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Hi All
I'm in the process of purcasing my first Plane from a private owner. The current owner lives in NY state and I live in NJ. I know with cars I would pay sales tax at NJ Motor vehicles when I register and title the car but how does the process work with Planes? I was told that you just snd in a bill of sale and registration form to the FAA and that i would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? Thanks in advance for any info Panther Student Pilot |
#2
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On Feb 28, 2:43 pm, wrote:
Hi All I'm in the process of purcasing my first Plane from a private owner. The current owner lives in NY state and I live in NJ. I know with cars I would pay sales tax at NJ Motor vehicles when I register and title the car but how does the process work with Planes? I was told that you just snd in a bill of sale and registration form to the FAA and that i would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? Thanks in advance for any info Panther Student Pilot Not sure about NJ but in CA the FAA notifies the state and you get a bill. -Robert |
#3
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In Indiana you are required to notify the Indiana Department of Revenue
and they send you some paperwork to fill out. You enter in the price you paid for the plane and then multiply that by .06 and cut them a check. Jon Kraus wrote: Hi All I'm in the process of purcasing my first Plane from a private owner. The current owner lives in NY state and I live in NJ. I know with cars I would pay sales tax at NJ Motor vehicles when I register and title the car but how does the process work with Planes? I was told that you just snd in a bill of sale and registration form to the FAA and that i would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? Thanks in advance for any info Panther Student Pilot |
#4
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Jon Kraus wrote:
In Indiana you are required to notify the Indiana Department of Revenue and they send you some paperwork to fill out. You enter in the price you paid for the plane and then multiply that by .06 and cut them a check. Jon Kraus wrote: Hi All I'm in the process of purcasing my first Plane from a private owner. The current owner lives in NY state and I live in NJ. I know with cars I would pay sales tax at NJ Motor vehicles when I register and title the car but how does the process work with Planes? I was told that you just snd in a bill of sale and registration form to the FAA and that i would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? Thanks in advance for any info Panther Student Pilot I love Texas. Casual sales between individuals are NOT taxed. We also do not have income tax. -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
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On Feb 28, 5:43 pm, wrote:
would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? At least until a couple of years ago, the "casual" sale of an airplane was exempt from NJ Sales Tax. Casual being defined as between individuals with no "dealer" involve. But with the new tax, tax, tax administration, that may have changed. |
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On Mar 1, 9:11 am, wrote:
On Feb 28, 5:43 pm, wrote: would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? At least until a couple of years ago, the "casual" sale of an airplane was exempt from NJ Sales Tax. Casual being defined as between individuals with no "dealer" involve. But with the new tax, tax, tax administration, that may have changed. Sorry, that's not the case. I had a skylane tied down at Essex, I am a new york resident and the NJ tax officials tried to get me to pay sales tax on the plane because it was tied down there and they wanted to assess me the tax with penalties. How they found me? I guess they must walk around the airports taking tail numbers. I am a new york resident and the plane is registered to a delaware corporation. They couldn't care less, as the NJ law states that they are owed the tax, even if the plane was registered and owned from an out of state individual or corporation. The only way I got out of if it was thru a loophole in their law, that stated that if the plane was brought to NJ after being in another state for over 12 months, it would be exempt. I did have in in NY for the previous 12 months, and had to prove it with cancelled checks for the tie down in another state which I fortunately had. If you buy a plane and register in NJ or NY you will owe the tax on the purchase amount, if you don't pay right away they will assess you the tax, with penalties and interest. If you want to avoid the tax, you must register the plane in a delaware corporation. This cost some money and annual fees. If the plane is a lower cost plane, I would say $25,000 or less it just might not be worth the hassle, but as I said earlier, in NJ they don't care if it's in a delaware corp, they want the tax, unless you are willing to keep the plane in NY for 12 months first and if it is in a delaware corp. Hope this helps, sorry it was so long, but I have been stung. My last plane was a C150, and I paid the ny tax. contact the tax officials and they will explain it to you and send you the forms. Dave |
#7
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#8
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On Mar 1, 1:36 pm, wrote:
On Mar 1, 9:11 am, wrote: On Feb 28, 5:43 pm, wrote: would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? At least until a couple of years ago, the "casual" sale of an airplane was exempt from NJ Sales Tax. Casual being defined as between individuals with no "dealer" involve. But with the new tax, tax, tax administration, that may have changed. Sorry, that's not the case. I had a skylane tied down at Essex, I am a new york resident and the NJ tax officials tried to get me to pay sales tax on the plane because it was tied down there and they wanted to assess me the tax with penalties. How they found me? I guess they must walk around the airports taking tail numbers. I am a new york resident and the plane is registered to a delaware corporation. They couldn't care less, as the NJ law states that they are owed the tax, even if the plane was registered and owned from an out of state individual or corporation. The only way I got out of if it was thru a loophole in their law, that stated that if the plane was brought to NJ after being in another state for over 12 months, it