How do I get a florida retail sales chart
NO..Dealers do not need to collect tax from purcahsers who are out of state residents
No.
Indiana Residents- $5/ per vehicle Out of State Residents- $10 per vehicle Walk in/bicycle- $2 per person
Florida has an estimated 18,538,000 residents. The District of Columbia (which of course is not a state) has an estimated 600,000 residents.
The state sales and use tax rate is 6.5%, 7% for Texarkana residents, of the taxable price of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers with a gross purchase price of $4,000.00 or greater.
Yes. As an itemized deduction, you can claim either your state income tax withholding or claim a deduction for sales taxes paid. In states such as Florida which have no income tax, obviously your only option is to take a sales tax deduction. See the link below.
No
The sales and use tax in Saint Johns County in Florida is currently 6 percent. This is the same sales tax that the whole state of Florida charges.
The answer is - it depends, but the answer is somewhat complicated. If you have the car shipped directly from the dealer to your home state, then no Florida sales tax applies. Let's presume you are driving the car off the lot yourself. Florida will charge you sales tax on this purchase, but if the right paperwork is filled out (Form DR-123), then the sales tax rate will only be as high your home state sale tax rate (with a ceiling of the Florida sales tax rate). So if you live in a state with a 3% sales tax, the Florida dealer should only charge you a 3% sales tax if you sign the right forms. Any sales tax you pay in Florida can be credited to the taxes that are due when you get your tag in your home state. Worthy of note, if your state has a zero sales tax rate on cars (such as Montana or Georgia), then the dealer does not have to charge you Florida sales tax. I'm a Florida CPA & Attorney that does almost nothing but Florida sales and use tax controversy. I hope this answer helps. James Sutton, CPA, Esq. WWW FLORIDASALESTAX COM
depends what the vehicle is.
Yes, if they have a valid marriage license issued by a Florida clerk of circuit court.