โOct-07-2017 12:40 PM
โOct-10-2017 06:46 AM
โOct-09-2017 06:17 PM
โOct-09-2017 05:43 PM
โOct-09-2017 05:35 PM
โOct-09-2017 04:48 PM
โOct-09-2017 03:52 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:Hey bonehead, I do know what I am talking about. That's great your taxes are low but what kind of spread do you have? I have 11 acres of beautiful wooded land. You can't touch that around the Philly area, period, for what I pay in taxes in TN. So while we are both speaking truthfully in our postings, we did not divulge details to back up our claims yet you decided to slander me by claiming I didn't know what I was talking about. I DO know that the roads in PA suck, I don't care how you slice it, winter or not being the same.Pirate wrote:Groover wrote:PA roads still suck and are the worse I have driven on too. Property taxes and the worse I have seen too. For what I pay in 1400 (per year) in taxes down in TN, equivalent in PA would probably be close to 11 or 12K per year.Ralph Cramden wrote:
No matter where you reside you're going to pay it one way or another. Here in PA there is no property tax on RV,s or vehicles, just sales tax on the front end. We do enjoy however one of the highest, if not the highest, fuel taxes in the nation.
If you don't like it move somewhere else, you may save a little, you may not. It's the price you pay for having roads to move your RV on, public parks with campgrounds of which most are not self sufficient and depend on general fund dollars, and other infrastructure.
I find your high fuel tax to be ironic because my experience has been that PA has the worst roads of anywhere that I have been. Meanwhile, in my home state of TN we some of the lowest fuel taxes and I belive the best roads of anywhere I go. I admit that I have not been to PA in over 10 years. I hope that roads have gotten better for you there.
While I am here and back to the op's question, TN does not have property tax on vehicles, just a 7.5% sales tax and in my county 30$/year for any private vehicle larger than a motorcycle. Some counties have a "wheel tax" which tacks on an extra $25 per vehicle. We also don't have income tax except for interest and dividends and are phasing out the death tax.
Where would they be 11K or 12K? The cities of Pittsburgh or Philadelphia or the counties they are in or surrounding? Possibly before posting you should no what your talking about. My property taxes including school tax in SW PA away from metropolitan areas run $2200 per year on $135K of property value. As far as the roads comparing TN to PA is Apple's to Oranges. You have little in the way of freeze thaw cycles and little need for salt and other road treatment chemicals.
โOct-08-2017 06:07 PM
โOct-08-2017 05:08 PM
CharlesinGA wrote:gcloss wrote:
Charles,
I just moved to Peachtree City in Fayette County last week. I know I have to pay the TAVT on my Ram 2500 & Subaru when I register them this week.
I'm trying to figure out what I will have to pay to transfer the registration from NY to Georgia on my 2015 Jayco Eagle travel trailer.
Maybe you can give me an overview on how the TAVT will work on my travel trailer?
Thanks in advance.
The trailer, being non-motorized, will only require a title transfer fee, something like $20 if I recall (that is on the Tax Commissioners side and I am not up on the exact figures). No tax is due this year. Come your birthday next year, you will renew the registration and at that time pay a registration fee (again no more than $20 I think) and a tax on the assessed value of the trailer, which is 40% of the fair market value times the county's and cities millage rate (or rates) including school taxes. The rates for this year have been set in just the past couple of months for most counties and many cities are still working to set their rates, so the only statewide published rates are for 2016. 2016 Georgia tax millage rates.
For Fayette the following rates were in effect for 2016
FAYETTE BROOKS 0.799 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY EMS 0.456 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT 3.070 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY INC - BROOKS 4.917 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY INC - FAYETTEVILLE 4.917 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY INC - PEACHTREE CITY 4.917 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY INC - TYRONE 4.917 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY UNINCORPORATED 4.917 0.000
FAYETTE COUNTY WIDE EMERGENCY SERVICES 0.210 0.000
FAYETTE FAYETTEVILLE 3.874 0.000
FAYETTE PEACHTREE CITY 6.756 0.309
FAYETTE SCHOOL 19.750 1.350
FAYETTE STATE 0.000 0.000
FAYETTE TAD FAYETTEVILLE
FAYETTE TYRONE 2.889 0.000
PTC has its own fire and ambulance so you do not pay the Fayette EMS or county fire dist. except for the county wide EMS.
Fayette has some of the best schools in the state, so don't gripe about the millage rate, many of the worst counties have millage rates only slightly less than that.
County tax is 4.917
City tax is 6.756
School tax is 19.750
Countywide EMS tax is 0.210
Total = 31.633 mills
EDIT: I forgot the bond retirement millage numbers in the right column.
