LeoVampire
New England Marauder Member
Help Stop the Connecticut Collector Car Tax Increase
April 14, 2011
View larger images
The Connecticut State Legislature is actively considering a bill targeted at collector car owners that would result in a 400% tax increase on the personal property taxes paid for antique vehicles. This move would raise the personal property tax cap from $500 to $2500 for each registered antique car. The Historic Vehicle Association, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of collector car owners and an affiliate of Hagerty, has been working to kill this bill but we need your help.
The proposed tax increase would apply to registered antique vehicles that are 30 years or older. If a vehicle is registered as a regular driver and not registered as an antique then no property tax cap would apply and the increase could be even more.
The negative impacts of this proposed tax in HB 5580 are as follows:
April 14, 2011
View larger images
The Connecticut State Legislature is actively considering a bill targeted at collector car owners that would result in a 400% tax increase on the personal property taxes paid for antique vehicles. This move would raise the personal property tax cap from $500 to $2500 for each registered antique car. The Historic Vehicle Association, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of collector car owners and an affiliate of Hagerty, has been working to kill this bill but we need your help.
The proposed tax increase would apply to registered antique vehicles that are 30 years or older. If a vehicle is registered as a regular driver and not registered as an antique then no property tax cap would apply and the increase could be even more.
The negative impacts of this proposed tax in HB 5580 are as follows:
- This 400% tax increase focuses on one percent of the population potentially causing an antique vehicle owner to pay more vehicle tax than property tax for their home.
- This attempt to raise $2 million for local municipalities could potentially cost the state money through deferred registration of antique vehicles where people are tempted to register their cars in other states or sell their antique vehicles outright.
- Nationally, antique car owners spend $35 billion each year and donate more than $59 million to charitable organizations. Connecticut car clubs host hundreds of events each year and support for these events, charities and local business revenue could suffer or completely disappear. Less antique cars would have a negative overall economic impact in the State of Connecticut.