โJan-28-2017 03:42 PM
โAug-27-2017 04:39 PM
tinstartrvlr wrote:
Every state has it's positives/negatives, and from what I have seen, where you save on one thing you pay on another. It seems to balance out generally (with some exceptions, like California)
โAug-27-2017 12:39 PM
โAug-27-2017 09:19 AM
โAug-26-2017 10:29 PM
velvetmonkey408 wrote:
I never understood why NV often isn't considered for along with SD, FL, and TX for domicile. No state income tax and no vehicle inspection in most counties. If I were to go full-time, NV would be high on my list as a central place to many of the areas I'd like to visit/travel through. It would be convenient for health care (compared to SD/FL/TX)...
โAug-26-2017 05:41 PM
โAug-26-2017 02:53 PM
fulltimedaniel wrote:
When I am asked the question about why I have South Dakota plates I tell people that to my mind what they should look for is the state with the LOWEST AUTO INSURANCE rates.
โAug-26-2017 02:27 PM
โApr-09-2017 10:57 AM
โApr-08-2017 07:42 PM
โFeb-05-2017 06:55 AM
โFeb-01-2017 08:08 AM
โJan-31-2017 10:23 AM
โJan-30-2017 11:56 AM
โJan-30-2017 06:17 AM
GoPackGo wrote:lanerd wrote:
I never thought about the insurance angle. Am I correct to assume that what ever state your domicile, vehicle registration and driver's license is.... that you also have to have insurance from that state?
I have a friend who lives in MO but spends his time mostly in California as a camp host and will be selling his house in MO and looking to SD for his domicile, registration and license.
Ron
Addressing your first paragraph.
You do not have to BUY insurance from an insurance company in your domicile state. My domicile state is Florida and I buy my insurance from Miller Insurance (Independent Agency) in Oregon - I ended up going with National Interstate. I have my Florida address on everything - DL, registration, etc.
The actual insurance company (GEICO, Progressive, National Interstate, etc) decides where they will write insurance policies (Florida, Ohio, Texas, etc).
I have also been told that even moving into a different county in the same state can have an effect on what you pay for auto insurance.