Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you still have an address in VA where mail goes and you pay taxes, you’re in the wrong but can easily get away with it. If your don’t and anything happens you’re screwed. Depends on your risk tolerance.
This is true. You probably can. Except you'd have to pay your taxes to the wrong jurisdiction. And the one branch of government you really want to avoid getting into trouble with is the tax authorities. Do you also plan to lie to your employer about where you are living so that it wrongly pays your withholding tax, unemployment tax, etc. to VA instead of DC? How far do you want to extend the lie?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks for response. I plan on still have an address in VA (where my family live) where mail (bank, legal docs) goes and pays VA taxes. I sometimes will travel back & forth to my VA family residence. It is my best friend who will sign the rental lease, and I am co-living with her because I am in the process of getting my own place house hunting/buying in VA/MD. Once I made the purchase my house, my best friend will move in with me right away. We may break 1 year contract earlier than we thought and pay the penalties.
I just do not want to make it complicated because this car is owned/registered by my parents (it is not even in my name) and mu parents live in VA. I am just fresh out of college.
Anonymous wrote:If you still have an address in VA where mail goes and you pay taxes, you’re in the wrong but can easily get away with it. If your don’t and anything happens you’re screwed. Depends on your risk tolerance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a college student I parked on DC streets for several years with a different license plate. I was on a lease but my legal residence was with my parents. How can DC ticket for this?
You could have been ticketed, but then you could have qualified for an exemption. If a vehicle with out of state tags is parked in DC for 30 consecutive days, it can be ticketed. But as a full-time college student, you’d be eligible for a reciprocity parking permit because you are considered a temporary resident as a full-time college student. OP is not claiming to be a DC college student (or hasn’t yet made that claim).
https://dmv.dc.gov/node/1118916
Interesting. I have been out of school for a long time. Maybe the rules were more lax then. No one ever spoke of anything relating to this and it obviously would have effected many students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a college student I parked on DC streets for several years with a different license plate. I was on a lease but my legal residence was with my parents. How can DC ticket for this?
You could have been ticketed, but then you could have qualified for an exemption. If a vehicle with out of state tags is parked in DC for 30 consecutive days, it can be ticketed. But as a full-time college student, you’d be eligible for a reciprocity parking permit because you are considered a temporary resident as a full-time college student. OP is not claiming to be a DC college student (or hasn’t yet made that claim).
https://dmv.dc.gov/node/1118916
Anonymous wrote:As a college student I parked on DC streets for several years with a different license plate. I was on a lease but my legal residence was with my parents. How can DC ticket for this?