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States to take shelter from the storm of taxes

Tax season is safely behind us, so it’s time to breathe a sigh of relief. Maybe it’s time to think about living in a state where the tax burden is less than it is where you are now.
Image: Buffalo roam in Yellowstone National Park
Where do the buffalo roam and the citizens pay the least amount of taxes? Wyoming.www.alamy.com
/ Source: CNBC.com

Tax season is safely behind us, so it’s time to breathe a sigh of relief. But if you paid more to the IRS than you feel you should have, maybe it’s also time to start thinking about doing things a little differently. Maybe it’s time to think about living in a state where the tax burden is less than it is where you are now.

Some states have low property taxes, low gasoline taxes and low sales taxes. Some have low income tax rates, and some expect not one cent of income tax revenue from its residents. Each of these states is the closest thing there is to an American tax haven, and there are many factors to consider for anyone thinking about relocating to one.

Using data from tax service provider H&R Block, CNBC.com lists the top 10 states for low tax burdens. We also spoke to financial experts for insight into things you should think about before you sell your house, pack your bags and drive into the sunset.

Here are states that qualify as American tax havens.

10. Florida
Florida is a popular destination for retirees, and not just because of the sunshine. Residents don’t pay any personal income tax, the sales tax rate is 6 percent, and the gasoline tax is 17 cents per gallon.

The state’s high property taxes stop it from ranking higher on the list. The rate is 1.09 percent of the median home value, according to Vincent Bates, lead tax research analyst for H&R Block’s Tax Institute.

9. South Dakota
South Dakota residents pay no personal income tax. Its sales tax is 4 percent, it levies no corporate income taxes, and has no estate tax. As of 2010, its gasoline tax is 22 cents per gallon.

South Dakota also has something else going for it besides low taxes — low unemployment. As of March 2012, the state had an unemployment rate of 4.3 percent, well short of the national average, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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8. Delaware
Delaware is a tiny midatlantic state that’s the home of Vice President Joe Biden and actor Judge Reinhold of “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” fame. It assesses no state general sales tax whatsoever, and the highest tax bracket in the state is a 5.95 percent income tax rate.

Delaware's local governments collected $626.90 per capita in property taxes during fiscal year 2006, the latest year available from the Census Bureau, notes Elle Kaplan, CEO and founding partner of Lexion Capital Management, an investment management firm. Delaware’s per capita property tax collections rank 43rd nationally, Kaplan says.

7. New Mexico
New Mexico’s personal income tax rates vary, depending on the filing status and income of the individual. However, it tops out at a reasonable 4.9 percent.

The gasoline tax is 17 cents per gallon, another attribute that makes the state attractive to taxpayers. The sales tax is 5.13 percent.

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6. Utah
Utah has had a 5 percent individual income tax rate since 2008, and it applies to everyone at every income level. It has a sales and use tax of 4.7 percent, and it imposes no taxes on intangible assets like intellectual property. It also doesn’t collect estate taxes.

5. Tennessee
Tennessee levies a 6 percent tax on income from dividends and interest. However, the state leaves the salaries and wages of its taxpayers untouched.

On the downside, the state sales tax is 7 percent, one of the nation’s higher rates, and the state has the fifth-lowest median household income in the country, at $41,461

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4. Louisiana
Louisiana’s property tax on owner-occupied housing is .43 percent, third-lowest rate in the country.

Louisiana also has a low sales tax rate of 4 percent, which is made up of 3.97 percent state sales tax and 0.03 percent Louisiana Tourism Promotion District sales tax.

3. Colorado
Colorado has low tax rates across the board. It levies a relatively low 4.63 percent flat tax on the personal income of its residents and has a low sales tax rate of 2.9 percent.

“Most small businesses are S Corporation or sole proprietorships,” says Kaplan. “They pay taxes for their business at the tax rate of individuals. That means Colorado is an appealing place to run a small business.”

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2. Alabama
The property tax on owner-occupied housing in Alabama is .41 percent, second-lowest in the country. However, anyone wishing to start a business in Alabama should be aware of its corporate tax rate.

“Alabama imposes a flat corporate tax of 6.5 percent on all corporate income,” says Kaplan. “That means would-be entrepreneurs and small businesses in the ‘ramp up phase’ would be better off moving elsewhere.”

Alabama has a low gasoline tax, but there’s a catch. “Alabama's municipalities have the right to levy their own ‘local option’ taxes on gasoline,” says Kaplan. “Tread carefully if you settle in a town that adds the local option of imposing an additional gasoline tax.”

1. Wyoming
Wyoming is the best place for overall tax rates in the country. It has low taxes across the board, including one of the lowest gasoline taxes in America, at 14 cents per gallon. It also has low property taxes and sales tax, and levies no personal or corporate income tax.

Jerry Lynch, president and certified financial planner at JFL Consulting, urges caution before heading to the Cowboy State in a fit of low-tax-rate fever. “If you get up and move to a state you’re not familiar with, the move could cost you 10 percent of the value of your home,” he said in an interview.

“So if you’re moving to another state, rent before you buy and make sure you want to live there. What you save in taxes is miniscule compared to the cost of selling your home twice.”