I have a 210 under contract in the Charlotte area. It does not appear that N.C. is a flyaway state but that tax on the sale may be exempt as a casual sale. If it is taxed it looks like the cap may be $2,500. Does anyone have the scoop on this?
Would you tell them to kiss off by calling or writing to them or would you just ignore them?have them fly it to your state or a fly away state and do the deal there?
If I bought a car (or other mobile asset) from a private party in another state with the intentions of driving said vehicle back home...and the original state tried to charge me tax I would tell them to kiss off. Especially if my state also charged a sales, use, property tax.
Both. Write it on the tax bill and then ignore them.Would you tell them to kiss off by calling or writing to them or would you just ignore them?
Thanks. The owner lives in S.C. but the plane is based at KUZA (S.C.). I thought Rock Hill was in N.C. But it is in S.C.. I would be taking possession at KUZA so I would be fine with only $500 in sales tax going to the state of S.C..Your understanding of NC tax is accurate.
I will point out that SC caps sales tax at $500 and is probably 10 minutes away.
Sounds like an offer I can’t refuse! I do, however, want a plane that I can reuse.lemme know if you need a ferry pilot for that 10 minute flight. I have no 210 time, don't really like high wings, never ferried a plane before, and I'm really not even a good pilot. but I'm happy to do it.
I can vouch for him that he is not really a good pilot.lemme know if you need a ferry pilot for that 10 minute flight. I have no 210 time, don't really like high wings, never ferried a plane before, and I'm really not even a good pilot. but I'm happy to do it.
. . . unless they monitor the registration records. I sold both my planes earlier this year and heard from Vermont within a week or two.Bring cash and the State never has to know a thing.
…and he’ll sign you off for any insurance required dual, too.lemme know if you need a ferry pilot for that 10 minute flight. I have no 210 time, don't really like high wings, never ferried a plane before, and I'm really not even a good pilot. but I'm happy to do it.
Not sure but from what I recall the casual sale exemption in Louisiana (as in most states) is not restricted to sales by human beings. It’s about whether the seller is in the business of selling that type of property, not whether the seller is a certain type of entity.You need to be looking at casual sales exemptions, if you are buying from an individual, not an LLC. Depending on Louisiana law, you may not owe any sales tax.
I get it, I’m in Georgia and almost any purchase from a company is taxable. I bought a 414A from an individual in Texas, no sales tax. My current 414 was owned by a Georgia LLC, I bought the LLC as the sole member and then transferred the plane into my name, no tax. The exemption is a single member company transferring to the sole member.Not sure but from what I recall the casual sale exemption in Louisiana (as in most states) is not restricted to sales by human beings. It’s about whether the seller is in the business of selling that type of property, not whether the seller is a certain type of entity.
(I suspect @robin ardoin already knows this.)
Absolutely. You need to know yours. And you need a professional opinion.I get it, I’m in Georgia and almost any purchase from a company is taxable. I bought a 414A from an individual in Texas, no sales tax. My current 414 was owned by a Georgia LLC, I bought the LLC as the sole member and then transferred the plane into my name, no tax. The exemption is a single member company transferring to the sole member.
It pays to investigate your state laws, there are ways to legally minimize your taxes.
Georgia has had this rule dating back many years, before the current title tax for cars, casual sales for cars were exempt, unless it was from a company. If you bought a car from your neighbor, no tax, unless it was in his company name. The state will get their money!Absolutely. You need to know yours. And you need a professional opinion.
But while I know the Georgia casual sale exemption is limited to when the otherwise “casual” seller does not utilize an aircraft broker business, I have not heard that it is limited to natural persons. Interesting.