit was revoked or invalid at time of sale. CDTFA assesses sales tax on transactions. Permit verification at time of each sale is retailer’s duty.
3. Good Faith Test
CDTFA requires good faith acceptance — reasonable basis to believe the buyer is reselling.
If this is you: Auditor questions whether acceptance was in good faith. Buyer’s industry, purchase volume, and specific product type all factor. Good faith challenges typically focus on obvious personal-use items.
4. Converted Inventory
Inventory purchased for resale but converted to own use triggers use tax.
If this is you: Buyer converted resale inventory to own business or personal use. Use tax at cost basis. Conversion audit typical in construction, restaurants, retailers with employee purchases.
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Resale Audit Document Lookup
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CDTFA-230 | General Resale Certificate |
| Customer seller’s permit | Validity verification |
| Exemption verification | Good faith support |
| Publication 103 | Sales for Resale |
| RTC §6091 | Resale exemption statute |
| CDTFA Regulation 1668 | Sales for Resale rules |
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Resale Audit Statute
- 3-year standard.
- 8-year substantial understatement.
- Unlimited for fraud.
- Certificate retention = audit statute + safety margin.
Resale Audit Outcomes
| Defense Quality | Typical Outcome |
|---|---|
| Complete certificates + permits verified | Most exemptions preserved |
| Partial documentation | Partial assessment |
| Missing certificates | Full assessment on claimed sales |
| Converted inventory identified | Use tax on converted |
Resale Audit Escalation
Audit to Assessment
CDTFA reviews exemption documentation. Missing certificates produce assessments.
Assessment to Appeals
Petition for Redetermination challenges documentation issues.
Appeals Review
CDTFA Appeals and OTA can accept post-audit reconstructed documentation in some cases.
First 48 Hours of Resale Audit
- Compile all resale certificates.
- Verify buyer seller’s permits.
- Reconcile to sales records.
- Identify gaps.
- Request replacement certificates.
- Engage counsel.
The ROI Question
Resale audits produce the largest CDTFA assessments. Professional defense typically saves multiples of the fee through documentation recovery and good-faith challenges.
When to Engage Attorney
- Resale audit notice.
- Wholesale business.
- Retailer with resale customers.
- Converted inventory issue.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a California sales-for-resale audit?
A CDTFA audit focused on resale certificate (CDTFA-230) validity and compliance. Four issue categories: missing/expired certificates, invalid buyer permits, good faith challenges, and converted inventory. Produces the majority of CDTFA sales tax assessments.
What is a CDTFA-230?
The California General Resale Certificate. Purchaser’s documentation stating the purchase is for resale, exempting the transaction from sales tax. Seller retains the certificate for audit. Must be obtained in good faith at or before the sale.
Why did CDTFA disallow my resale certificates?
Common reasons: missing certificates for specific transactions, expired certificates, invalid buyer seller’s permits, good-faith challenges (buyer obviously not reselling), or converted inventory. Each has specific defenses.
How long must I keep resale certificates?
At least the audit statute period — 3 years standard, 8 years substantial understatement, longer if fraud alleged. Many businesses retain permanently.
What is good faith for resale certificates?
Reasonable basis to believe the buyer is reselling. Buyer’s industry, purchase volume, product type, and buyer statements all factor. Obvious personal-use items (despite a certificate) can fail good faith.
Does invalid permit void my resale exemption?
Yes. If the buyer’s seller’s permit was invalid or revoked at the time of sale, the resale exemption is disallowed. Retailer verification of permit status at each sale is standard.
What is converted inventory?
Property purchased under resale certificate but subsequently used by the buyer for own business or personal use. Triggers use tax at cost basis on the converted portion. Common in construction, employee purchases, and retailer own-use.
Can I get a replacement certificate after audit?
Attempt — request a fresh certificate from the buyer. CDTFA generally requires the certificate to have been in place at the time of sale, but post-audit documentation can support good-faith claims. Appeals may accept.
How do I prevent a resale audit finding?
Obtain CDTFA-230 before each sale. Verify buyer seller’s permit. Retain certificates systematically. Update annually. Monitor for buyer permit revocation. Document good faith basis.
What if my customer’s permit was revoked?
If the revocation was before the sale, the resale exemption is invalidated. If after, you may have good-faith defense depending on whether the revocation was publicly knowable. Permit status verification is retailer responsibility.
Does CDTFA verify buyer permits automatically?
CDTFA provides online permit verification at CDTFA.ca.gov. Best practice: verify at each sale or periodically. Missing verification can support good-faith challenges.
Can I appeal a resale audit finding?
Yes. Petition for Redetermination within 30 days of Notice of Determination. CDTFA Appeals, OTA, and Superior Court paths available. Well-documented appeals frequently produce reductions.
How do I handle converted inventory audit?
Acknowledge the use tax liability on converted property at cost basis. Challenge CDTFA’s computation if incorrect. Future compliance: track own-use extractions separately from resale inventory.
If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.
The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.
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Next Steps
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