PTC Bond 0.309
School Bond 1.350
Total = 1.659
Grand total = 33.292
Move your decimal three places to the left and you get .033292
If your Jayco is worth $20K fair market, then the assessed value is $8000 and this times the .033292 equals $266.34 in tax plus the small tag fee.
Charles
โOct-08-2017 04:56 PM
gcloss wrote:
Charles,
I just moved to Peachtree City in Fayette County last week. I know I have to pay the TAVT on my Ram 2500 & Subaru when I register them this week.
I'm trying to figure out what I will have to pay to transfer the registration from NY to Georgia on my 2015 Jayco Eagle travel trailer.
Maybe you can give me an overview on how the TAVT will work on my travel trailer?
Thanks in advance.
โOct-08-2017 04:44 PM
Pirate wrote:Groover wrote:PA roads still suck and are the worse I have driven on too. Property taxes and the worse I have seen too. For what I pay in 1400 (per year) in taxes down in TN, equivalent in PA would probably be close to 11 or 12K per year.Ralph Cramden wrote:
No matter where you reside you're going to pay it one way or another. Here in PA there is no property tax on RV,s or vehicles, just sales tax on the front end. We do enjoy however one of the highest, if not the highest, fuel taxes in the nation.
If you don't like it move somewhere else, you may save a little, you may not. It's the price you pay for having roads to move your RV on, public parks with campgrounds of which most are not self sufficient and depend on general fund dollars, and other infrastructure.
I find your high fuel tax to be ironic because my experience has been that PA has the worst roads of anywhere that I have been. Meanwhile, in my home state of TN we some of the lowest fuel taxes and I belive the best roads of anywhere I go. I admit that I have not been to PA in over 10 years. I hope that roads have gotten better for you there.
While I am here and back to the op's question, TN does not have property tax on vehicles, just a 7.5% sales tax and in my county 30$/year for any private vehicle larger than a motorcycle. Some counties have a "wheel tax" which tacks on an extra $25 per vehicle. We also don't have income tax except for interest and dividends and are phasing out the death tax.
โOct-08-2017 04:32 PM
CharlesinGA wrote:Ivylog wrote:
Georgia used to tax you every year when you got your tag but now you pay a one time use/sales tax of 6.7%. At 62 years old, $36K of income tax (6%)/person is free and at 65 it goes to $65K each making GA retirement friendly. Depending on the county, property taxes are very low...$7/1000 dollars of value, BUT in the Atlanta area it can be double that amount.
In Georgia the tax is known as the Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT). It is literally a tax on the value of the title. There are no sales or use taxes on MOTOR vehicles in Georgia. Trailers such as cargo, utility, travel trailers, fivers, etc, are still taxed each year on the particular county's millage rate where the trailer is registered (which if you have a homestead exemption, must be the county of residence).
The TAVT applies to any vehicle re-titled, purchased, or brought into the state. Some tax rates are lower for transfers within family, and the rate is currently 7% and is frozen thru 2018. after that a re-evaluation of the tax rate will be preformed and the state can raise or leave alone the precentage. It is capped at 9% by law.
For a short period of time after the TAVT went into effect, owners of vehicles purchased prior to March 1, 2013 were allowed to switch to the new system, however that has passed into history. When a vehicle under the old system is transferred to a new owner, the vehicle falls under the new system.
As with almost any tax, you have a right to appeal of the value, and you appeal that value to the Board of Assessors in the county in which you registered and titled the vehicle. You must pay the full tax in good faith while the appeal is on-going. They are usually handled in a very timely manner as the locals BOA's really do not want to handle these appeals and have established procedures to expedite the appeals.
Disclosure: I am the chairman of the county Board of Assessors of the county in which I reside in Georgia.
Charles
Vehicles purchased prior to March 1, 2013
โOct-08-2017 04:23 PM
Ivylog wrote:
Georgia used to tax you every year when you got your tag but now you pay a one time use/sales tax of 6.7%. At 62 years old, $36K of income tax (6%)/person is free and at 65 it goes to $65K each making GA retirement friendly. Depending on the county, property taxes are very low...$7/1000 dollars of value, BUT in the Atlanta area it can be double that amount.
โOct-08-2017 01:06 PM
โOct-08-2017 12:55 PM
Ozlander wrote:gutfelt wrote:Micbob4 wrote:
It's now $6.55 for every $100 of appraised value.
that's $13,300.00 on 200K I cant believe theres a person alive out there that would pay that tax
$13K is peanuts for some people.