After several months finally moving to Texas

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srothstein
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Joined: Sat Dec 16, 2006 8:27 pm
Location: Luling, TX

Re: After several months finally moving to Texas

Post by srothstein »

ScottDLS wrote:
srothstein wrote:I just looked. If the car is bought out of state, you owe the full sales tax minus any you paid to the other state. If it was previously registered in another state, you owe either the lesser of the sales tax or $90 flat rate. The sales tax is based on 6.25% of the current presumptive market value (book value). This is in tax code sections 155.022 and 155.023.
So if the car is worth more than 1500 then you make out pretty well on the 90 bucks. Also, for used vehicles how do they know what tax you paid when you bought? my car had been registered in 3 states before I got here and they never asked for the original bill of sale.
For used vehicles, they don't know what you paid, so it is the current book value tax or the $90. For almost everyone, that means the flat rate. The only tiem they really try to collect the sales tax is if a Texas resident went out of state to buy the car and brought it back to Texas for its initial title/registration. This may be common in some border cities, like Texarkana where almost half the city is in Arkansas.

I guess it would also apply if you were in Vegas and got lucky on one of those slot machines where the grand prize is a car. I don't think that is nearly as common, though.
Steve Rothstein
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ELB
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Re: After several months finally moving to Texas

Post by ELB »

ScottDLS wrote: ... Also, for used vehicles how do they know what tax you paid when you bought? my car had been registered in 3 states before I got here and they never asked for the original bill of sale.
As Srothstein noted, they use market value from some source. A couple or three years ago Texas tightened up on the sales tax for used vehicles in general, because it was felt Texas was missing out on some revenue because people were showing bills of sale well below market value for used cars. (E.g. sell your car to your grandson for 1 dollar, or you sell to someone for $1000 on paper but he gives you cash under the table that doesn't show up in the tax calculation).
srothstein wrote:I guess it would also apply if you were in Vegas and got lucky on one of those slot machines where the grand prize is a car. I don't think that is nearly as common, though.
Also, federal income tax would apply. None of the tax collectors want to miss out on anyone's good fortune!


Anyway, back to the main point: Welcome to Texas, Antares! :tiphat:
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