Submitted by J_Bro00 t3_yeepxa in Connecticut
Billh491 t1_itxp9zz wrote
I have done this and the way it works is mass will collect its income tax from you. Then you will get a credit for those taxes when you file in CT. You will have 3 tax returns 2 states plus fed.
So say you make 100k and the mass tax is 5% you pay them 5k. CT tax is 6% you pay ct 1k. Or mass is 6% so you pay them 6k and say ct was 5% you owe ct nothing.
I don't know the exact rates just used these as an example.
Also we pay property taxes on our cars which maybe a new thing for you.
J_Bro00 OP t1_itxpu39 wrote
Really on cars? Definitely would be new for me how much do you pay on car taxes? Also thank you for the info! Very valuable information
TheDizzyTablespoon t1_ity03fs wrote
My father lives in MA and I was dealing with the things he had to pay when he was hospitalized. I remember he received a tax bill that he told me he pays every year. I thought it was the same as a car tax.
sheeplewatcher t1_ity683i wrote
Excise tax in Mass
Billh491 t1_itxqhle wrote
so each town has a mill rate which is how much you pay per 1000 in value. So a mill rate of 35 would mean a 35.00 tax bill for your car.
Now look up how much your car is worth on say kelly blue book. Say it is worth 20k you take 70% of that is 14k so you pay 35 times 14 = 490.00 car tax.
Yowowser t1_itxx1ts wrote
Actually is capped at like 24 or 27% for cars. Best the tax by buying a 25 year old car and build it out. It can be worth 20k d when your done and taxed like it's worth$500
Billh491 t1_itxxjka wrote
I live in Portland and my mill rate is 35.01 on my house and car.
Here is a pdf with the mill rates for every town.
https://portal.ct.gov/-/media/OPM/IGPP-Data-Grants-Mgmt/Mill-Rates-20GL-22FY-8-6-21.pdf
Prestigious_Bobcat29 t1_iu0emmq wrote
MA pays property tax on cars as well fwiw
Kodiak01 t1_iu126c2 wrote
MA refers to theirs as an Excise tax. Their formula is also much simpler than CT.
Here is how MA figures their auto tax:
Tax is $25 per $1000 valuation. Valuation is based off a percentage of MSRP, a figure which stays static for the life of the vehicle. (Note this is MSRP, NOT the actual purchase price of the vehicle)
Prior to current model year (2023 vehicle in 2022): 50%
Current model year: 90%
2nd year: 60%
3rd year: 40%
4th year: 25%
5th year and older: 10%
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