Nevada’s Department of Taxation says people buying tickets later this month for this year’s Burning Man will be paying live entertainment tax for the first time. The Reno Gazette-Journal says the Nevada Department of Taxation notified Burning Man in a letter last week that the more than 15,000 tickets sold for the event qualified it for the tax. The letter reportedly says Burning Man is required to register for the tax before tickets go on sale. The RGJ says the organization has not yet commented on the decision. Lawmakers expanded the definition of entertainment under its live entertainment tax law to include outdoor festivals like Burning Man and the Electric Daisy Festival in Las Vegas.