So many Florida license plates...

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:A lot of military people keep their Florida plates.


+1, I assume anybody with FL plates is military


Same reason for the disproportionate number of Alaska plates
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I find it hard to believe it's rental cars. There has been a clear uptick in these license plates over the last 6 months.

90% tax cheats, 10% legitimate. The IRS is so understaffed everyone will get away with it.


The IRS doesn't care if you live in FL or VA. You pay federal income tax regardless. The VA taxman likely cares.
Anonymous
snowbirds driving back down south.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So many people are responding that these are military plates from FL and TX. Does this scare anyone? I am not sure I want my kids to attend school with kids whose parents are war mongers.


You just realized there is a huge military presence around here? Are you also wondering what that big pentagon-shaped building off of 395 is?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So many people are responding that these are military plates from FL and TX. Does this scare anyone? I am not sure I want my kids to attend school with kids whose parents are war mongers.


You just realized there is a huge military presence around here? Are you also wondering what that big pentagon-shaped building off of 395 is?


Even 4 stars can only afford so much house. Depending on PP's neighborhood it's very possible that officers and their families are priced out.
Anonymous
I'm convinced if a VA governor ran on the platform of eliminating (or even halving it) the car tax, they'd win by an unprecedented landslide. It means people don't register their cars properly and it even stifles people buying new cars. I know for us personally we put off buying a new car to avoid the massive tax. We got a 40k car and the tax bill is $1600 yearly. ugh.

I personally received a new car (20k?) as a graduation present before I moved up here to work for peanuts on the Hill. I was from FL. I tried to register the car, but when I saw the huge tax bill, I realized I couldn't afford to register my car. So I kept the Florida plates. Because my wages were about 30k, my parents even had to buy my food sometimes. No way I could afford the car tax.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm convinced if a VA governor ran on the platform of eliminating (or even halving it) the car tax, they'd win by an unprecedented landslide. It means people don't register their cars properly and it even stifles people buying new cars. I know for us personally we put off buying a new car to avoid the massive tax. We got a 40k car and the tax bill is $1600 yearly. ugh.

I personally received a new car (20k?) as a graduation present before I moved up here to work for peanuts on the Hill. I was from FL. I tried to register the car, but when I saw the huge tax bill, I realized I couldn't afford to register my car. So I kept the Florida plates. Because my wages were about 30k, my parents even had to buy my food sometimes. No way I could afford the car tax.


The tax drops as your car depreciates. That 1600 bill would be under $1,000 in two years. If you pull the tax, you do you replace the revenue?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm convinced if a VA governor ran on the platform of eliminating (or even halving it) the car tax, they'd win by an unprecedented landslide. It means people don't register their cars properly and it even stifles people buying new cars. I know for us personally we put off buying a new car to avoid the massive tax. We got a 40k car and the tax bill is $1600 yearly. ugh.

I personally received a new car (20k?) as a graduation present before I moved up here to work for peanuts on the Hill. I was from FL. I tried to register the car, but when I saw the huge tax bill, I realized I couldn't afford to register my car. So I kept the Florida plates. Because my wages were about 30k, my parents even had to buy my food sometimes. No way I could afford the car tax.


I bought one new car twenty years ago and I’m still driving it and only it with over 200k miles. Why? One reason. The car tax
Anonymous
My parents are snowbirds and spend half the year in Florida and half the year in MOCO. They have Florida plates on their cars and are Florida residents since its cheaper. They are very careful not to spend more than half the year in Maryland - they don't need to be in Florida just can't be in Maryland.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm convinced if a VA governor ran on the platform of eliminating (or even halving it) the car tax, they'd win by an unprecedented landslide. It means people don't register their cars properly and it even stifles people buying new cars. I know for us personally we put off buying a new car to avoid the massive tax. We got a 40k car and the tax bill is $1600 yearly. ugh.

I personally received a new car (20k?) as a graduation present before I moved up here to work for peanuts on the Hill. I was from FL. I tried to register the car, but when I saw the huge tax bill, I realized I couldn't afford to register my car. So I kept the Florida plates. Because my wages were about 30k, my parents even had to buy my food sometimes. No way I could afford the car tax.


I bought one new car twenty years ago and I’m still driving it and only it with over 200k miles. Why? One reason. The car tax


You are not alone, wife and I keep our cars for 10 years each due to the car tax.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm convinced if a VA governor ran on the platform of eliminating (or even halving it) the car tax, they'd win by an unprecedented landslide. It means people don't register their cars properly and it even stifles people buying new cars. I know for us personally we put off buying a new car to avoid the massive tax. We got a 40k car and the tax bill is $1600 yearly. ugh.

I personally received a new car (20k?) as a graduation present before I moved up here to work for peanuts on the Hill. I was from FL. I tried to register the car, but when I saw the huge tax bill, I realized I couldn't afford to register my car. So I kept the Florida plates. Because my wages were about 30k, my parents even had to buy my food sometimes. No way I could afford the car tax.


Wasn’t it slashed significantly years ago?

We could get rid of it and raise property taxes to properly fund schools, etc. Just the areas with good schools.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Funny to see certain people immediately shriek tax cheats.

These people are just doing what the various state laws allow them. Florida makes it easy to establish residency and also doesn't demand that you spend six months +1 day in Florida. You just need to spend no more than six months + 1 day in any other single state. There's been a major "drain" of higher net worth people setting up residency in Florida because of the generous tax benefits. Have a property in Florida, a property somewhere for the summer, and keep your original residence in the DMV for seeing friends and your doctors. Or have a Florida PO box and spend most of the winter in the Bahamas/Caribbean and six months - 1 day in DMV. Still very legal. That's what my aunt and uncle do. They probably spend no more than six weeks of the year in Florida and the rest of the time is between MD and the Bahamas, but they're still legally Florida residents.

FYI you still pay property taxes where the property is. Once you declare residency in Florida or any state outside Maryland, you lose your homestead tax credits.


Love to hear slime balls rationalizing this behavior.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Funny to see certain people immediately shriek tax cheats.

These people are just doing what the various state laws allow them. Florida makes it easy to establish residency and also doesn't demand that you spend six months +1 day in Florida. You just need to spend no more than six months + 1 day in any other single state. There's been a major "drain" of higher net worth people setting up residency in Florida because of the generous tax benefits. Have a property in Florida, a property somewhere for the summer, and keep your original residence in the DMV for seeing friends and your doctors. Or have a Florida PO box and spend most of the winter in the Bahamas/Caribbean and six months - 1 day in DMV. Still very legal. That's what my aunt and uncle do. They probably spend no more than six weeks of the year in Florida and the rest of the time is between MD and the Bahamas, but they're still legally Florida residents.

FYI you still pay property taxes where the property is. Once you declare residency in Florida or any state outside Maryland, you lose your homestead tax credits.


Love to hear slime balls rationalizing this behavior.


Sad to see such ignorance in the above poster who has no understadning of local, state, and federal taxes and residency requirements. Your inability to wrap you tiny brain around something very normal does not make it slimeball behavior. How old are you anyway?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I find it hard to believe it's rental cars. There has been a clear uptick in these license plates over the last 6 months.

90% tax cheats, 10% legitimate. The IRS is so understaffed everyone will get away with it.


The IRS doesn't care about people cheating to avoid _state_ income taxes.
Anonymous
I lived in Florida when the adopted the current plate design. Those two oranges definitely have some... interesting placement.
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