# 80.35 What additional options and requirements apply to multiyear licenses?
In addition to the requirements at § 80.34, the following provisions apply to multiyear licenses:
(a) An agency may spend the proceeds derived from a multiyear license fee as soon as the agency receives payment.
(b) A multiyear license may be valid for either a specific or indeterminate number of years, but it must be valid for at least 2 years.
(c) The agency may count a license holder for the number of certification periods for which all the following requirements are met:
(1) The license holder meets all other requirements of this subpart;
(2) The license is currently valid;
(3) The agency received the minimum required revenue for each certification period during the duration of the license, in the case of a multiyear license with a specified ending date;
(4) The license holder remains alive (see paragraph (d) of this section), in the case of a lifetime license or other license with no specified ending date; and
(5) If the license is valid for less than the number of years that it meets the minimum required revenue, or the license exceeds the life expectancy of the holder, the agency may count the license holder only for the number of years during which all certification requirements are met. For example, an agency may count for 12 certification periods a license holder who purchased a single-privilege, multiyear license that sells for $25 and is valid for at least 12 years.
(d) The agency must use and document a reasonable technique for deciding how many multiyear-license holders remain alive in the certification period. Some examples of reasonable techniques are specific identification of license holders, statistical sampling, life-expectancy tables, and mortality tables. The agency may instead use 80 years of age as a default for life expectancy.
(e) For currently valid multiyear licenses sold prior to September 26, 2019 (the effective date of the rule promulgated at 84 FR 44772, August 27, 2019), an agency may apply the provisions of § 80.34 to those multiyear licenses under the following situations:
(1) All the requirements in paragraph (c) of this section are met.
(2) The agency may count a multiyear license holder only once in any certification period (see § 80.33) when the license holder purchased another license with the same privilege within an allowable future certification period.
(3) An agency must count the license holder only for the appropriate number of current or future certification periods. The provisions of § 80.34 are not retroactive to past certification periods.
(4) For an illustration of the applications provided in this paragraph (e), see table 1 to paragraph (e):
Table 1 to Paragraph (**e**)—Scenarios for Counting License Holders Under the Requirements for Gross Revenue at § 80.34
[For use in counting valid multiyear licenses sold prior to September 26, 2019.]
| Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 |
| --- | --- |
| The agency spent the money and was able to count the license during only one certification period based on the regulations promulgated in 2014. | The agency invested the funds into an annuity that produced enough income to allow the license holder to be counted in all certification periods since the date of the license sale. |
| Applying the standard at § 80.34(b)(1) to the original license cost results in a potential for 50 certification periods ($100/$2 per year = 50). | Applying the standard at § 80.34(b)(1) to the original license cost results in a potential for 50 certification periods ($100/$2 per year = 50). |
| After subtracting the 1 certification period that was already counted, 49 potential certification periods remain. | After subtracting the 6 (2014-2019) certification periods already counted, 44 potential certification periods remain. |
| Because the license is valid for only 10 years, and through 2023, under scenario 1 the agency could count the license holder only from 2019 through the end of the term of the license (2023) or an additional five certification periods. | Because the license is valid for only 10 years, under scenario 2 the agency could count the license holder in an additional four (2020-2023) certification periods. |