40.232—Experimental purposes.
A manufacturer of tobacco products may use tobacco products for experimental purposes without determination and payment of tax as set forth in this section.
(a) What are experimental purposes?
Experimental purposes are operations or tests carried out under controlled conditions to discover an unknown scientific principle or fact, to gather or confirm data about a known scientific principle or fact, or to test manufacturing, packaging, or other such equipment. Examples of uses for experimental purposes are:
(1)
Use by manufacturers to determine scientific facts relating to tobacco products, such as their chemical content;
(3)
Use by laboratories, hospitals, medical centers, institutes, colleges, or universities, for scientific, technical, or medical research.
(b) What purposes are not experimental?
The uses of tobacco products outside the factory premises for advertising or consumer testing or as salespersons' or customers' samples are not experimental purposes.
(c) Use in factory.
A manufacturer of tobacco products may use tobacco products without determination and payment of tax for experimental purposes in a factory.
(d) Use outside factory.
A manufacturer may remove tobacco products in bond for experimental purposes outside a factory. When tobacco products are shipped for experimental purposes outside the factory, the proprietor of the factory remains liable for the taxes imposed by 26 U.S.C. 5701 until the occurrence of one of the following events:
(1)
The tobacco products are returned to the premises of the factory from which they were shipped; or
(e) Record of use.
In addition to the records prescribed by § 40.183, a manufacturer who removes tobacco products in bond for experimental purposes outside a factory must prepare and maintain a record containing the following information:
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under Control Number 1512-0562)