โJul-02-2015 10:49 AM
โJul-11-2015 04:56 AM
wbwood wrote:
Whether you call it avoidance or evasion, I don't think it really matters. If you don't agree with the taxes your state collects, then move to a place with lower taxes or no taxes at all. You are living where you are for a reason. Obviously you like it. I know one thing, if you "avoid" paying your home state the taxes on something you bought in another state, then don't be surprised when you receive a tax bill from your home state. I know on the NC state tax paperwork that we file every year, there is a question where it asks if you bought anything out of state. States are really cracking down on getting what is theirs.
What the OP mentioned is shady in my book.
โJul-11-2015 04:49 AM
huntram wrote:
Tax evasion is illegal. Tax avoidance is not just legal but encouraged. We own a house and rent it out in California so we DO pay income taxes on that... Now that our HOME is on wheels and we live wherever we are parked for the night we can be from wherever we want to be from. We legally avoid taxes by having a 'domicile' in South Dakota as well as drivers licenses, registrations, and we vote in South Dakota (a state with no income tax).
There is no state income tax on our pensions in South Dakota.
If we ever decide to make our house our home again we will make California our residence again and pay income taxes there again and pay the ridiculously high registration prices on our vehicles.
Remember AVOIDANCE not EVASION!
Brian
โJul-10-2015 11:40 PM
wbwood wrote:
Tax avoidance...tax evasion....
Lets just call it tax noncompliance.....
โJul-05-2015 01:05 AM
2oldman wrote:
If you really want to cheat your state out of taxes, why not just go all the way and create a MT LLC? At least that will be sorta legal.
Your best bet right now is to make sure you never get stopped. You're probably more likely to get reported by a neighbor than getting stopped.
โJul-04-2015 01:09 PM
โJul-04-2015 12:54 PM
โJul-04-2015 12:49 PM
toedtoes wrote:
wbwood - he wasn't going to use a NM address. He stated that the dealership told him they would use his ID address for the NM registration.
โJul-04-2015 11:56 AM
โJul-04-2015 11:51 AM
โJul-04-2015 09:45 AM
โJul-04-2015 05:50 AM
mowermech wrote:
"If an Idaho resident buys a vehicle outside of the state, use tax is due (with credit given for taxes paid to another state) on the fair market value at the time it enters Idaho."
What if the vehicle never enters Idaho?
As I previously stated, YES, you CAN register a newly purchased vehicle in another state, but you may have to keep it out of your home state forever!
I have done it twice, buying vehicles from CA dealers. Since the dealer is the DMV registration agent for the state, the dealer title clerk MUST collect the sales tax, and register the vehicle to the new owner. They did that, and the paperwork was made out in my name, with my Montana address! Yes, as soon as I got home, I had to transfer the title to Montana and get the proper Montana registration. BUT, if I had never brought either of those vehicles home, I could have driven them with the CA plates for the full time I owned them!
Private party purchases in CA are entirely different. the seller hands the buyer the paperwork, and the buyer takes care of registering and paying the tax. If the final transfer is done in another state (where there is not tax), no tax is paid. I have done that twice in CA, too. One of th0ose was a Nevada car, but the sale took place in CA and the title transfer was done in MT.
โJul-04-2015 05:34 AM
โJul-04-2015 05:06 AM
rondeb wrote:
Idaho registration (plates) are so cheap that why would you want to register it anywhere else.
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
โJul-03-2015 11:23 PM