Posted on 10/03/2007 5:22:03 PM PDT by Lorianne
After navigating a tight credit market and securing a home loan, a big property tax bill really hurts.
And nowhere is it felt more than in New York and New Jersey, where residents pay more in these taxes than anyone else in the country. The hardest hit? Homeowners in western New Jersey's Hunterdon County. Last year, the median yearly property tax bill amounted to a whopping $7,999 here, according to the Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan research group in Washington, D.C, which compiled data based on 2006 figures.
Things aren't much better in New York. In Nassau County, Long Island, the median homeowner drops $7,706 a year, while up north, Westchester County residents pay $7,626 a year.
"They spend more on government [in the Northeast]," says Gerald Prante, an economist at the Tax Foundation. "In New York and New Jersey, they're high on every tax."
“At least I don’t put up with government that costs more than I can afford.”
Some people are hit overnight with huge rate increases, along with creeping ones.
I guess if you can afford Socialism and Redistribution then you are OK....welcome to the new America.
Not everyone votes Dem, they have this area locked true. That does not mean they win by 100%
This article had me looking for a chart or map or something that shows property taxes as a percentage of property value in various areas. I couldn’t find anything.
Anyone know of something like this?
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Here in Mercer County, I am surrounded by Princeton professors and some sane folks. We still have GOP-leaning areas (Hopewell, Washington Twp.), but here in Lawrenceville, we have had an all-Dem Council since 1982.
Property is worth more in the east. These numbers are meaningless. Tax rate is what matters.
In some way, shape or form you are getting hit. I don’t care where you live.
Property taxes is one of those issues that I wish people would turn out for and fight back. The county I am in in NC took a huge rate increase a few years ago. Nobody seemed to care.
North, to Alaska. :)
They are not meaningless. If a person is retired, and in their house for years, they are still fixed income, even though the asset increased in value. They can't sell part of the house, to keep up with what is now $15,000 tax hit which was $7,000 just six years ago. Nor should they be forced to move away, simply because the legislators are pigs, and revenues are never enough.
Wisconsin is way too high, also.
I fully agree, the elderly are still punished. The tax breaks for the retired are to little. I believe in securing your own future but some times it is not at hand for the family man that worked his whole life to no longer afford a house he has paid for in full due to property tax.
But back to my point...in researching properties in Greenwich,CT and in Rye,NY (just over the border from Greenwich) houses which appeared to be very similar (price-wise and otherwise) in the two towns had **very** different tax bills...Greenwich having a bill of around $4,000 and Rye having a bill of $10,000-$12,000.
Inflated property values and inflated property taxes. My house is worth about the median for my area, about $200,000 give or take. My property taxes run about $700 a year.
BTW, there are some states where your property taxes don’t go up at all...ever. You pay the same amount per year the day you bought the house...even if you own it for 75 years. But if you sell it then the new owners pay the current tax amount. I think california is one of those states, but I could be wrong.
This is a good idea, but keep in mind that the tax rates will need to be higher to compensate for all the old people getting off cheap.
What state do you live in??
My home is worth a quarter of yours at most. Yet I’m paying at least 50% more per year than you do.
Not everyone intends on selling, though the turnover is higher than I thought. Those on fixed incomes, retired folks will just have to find another place to live, huh?
While that all might be very true, state INCOME taxes are much higher in California compared to New Jersey.
In New Jersey: If your income range is between $0 and $20,000, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 1.4%.
Whereas in California: If your income range is between $0 and $6,146, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 1%; between $6,147 and $14,570, the rate is 2% and between $14,571 and $22,996, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 4%.
In New Jersey: If your income range is between $20,001 and $35,000, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 1.75%; and if your income range is between $35,001 and $40,000, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 3.5%.
Whereas in California: If your income range is between $22,997 and $31,924, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 6% and if your income range is between $31,925 and $40,345, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 8%.
In New Jersey: If your income range is between $40,001 and $75,000, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 5.525%.
or between $75,001 and $500,000, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 6.37%;
or $500,001 and over, your tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 8.97%.
However, in California ALL your income at $40,346 and over, the tax rate on every dollar of income earned is 9.3%.
I have always thought of California as more "progressive" than New Jersey, but while the NJ top rate is only slightly less than in California (8.98% vs 9.3%), you reach the top rate in California almost $460,000 sooner than you do in New Jersey.
http://swz.salary.com/salarywizard/layouthtmls/swzl_statetaxrate_NJ.html
Some states don’t have sales tax. Some states don’t have income tax. Some states have almost no property tax. Then there are places where housing is so cheap it’s funny. But the towns where housing is so cheap there are no jobs to be found. Brownsville was one of those. I seem to remember you could get a house in Brownsville for under 5 grand. I think New orleans was similar. Obviously those homes in new orleans won’t be around anymore.
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