[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 16]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR49.4262(b)-1]

[Page 260-261]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 49_FACILITIES AND SERVICES EXCISE TAXES--Table of Contents
 
                   Subpart D_Transportation of Persons
 
Sec. 49.4262(b)-1  Exclusion of certain travel.

    (a) In general. Under section 4262(b) taxable transportation does 
not include that portion of any transportation which meets all four of 
the following requirements:
    (1) Such portion is outside the United States;
    (2) Neither such portion nor any segment thereof is directly or 
indirectly:
    (i) Between (a) a point where the route of the transportation leaves 
or enters the continental United States, or (b) a port or station in the 
225-mile zone, and
    (ii) A port or station in the 225-mile zone;
    (3) Such portion:
    (i) Begins at either (a) the point where the route of the 
transportation leaves the United States, or (b) a port or station in the 
225-mile zone, and
    (ii) Ends at either (a) the point where the route of the 
transportation enters the United States, or (b) a port or station in the 
225-mile zone; and
    (4) A direct line from the point (or the port or station) specified 
in subparagraph (3) (i) of this paragraph, to the point (or the port or 
station) specified in subparagraph (3) (ii) of this paragraph, passes 
through or over a point which is not within 225 miles of the United 
States. For purposes of this section, the route of the transportation 
shall be deemed to leave or enter the United States when it passes over 
(i) the international boundary line between any part of the United 
States and a contiguous foreign country, or (ii) a point three nautical 
miles (3.45 statute miles) from low tide on the coast line.
    (b) Transportation to or from Alaska or Hawaii. (1) Under the 
provisions of section 4262(b) transportation between the continental 
United States or the 225-mile zone and Alaska or Hawaii will be 
partially exempt from the tax. The portion of such transportation which 
(i) is outside the United States, (ii) is not transportation between 
ports or stations within the continental United States or the 225-mile 
zone, and (iii) is not transportation between ports or stations within 
Alaska or Hawaii, meets all the requirements set forth in section 
4262(b) and is excluded from taxable transportation.
    (2) The provisions of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example (1). A buys a ticket for transportation by air from Seattle 
to Fairbanks, Alaska, via Ketchikan and Juneau, Alaska, and Whitehorse, 
Yukon Territory, Canada. The portion of the transportation between the 
point where the route of the transportation leaves the continental 
United States and the point where it first enters Alaska (the three-mile 
limit or the international boundary) is not subject to tax.
    Example (2). B purchased combination rail-water transportation 
beginning before November 16, 1962, from Chicago to Juneau, Alaska, by 
way of Vancouver, Canada. The portion of the transportation from 
Vancouver to the point where the route of the

[[Page 261]]

transportation enters the three-mile limit off the coast of Alaska is 
not subject to tax.
    Example (3). C purchases a ticket in the United States for 
transportation by air from Vancouver, Canada, to Honolulu, Hawaii. No 
part of the route followed by the carrier passes through or over any 
part of the continental United States. The only part of the payment made 
by C for this transportation which is subject to the tax is that 
applicable to the portion of the transportation between the three-mile 
limit off the coast of Hawaii and the airport in Honolulu.

    (c) Method of computing tax on travel not excluded. (1) Where a 
payment is made for transportation which includes transportation 
excluded under the provisions of section 4262(b):
    (i) The tax may be computed on that proportion of the total amount 
paid which the mileage of the taxable portion of the transportation 
bears to the mileage of the entire trip, or
    (ii) If the taxable portion of the transportation includes 
transportation from one port or station to another port or station for 
which an applicable local fare of a like class is available, the tax may 
be computed on the amount of such local fare, plus an amount equivalent 
to that proportion of the remainder of the total amount paid which the 
mileage of the remainder of the taxable portion of the transportation 
bears to the remainder of the mileage of the entire trip. If the taxable 
transportation includes a leg from a station to a coastal gateway point 
of embarkation for which a uniform fare is charged regardless of the 
gateway point actually used, the tax on such a leg may be computed on 
the basis of such uniform fare. In the absence of a fare described in 
this subparagraph, the tax must be determined in accordance with 
subdivision (i) of this subparagraph. If the taxable portion of the 
transportation includes a leg between coastal gateway points of 
embarkation for which no additional fare is charged no tax shall be 
applicable to such leg of the transportation.
    (2) The basis for determining the proportions described in 
subdivisions (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph shall be 
the average mileage of the established route traveled by the carrier 
between given points under normal circumstances.
    (d) Illustration. The application of paragraph (c) of this section 
may be illustrated by the following example:

    Example. On October 10, 1959, A purchases in San Francisco a ticket 
for transportation by air to Honolulu, Hawaii. The portion of the 
transportation which is outside the continental United States and is 
outside Hawaii is excluded from taxable transportation. The tax applies 
to that part of the payment made by A which is applicable to the portion 
of the transportation between the airport in San Francisco and the 
three-mile limit off the coast of California (a distance of 15 miles) 
and between the three-mile limit off the coast of Hawaii and the airport 
in Honolulu (a distance of 5 miles). The part of the payment made by A 
which is applicable to the taxable portion of his transportation and the 
tax due thereon are computed in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) as 
follows:

Mileage of entire trip (San Francisco airport to Honolulu          2,400
 airport) (miles)...........................................
Mileage in continental United States (miles)................          15
Mileage in Hawaii (miles)...................................           5
                                                             -----------
                                                                      20
Fare from San Francisco to Honolulu.........................     $168.00
Payment for taxable portion (20/2400 x $168)................       $1.40
Tax due (10% (rate in effect on date of payment) x $1.40)...       $0.14



(All distances and fares assumed for purposes of this example. If 
transportation begins after November 15, 1962, the tax applies only to 
the amount paid for transportation by air and should be computed at the 
rate of 5 percent.)

[T.D. 6430, 24 FR 9665, Dec. 3, 1959, as amended by T.D. 6618, 27 FR 
11224, Nov. 14, 1962]