Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those freaking out about Va taxes, are simply catastrophizing. Unless you make more than 600,000 per year when the first new marginal tax rate begins or more than 1 million per year where the second new marginal rate kicks in, you will be largely unaffected by this.
Not true. New taxes on services will affect everyone.
I am already seeing this, I just noticed extra Fairfax meal tax on my order picking up acai bowl. I looked through my history and this only appeared on my last 2 orders suddenly and quietly.There is a standard sales tax, and a new "fairfax county meal tax". Will there be more?
I’m a moderate who’s voted Republican recently and there’s so much bad info here on the tax stuff. Not sure how I’m the one correcting it but here we are.
The Fairfax meal tax has NOTHING to do with the new state legislature and/or Spanberger. It’s Fairfax saying we need more tax revenue because of (insert excuse — Trump if you’re a Dem, irresponsible fiscal spending if you’re an R).
The new taxes the state legislature DID want to pass - on income, investments, and services (Uber eats, dry cleaning, fitness, dog grooming, etc) - all died in committee and aren’t being pushed forward.
Anonymous wrote:Don't commute across a bridge.
VA has several highways that aren't horrible beltway that can get you places faster and aren't as heavily utilized. And residential roads that don't have many lights. I think if you are a heavy car user you would like VA more. VA also has tolls and express lanes are very fast if you need to be somewhere in a hurry, ditch terrible traffic, and don't mind payingAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those freaking out about Va taxes, are simply catastrophizing. Unless you make more than 600,000 per year when the first new marginal tax rate begins or more than 1 million per year where the second new marginal rate kicks in, you will be largely unaffected by this.
Not true. New taxes on services will affect everyone.
I am already seeing this, I just noticed extra Fairfax meal tax on my order picking up acai bowl. I looked through my history and this only appeared on my last 2 orders suddenly and quietly.There is a standard sales tax, and a new "fairfax county meal tax". Will there be more?
Anonymous wrote:Spent many years in the MD suburbs, now live in Arlington. My advice is to live in a place that will minimize your time commuting and is closest to your job/kid's school/activities. The QOL differences between MD/VA will be dwarfed by the improvement in QOL you will have just be being close to where you need to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where would you recommend young professionals looking to raise a family live in the DMV? Looking for single family community with good/great schools. Hoping to spend less than $1.2M. Raised in Montgomery County but concerned with changes/ direction in the county. Not as familiar with Virginia communities. Commute to DC several days a week. Appreciate your thoughts and any insights.
Virginia all the way. closer to Tysons, closer to downtown, lower taxes, halfway between both airports, and you have Virginia colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As others have alluded, for the longest time VA's advantage was that it was a centrist state compared to deep blue MD. It's gone from a centrist lean red to a centrist lean blue, but the recent election has revealed a sharp blue turn, with a state government that is going to behave a lot more like Annapolis, with lots of higher taxes and fees and inefficient / bloated spending and having to pay for it. I am not thrilled as I liked VA being centrist. Is it temporary or an indicator for the future? Who knows.
But will say VA has the superior state university system. Well worth having it as your default option. I'd still pick VA for this reason alone.
It's a huge reason for many people. Also VA can swing politically again if this administration keeps spending like bandits without people noticing any improvements but with the addition of very noticeable taxes. Governors get re-elected. If she intends to do away with the car tax in favor of these consumption service taxes then it may be ok
Anonymous wrote:As others have alluded, for the longest time VA's advantage was that it was a centrist state compared to deep blue MD. It's gone from a centrist lean red to a centrist lean blue, but the recent election has revealed a sharp blue turn, with a state government that is going to behave a lot more like Annapolis, with lots of higher taxes and fees and inefficient / bloated spending and having to pay for it. I am not thrilled as I liked VA being centrist. Is it temporary or an indicator for the future? Who knows.
But will say VA has the superior state university system. Well worth having it as your default option. I'd still pick VA for this reason alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those freaking out about Va taxes, are simply catastrophizing. Unless you make more than 600,000 per year when the first new marginal tax rate begins or more than 1 million per year where the second new marginal rate kicks in, you will be largely unaffected by this.
Not true. New taxes on services will affect everyone.
There is a standard sales tax, and a new "fairfax county meal tax". Will there be more? Anonymous wrote:We love Arlington. It’s closer to our jobs than the MD suburbs (or our previous home in DC) we are generally happy with the schools and like the fact that it is a smaller school system. Plus if $$$$ is an issue at all, you have access to better in state options for college than in MD (UMD is great but VA has more strong options). Going over a bridge is really a non issue for me and I live a short walk to the orange line.
There seem to be some people freaking out about Spanberger but my taxes are currently lower in VA than they would be in MD. If you have multiple expensive cars, I guess that might not be true.
Anonymous wrote:Those freaking out about Va taxes, are simply catastrophizing. Unless you make more than 600,000 per year when the first new marginal tax rate begins or more than 1 million per year where the second new marginal rate kicks in, you will be largely unaffected by this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The close-in nice areas of MoCo (Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomoac, etc) seem nicer than close-in Virginia counterparts. And they feel more connected to Upper NW DC. It's just a nicer setting and schools, etc are really good (public and private). Northern Virginia seems like the more transient area. Maryland seems more established, has a stronger sense of pride/place.
Virginia does have the better public college options and the horse country areas are beautiful.
I'd rather live in Maryland overall.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Spent many years in the MD suburbs, now live in Arlington. My advice is to live in a place that will minimize your time commuting and is closest to your job/kid's school/activities. The QOL differences between MD/VA will be dwarfed by the improvement in QOL you will have just be being close to where you need to be.
Anonymous wrote:The close-in nice areas of MoCo (Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomoac, etc) seem nicer than close-in Virginia counterparts. And they feel more connected to Upper NW DC. It's just a nicer setting and schools, etc are really good (public and private). Northern Virginia seems like the more transient area. Maryland seems more established, has a stronger sense of pride/place.
Virginia does have the better public college options and the horse country areas are beautiful.
I'd rather live in Maryland overall.