Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it’s the case. We bought a car in NH 3 years ago. 3 years later we moved to MD and when we came to register our car, they made us pay 6% in sales tax. That was an unpleasant surprise.
It doesn't make any sense. You'd bought your car in NH 3 years ago and registered it in NH. There's no way MD can make you pay tax on a transaction at another state and paid tax for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it’s the case. We bought a car in NH 3 years ago. 3 years later we moved to MD and when we came to register our car, they made us pay 6% in sales tax. That was an unpleasant surprise.
It doesn't make any sense. You'd bought your car in NH 3 years ago and registered it in NH. There's no way MD can make you pay tax on a transaction at another state and paid tax for it.
Yeah, this is BS. I lived in NH before moving to DC. I didn't have to pay tax here when I moved down with my car. I don't think they've changed the law in the last few years.
Anonymous wrote:This is hilarious. If cars were tax free in Delaware to out of state buyers, there would be zero car dealerships in MD because everyone would hop the state border to save thousands.
Anonymous wrote:Does it make sense to buy a new EV in Delaware to avoid paying about $2,500 in sales taxes? Or are their regulations or impediments we aren't aware of?