Submitted by tabthough t3_11ai346 in dataisbeautiful
ZombiePlaya t1_j9sihr0 wrote
Reply to comment by RagingHeretic in [OC] National Divorce by the Numbers (Politics, Demographics, GDP) by tabthough
Just looked it up and it appears to be a local county property tax the varies a lot it seems.
RagingHeretic t1_j9siugw wrote
Effective rate of 0.75%. You're incorrect. We tax the income high earners a lot, though, which is the correct way to do it.
[deleted] t1_j9sj62t wrote
[removed]
KindlyQuasar t1_j9tnij5 wrote
I'm a Texan homeowner. I have a modest 1600 sqft home built in the 80s. I pay about $6300/year in property taxes. My effective property tax rate is 2.47%, which is considered low.
Sources online will tell you that the state average is between 1.6-1.8%, but that is because the "agricultural exemption" is used by very wealthy landowners to reduce their tax burden.
Those over 65 can "lock" their tax rate (and qualify for additional exemptions), so even if the property value doubles they don't pay one extra cent in tax --- shifting that tax burden to the younger generation, of course.
Californians pay less in taxes than Texans -- unless you're in the top 1% of wage earners, then you pay a LOT less in Texas. Source: link
ZombiePlaya t1_j9ttqbo wrote
From what it looks like, California and Texas have similar tax rates. It's just that Texas splits it to make up for the no income tax, and California takes it at once.
Pay now or pay later I guess, both have really close class revenues I see as well.
All I can say is that I wouldn't live in either, especially when both I hear have energy problems.
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