View Full Version : What is your sales tax??
Just wondering who else pays crazy high sales tax. We pay 10 percent on literally everything including foods and meds. I was just thinking today how much more money we would have in the food budget if we didn't have to pay this!
mamabear
01-09-2008, 07:37 AM
That's crazy that you pay it on food and meds!
However, you don't pay as much in property tax so it would even out *somewhat* if you lived somewhere else. E.g., I pay $2500 in taxes every year on a house valued at $145k. But sales tax is much more regressive than property tax. I mean, you can have a modestly valued house and pay less, whereas sales tax hits those who make less money, much harder.
Ours is 6%. Exemptions are food, medication, clothing and shoes (used to be under $110, now is ANY price). Beer and wine ARE taxed. Hard liquor is not because all liquor stores are state-run.
Gloriel
01-09-2008, 09:00 AM
Wow, 10% is crazy! Ours was 5% but as of Jan 1 it just went up to 6%. We pay tax on clothing and any kind of convenience food/beverage, but not food like milk, produce, etc. I don't know about meds...
ThirtySomething
01-09-2008, 09:11 AM
7.25% with many special tax jurisdictions here and there.
No tax on food though.
TeriMomOf4
01-09-2008, 09:35 AM
We are 8.25%, but no tax on food.
We have no state income tax, but our property tax is pretty high.
Yes our property tax is low, but imo paying tax on meds and food is just a poor tax. Property tax is low because we have to vote in a property tax hike, and every time it comes up for a vote, timber companies do massive lobbying to convince the little man that it will hurt him, when in reality it mostly would hurt the timber companies and people who own large amts of land. You also get much more in the way of services-- our poor government is stretched sooooo thin. Oh also a balanced budget is part of our state constitution, so if they don't pull in what they think that they should in sales tax, then we go into a state called proration, where the budget is prorated by the amt of money actually in it. Schools are what suffer the most when this happens-- it gets pretty dang bad honestly.
Alabama is such a poor state-- I honestly don't know what the answers are here. People won't vote for a property tax hike because they are afraid of getting stuck w 10 percent sales tax and high property taxes. In reality, the last property tax hike would have only changed our property tax by a couple hundred a year, but they had just pushed a sales tax hike immediately before. State sales tax is only oh 7ish percent I believe? The rest is a local tax that is primarily to fund schools (unfortunately it doesnt really do its job)
ETA we also do have state income tax, and it is pretty high. We end up paying pretty much every year, even though we get back a decent amt in federal taxes
mamabear
01-09-2008, 10:20 AM
The answer is lots of government reform to make the timber companies and big biz in AL pay their share. But it's a lot easier said than done, of course.
I agree w/10% sales tax on everything being a poor tax...that's why I said what I did, about it being regressive. And it sucks that you pay that and still get crappy education and govt services. :( Just trying to point out that the silver lining is that although your monthly budget for food etc is higher, lower property taxes somewhat evens it out...
5% here in Virginia. 2.5% for food (we were surprised, since it was 7% and 3% in Georgia). There's an income tax, too, but it's the property taxes, oh the property taxes that really get a person here. If we want to buy a house near DH's aunt and uncle (and we're pretty sure we do), we'll be looking at over $4k a year, and that's for the cheapest foreclosure of a house we can find.
Wikipedia says Alabama is responsible for 4% of it, and the other 6% is your local sales tax. That's a huge local sales tax. It's capped here at 1%. Since it's local, I'm surprised that they don't put it on property.
maryalene
01-09-2008, 10:40 AM
6% - excludes food and prescription meds
Our property tax is 26 mills.
TeriMomOf4
01-09-2008, 11:12 AM
Here is the property tax bill for our house (searchable on the database if you know anything....our name or our address :p)
The first number is the appraisal value last year. The number after the location name is our appraisal value this year.
The red is the amount of tax we pay to that entity.
214,257 MCKINNEY CITY 221,459 0 221,459 0.588000 1,302.18
214,257 COLLIN COUNTY 221,459 0 221,459 0.245000 542.58
214,257 COLLIN C C COLLEGE 221,459 0 221,459 0.087683 194.18
199,257 FRISCO ISD 221,459 15,000 206,459 1.580000 3,262.05
Champagyne1
01-09-2008, 11:30 AM
in British Columbia it is 6% provincial sales tax + 5% goods and services tax I got you beat.... 11% ;)
marjen
01-09-2008, 11:56 AM
In Ontario we pay 7% PST and 5% GST = 12% tax (though up to Jan 1st it was 13%)
lisak
01-09-2008, 12:42 PM
I'm in AL too and it stinks. Ours is 8 so not too bad but the state tax kills us.
AngelaJ
01-09-2008, 03:01 PM
7% sales......3% on food.
6.7% for non food 3 (something) % for food. I think it's wrong to tax food
hello1107
01-23-2008, 11:10 AM
State plus local is 7.5% here and everything is taxed. It definitely eats into the food budget and annoys the heck out of me since I grew up in a state with no sales tax on foods.
Our income tax is pretty high here, too. We don't make enough to pay federal taxes, but we always have to pay in to the state.
gretchen
01-23-2008, 11:19 AM
6.75% here, but don't know what it is on food.
Not something I usually even think about, honestly...except when I read the Fair Tax book...that's an pretty neat bill. I wish our lawmakers would get on board with it!
MamaWolf
01-24-2008, 08:51 AM
6% sales tax not on food or rx's. 10% is kinda crazy. :( Especially on food and meds
BlueRoseMama
01-24-2008, 03:09 PM
8.8% here... no tax on foods unless they are precooked for you (like take out or dine in)
I like the tax we have here, it makes tipping so easy! Lol... a good tip is 14% - 18% so I just double the tax and then round up to the nearest dollar. My waitstaff always get a "good or better" tip from me every time. I like that. :)
Tax on food would just give me another reason to grow my own. ;) I would hate that... but it would really give me a push in that direction (if I needed any this year).... lol.
Val
thrifty_sahm
01-24-2008, 03:14 PM
There aren't very many stores to buy from in my city, but we are 4.3-4.9% I can't remember exactly. In town it is 7.9%.
maryalene
01-25-2008, 08:13 AM
6% - excludes food and prescription meds
Our property tax is 26 mills.
I was wrong on our property tax. When I looked it up to do our tax return, I saw that it is actually 41 mills for the year. :eek:
Ms.Belinda
01-26-2008, 12:17 AM
*Ahem* 12.5% in New Zealand
But we do have socialized medicine and excellent child tax credits etc., so I'm not complaining!
Amber
01-28-2008, 12:31 AM
Here is is 8.5% to 9% depending on what city I'm in which changes without to much of a drive.
The other tax I think that is crazy in my city is the 2% rental tax I pay on my rent even though they charge higher property tax rate to the owner already since it's a rental. This one makes no sense to me.
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