 |    
| 
Boat Tax - 2008 |
Editors note: This article was originally
published elsewhere and on this site during the spring of 2008
_______________________________________
In my last article, I wrote
about Maryland, specifically Maryland's boat
tax, and while Maryland and the Chesapeake are
fantastic cruising grounds, I do recognize that
there are other states in the union. Since many
of you readers and many of my clients venture
out in the world-visiting far flung locales from
Maine to Florida, the Caribbean and far beyond-I
am often asked about the tax implications of
other jurisdictions. I take these inquiries to
mean:
How can I legally avoid paying
taxes on my boat?
There is of course no simple
answer to the question. If there were, the tax
authorities would close it. That's what happened
in the good old days when it was pretty safe to
register a boat to Delaware, place it in Coast
Guard documentation, and call it good.
After reading this, many folks
will just want to buy their boat, pay the tax,
and go cruising, and that's great. Many boat
taxes support boating related activities and
needed facilities. Others purchasers, however,
plan to leave the country, or keep the boat
moving for a long time, and perhaps have a
higher threshold for risk. Paying sales tax may
not be desirable or necessary, and they may be
willing to do what is necessary to organize
their boating life in a way that is not subject
to tax.
This article is the first step,
and the easiest step in that direction.
Before we get into specifics,
however, let's go back to the beginning. What
kind of tax are we talking about and who
collects it? There is no federal vessel tax (and
may the federal luxury tax stay good and dead!),
so taxes are imposed at the state and local
levels. Generally, there are three taxes of
concern to boat owners: sales tax, use or
registration tax, and personal property tax.
Sales tax is imposed, if at all, at the time of
purchase. Use tax is imposed by sales tax states
on goods that were not taxed at the time of
purchase. Personal property tax is an annual
tax, payable every year, on property that is
kept within a jurisdiction. This article will
focus on sales tax.
It is hard to keep track of all
of the state taxes, and nearly impossible to
keep track of all of the county and municipal
taxes. Not only are they all different, but they
also all subject to change. BOAT/US provides a
good general comparison of state taxes on its
website
www.boatus.com/gov/state_boat.asp but I
understand that it is being updated now after
several years without revision.
Below is a table that gives the
bare-bones of the state taxes in the East Coast
cruising grounds as they exist at the moment. It
does not include many defenses, exceptions,
exclusions, penalties, interest on late
payments, and any number of other important
details, nor is it legal advice, but it does
provide a rough snapshot of the tax on the
purchase of a boat.
|
State |
Sales
tax on boats? |
Personal property tax?
|
|
Alabama |
2% |
No |
|
Connecticut |
6% |
No (but higher registration fees)
|
|
Delaware |
No |
No |
|
District of Columbia |
No |
No |
|
Florida |
6% |
No |
|
Georgia |
4% + local |
Yes |
Maryland
|
5% |
No |
|
Massachusetts |
5% |
Yes |
|
Maine |
5% |
Yes |
|
New
Hampshire |
$10 to $1761.40 depending on size and
propulsion with some exemptions |
No |
|
New
Jersey |
7% |
Fee based on value of boat |
|
New
York |
4% plus local |
No |
|
North
Carolina |
3% with $1,500 cap |
Yes |
|
Pennsylvania |
6%-7% |
No |
|
Rhode
Island |
No |
No |
|
South
Carolina |
5% with $300 cap |
Yes |
|
US Virgin Islands |
No |
No |
|
Virginia |
2% capped at $2,000 |
Yes |
To return to the question-How
can I legally avoid paying taxes on my boat-the
middle column is the key. Sales tax is the tax
on a purchase or transfer of a boat. If you want
to avoid sales tax, the easiest option is to
finalize your purchase in a jurisdiction that
doesn't tax the sale or caps the tax at a low
number. This may mean driving to Delaware and
choosing a boat at a Delaware dealer.
There are more sophisticated
strategies as well, such as writing a contract
that requires a Massachusetts boat to be
purchased through a transaction that takes place
New Hampshire. Or taking final possession and
completing the purchase of a boat in
international waters-this is where most of the
big boats go. These latter items have their
risks, however, particularly the fact that they
make local tax authorities suspicious, even if
the transaction is properly done. It does not
help matters that some unscrupulous purchasers
will fake an out-of-state or international
transaction, and thereby paint legitimate
purchases in a bad light.
Another very good option to
avoid initial sales tax is to identify an escape
clause in your local tax jurisdiction. In
Maryland, for example, one need not pay sales
tax on a boat that files a certification stating
that it is going to leave the state within 30
days of purchase. Similarly, in Florida, a
non-resident need not pay tax if the boat is
taken to a different state shortly after
purchase. If you anticipate taking your boat out
of the country, using it in a state that does
not have a sales tax, or actively cruising
between lots of jurisdictions, avoidance of
paying the initial sales tax can be a big cost
savings. If nothing else, a boat can depreciate
a good deal over the course of a few years.
I stated above that this article
would address the first step in legally avoiding
tax on a boat. Well, that was it. The first step
is to legally avoid sales tax. Anyone that has
been around boats, however, will recognize that
this is just the beginning. Most sales tax
states have two other closely related taxes,
title tax and use tax. Use taxes were devised to
take the profit out of going across state lines
to purchase products, which is exactly the
conduct we're talking about here.
Use tax is usually imposed at
the same rate as sales tax and is imposed when
you bring the boat back into a state. Use tax
must be of primary concern to anyone that has
not paid sales tax. (If you have paid sales tax
to a state however, you can rest easy, as sales
tax is an offset to use tax). For Marylanders,
use tax is the tax that a buyer will face on the
boat purchased in Delaware and brought home on a
trailer.
Future installments of this
Waterway Law column will address use tax and
personal property tax. These taxes are more
complicated in their application than sales tax
and take much more sophistication to legally
avoid. Use tax is triggered by the use of the
vessel and is subject to lots of argument about
how much time triggers the tax as well as
exceptions and defenses. Personal property tax
is often collected by local counties or cities,
and so it can be widely different even within a
single state. There are no simple answers here.
In the meantime, if you are
buying or have purchased a boat for a
significant amount of money, you should seek
specific legal advice about how to conduct your
affairs. Avoiding sales tax is only the first
step, but if done improperly, can bring far
worse consequences such as penalties, interest,
liens, etc. A good lawyer can provide advice
about how to maintain your boat in a situation
in which it does not owe tax, and if you follow
that advice, you can save a significant amount
of money.
Happy cruising!
©Copyright Lochner Law Firm, P.C. 1999-2010, All
Rights Reserved. |
[ < back ]