would be exempt. I did have in in NY for the previous 12 months, and had to prove it with cancelled checks for the tie down in another state which I fortunately had. If you buy a plane and register in NJ or NY you will owe the tax on the purchase amount, if you don't pay right away they will assess you the tax, with penalties and interest. If you want to avoid the tax, you must register the plane in a delaware corporation. This cost some money and annual fees. If the plane is a lower cost plane, I would say $25,000 or less it just might not be worth the hassle, but as I said earlier, in NJ they don't care if it's in a delaware corp, they want the tax, unless you are willing to keep the plane in NY for 12 months first and if it is in a delaware corp. Hope this helps, sorry it was so long, but I have been stung. My last plane was a C150, and I paid the ny tax. contact the tax officials and they will explain it to you and send you the forms. Dave With all due respect if you don't know the law then don't advise someone regarding it, especially if you don't live in NJ. The law is rather clear on aircraft purchased and BASED in NJ. If purchased from a Dealer, Broker or Commercial operation, such as a Flight School then Use Tax is due on the purchase price. If the plane was purchased from a private individual or group of private individuals, such as a partner ship, then it is classified as a "casual" sale and NO USE TAX IS DUE. The state of NJ, however will attempt to bully everyone into believing that a Use Tax is due and will badger you with registered letters and threats. Simply supply the sellers name and attest to the casual nature of the sale and they will eventually stop. Now there was a study done and Bill proposed, probably at a great expense to the NJ taxpayers, which recommends the repeal of this statute. see http://www.state.nj.us/treasury/taxa...mish/s2210.pdf The bills sponsor, Senator Bryant, says that the casual sale exemption gives the private seller an unfair advantage over a Dealer (LOL). AFAIK this bill has not been signed into Law. If it has then I stand corrected and all bets are off. To the original poster. Please don't confuse airplanes, which are registered on the Federal level with Cars which are registered on the State level. If you are indeed buying from a private party then you don't owe the State of NJ any tax. Gary |
#9
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On Mar 1, 9:38 pm, "Gary" wrote:
On Mar 1, 1:36 pm, wrote: On Mar 1, 9:11 am, wrote: On Feb 28, 5:43 pm, wrote: would get a bill from the state of NJ months from now? At least until a couple of years ago, the "casual" sale of an airplane was exempt from NJ Sales Tax. Casual being defined as between individuals with no "dealer" involve. But with the new tax, tax, tax administration, that may have changed. Sorry, that's not the case. I had a skylane tied down at Essex, I am a new york resident and the NJ tax officials tried to get me to pay sales tax on the plane because it was tied down there and they wanted to assess me the tax with penalties. How they found me? I guess they must walk around the airports taking tail numbers. I am a new york resident and the plane is registered to a delaware corporation. They couldn't care less, as the NJ law states that they are owed the tax, even if the plane was registered and owned from an out of state individual or corporation. The only way I got out of if it was thru a loophole in their law, that stated that if the plane was brought to NJ after being in another state for over 12 months, it would be exempt. I did have in in NY for the previous 12 months, and had to prove it with cancelled checks for the tie down in another state which I fortunately had. If you buy a plane and register in NJ or NY you will owe the tax on the purchase amount, if you don't pay right away they will assess you the tax, with penalties and interest. If you want to avoid the tax, you must register the plane in a delaware corporation. This cost some money and annual fees. If the plane is a lower cost plane, I would say $25,000 or less it just might not be worth the hassle, but as I said earlier, in NJ they don't care if it's in a delaware corp, they want the tax, unless you are willing to keep the plane in NY for 12 months first and if it is in a delaware corp. Hope this helps, sorry it was so long, but I have been stung. My last plane was a C150, and I paid the ny tax. contact the tax officials and they will explain it to you and send you the forms. Dave With all due respect if you don't know the law then don't advise someone regarding it, especially if you don't live in NJ. The law is rather clear on aircraft purchased and BASED in NJ. If purchased from a Dealer, Broker or Commercial operation, such as a Flight School then Use Tax is due on the purchase price. If the plane was purchased from a private individual or group of private individuals, such as a partner ship, then it is classified as a "casual" sale and NO USE TAX IS DUE. The state of NJ, however will attempt to bully everyone into believing that a Use Tax is due and will badger you with registered letters and threats. Simply supply the sellers name and attest to the casual nature of the sale and they will eventually stop. Now there was a study done and Bill proposed, probably at a great expense to the NJ taxpayers, which recommends the repeal of this statute. seehttp://www.state.nj.us/treasury/taxation/pdf/commish/s2210.pdf The bills sponsor, Senator Bryant, says that the casual sale exemption gives the private seller an unfair advantage over a Dealer (LOL). AFAIK this bill has not been signed into Law. If it has then I stand corrected and all bets are off. To the original poster. Please don't confuse airplanes, which are registered on the Federal level with Cars which are registered on the State level. If you are indeed buying from a private party then you don't owe the State of NJ any tax. Gary- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Gary, you sound very knowledgeable and I will stand corrected, I purchased the Skylane from a dealer, the situation from a private party as you stated was different. Dave |
#10
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![]() Shoot, I bought my plane from a dealer in NJ. I flew it home to RI immediately after the sale. A few months later NJ found me and started hassling me for the tax. I had to prove that I was not a NJ resident AND that the airplane was not based in NJ. |
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