Cost of owning a car in Vermont about US average, NH is cheapest

Vermont Business Magazine There's a $7,216 cost difference between owning a car in Michigan ($15,314.53) and New Hampshire ($8,098), finds a new study from personal finance website GOBankingRates.com. Vermont ($10,739.32) is also much cheaper than Michigan, but in the middle of the pack nationally. The study considered the costs of six key factors affecting the expenses of owning a vehicle in all 50 US states and the District of Columbia.

1. New Hampshire: $8,098

  • One-time purchase costs: $25
  • Annual ownership and usage costs: $2,691

"New Hampshire," the study says (see table of all states below), "is the cheapest state to own a car by far, with the total costs of buying and owning a car for three years coming in at $1,182 less than the next-cheapest state (Missouri at $9,280). New Hampshire is one of just four states that levies no sales tax on vehicle purchases. It also has low insurance premiums ($941 annually) and low maintenance and repair costs ($337 a year)."

21. Vermont: $10,739

  • One-time purchase costs: $2,046
  • Annual ownership and usage costs: $2,898

"Vermont residents pay some of the lowest prices for car insurance. The average $942 Vermont car insurance premium is $383 less than average insurance costs of $1,325, providing enough savings to make up for more expensive gas, car maintenance, registration fees and vehicle sales tax."

As of today, Vermont's average gasoline price is $1.97, the US average is $1.99, New Hampshire is $1.87, New York is $2.08, and Massachusetts is $1.89. And it doesn't matter if you are a Vermont or New Hampshire resident when buying a car in either state, because there is no sales tax applied at the time of the purchase, but it is when you register it in Vermont.

Outside of the sticker price of purchasing or financing a new set of wheels, GOBankingRates.com evaluated the following expenses to generate a national ranking:

  • Car sales tax
  • Title fees
  • Registration fees
  • Average annual car insurance premiums
  • Annual gas expenses
  • Average car maintenance and repair costs

"The common costs of owning a car outside of the car payment quickly add up -- our survey found that the average costs of owning a car for three years is $11,227," said Elyssa Kirkham, lead reporter on the study for GOBankingRates. "Typically, car owners should keep their costs low -- around 15 percent of their income for the car payment, insurance, gas, and so on -- which is trickier in states with higher car costs."

From most to least expensive, here is the complete state ranking:

Rank

State

Total Cost for 3 Years of Ownership

Rank

State

Total Cost for 3 Years of Ownership

1

Michigan

$15,314.53

27

Arizona

$10,984.00

2

California

$14,451.58

28

Arkansas

$10,972.11

3

District of Columbia

$13,561.06

29

North Dakota

$10,878.60

4

New Jersey

$13,484.11

30

Wyoming

$10,859.14

5

Florida

$13,210.64

31

Vermont

$10,739.32

6

Maryland

$12,925.76

32

Tennessee

$10,689.67

7

Rhode Island

$12,895.61

33

Iowa

$10,681.65

8

Montana

$12,763.74

34

Indiana

$10,638.45

9

Nevada

$12,695.68

35

New York

$10,627.63

10

Washington

$12,612.92

36

South Carolina

$10,625.40

11

Connecticut

$12,078.40

37

Idaho

$10,476.13

12

Hawaii

$12,060.55

38

Nebraska

$10,409.89

13

Minnesota

$11,882.37

39

Mississippi

$10,392.23

14

Louisiana

$11,822.62

40

South Dakota

$10,303.56

15

Pennsylvania

$11,781.63

41

Alabama

$10,214.40

16

Massachusetts

$11,745.74

42

New Mexico

$9,923.26

17

Texas

$11,672.91

43

Maine

$9,866.27

18

Delaware

$11,540.36

44

Alaska

$9,813.85

19

Colorado

$11,470.38

45

Oregon

$9,696.00

20

West Virginia

$11,340.77

46

Virginia

$9,602.97

21

Georgia

$11,318.43

47

Ohio

$9,595.07

22

Oklahoma

$11,290.70

48

Wisconsin

$9,570.90

23

Kansas

$11,124.29

49

North Carolina

$9,447.94

24

Kentucky

$11,081.83

50

Missouri

$9,280.24

25

Illinois

$11,041.66

51

New Hampshire

$8,098.00

26

Utah

$11,003.15

 

Additional Insights:

  • New Hampshire, Oregon, Alaska and Montana are the only states that don't levy sales tax on vehicle purchases
  • Missouri's average gas price of $1.59 per gallon is the lowest in the nation
  • These western states claim the highest gas prices in the country: Hawaii, California, Alaska, Nevada, andWashington.
  • 8 of the 10 least expensive states to own a car are coastal states.

Methodology: To generate these rankings, GOBankingRates surveyed and totaled the cost of buying and owning a car for three years in all 50 states and D.C. This total included six key car expenses:

  1. Car sales tax, based on rates provided by CarMax.com and calculated on the average car transaction amount of $33,543 in August 2015 as reported by the Kelley Blue Book.
  2. Title fees, as reported by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
  3. Registration fees, as reported by the National Conference of State Legislatures, calculated annually.
  4. Average annual car insurance premiums, sourced from Insured.com's 2016 report on car insurance rates by state.
  5. Annual gas expenses, based on an average of historical regular gas prices in each state sourced from AAA's Fuel Gauge Report. The expense was calculated based on the assumption of a driver filling up a 14-gallon tank once a week.
  6. Average car maintenance and repair costs in each state, sourced from CarMD's 2014 State Repair Cost Rankings.

For title and registration fees are based on car statistics, GOBankingRates assumed a car value of $33,543, an average weight of 4,000 lbs and a model year of 2014. Car sales tax and title fee were counted once each, while recurring annual costs of registration fees, insurance premiums, gas expenses and car maintenance were each counted three times for three years. This generated the total costs of buying and owning a car in each state, and states were ranked according to this total to find the least and most expensive.

GOBankingRates

GOBankingRates.com is a leading portal for personal finance and consumer banking information, offering visitors the latest on everything from finding a good interest rate to strategies for saving money, investing for retirement and getting a loan. Its editors are regularly featured on top-tier media outlets, including U.S. News & World Report, Forbes, Business Insider, Daily Finance, Huffington Post and more. It specializes in connecting consumers with the best financial institutions and banking products nationwide.

LOS ANGELES, March 21, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- GOBankingRates