Florida vs Massachusetts

Registering a new $35,000 vehicle costs about $2,498 in Florida versus $3,080 in Massachusetts — a $582 first-year advantage for Florida.

Florida
$2,498
first year, $35K gas car
vs −$582
Massachusetts
$3,080
first year, $35K gas car

Cost comparison

Florida Massachusetts Difference
First-year total
All-in cost to register a new $35,000 gas vehicle for the first time, including sales tax, title, and registration.
$2,498 $3,080 −$582
Annual renewal (year 2+)
Recurring annual cost after the first year — what you actually pay every year you own the car.
$46 $555 −$509
Sales tax (one-time)
Sales/use/excise tax owed at purchase on a $35,000 vehicle, using typical local rates.
$2,150 $2,188 −$38
Combined sales tax rate
State rate plus typical local rate (where applicable).
7.00% 6.25% +0.75 pp
EV first-year total
Same $35K scenario but as a battery electric vehicle, capturing EV-specific surcharges.
$2,498 $3,080 −$582
EV annual renewal
Recurring EV-ownership cost in year 2+.
$46 $555 −$509
EV surcharge
Annual EV-specific registration fee (zero in states without one).
None None matches

How each state structures it

Florida

Florida has a distinctive registration cost shape: relatively modest annual fees (a $35,000 sedan pays about $46/year to renew), but a substantial $225 one-time Initial Registration Fee for anyone titling a vehicle in Florida for the first time, including new residents. The state's 6% sales tax is straightforward, but Florida cleverly caps the local county surtax to apply only to the first $5,000 of the purchase price — meaning the local surcharge on a $35,000 car maxes out at about $50 regardless of county. Florida is also one of only a handful of states that does NOT charge an EV registration surcharge, though legislative attempts to add one are frequent. A new $35,000 vehicle in a typical 1%-surtax county runs about $2,500 first-year (including sales tax and the $225 initial registration), with annual renewals around $46.

Massachusetts

Massachusetts has a clean two-track structure: a flat $60 biennial registration fee paid to the RMV (equivalent to $30/year), and a separate annual Motor Vehicle Excise Tax of $25 per $1,000 (2.5%) of depreciated MSRP, billed by your city or town. The excise tax depreciation schedule is set in state law — 90% of MSRP in the year of manufacture, dropping to 60%, 40%, 25%, and finally 10% from year 5 onward — so the bill drops sharply in the vehicle's first few years. Beyond that, Massachusetts is simple: 6.25% statewide sales tax with no local additions, a $75 title fee, full trade-in credit on dealer sales, and crucially NO EV surcharge (plus up to $3,500 in EV rebates through MOR-EV). A new $35,000 vehicle runs about $3,055 in first-year costs (driven mostly by the $787 first-year excise tax), with annual costs dropping fast: $525 in year 2, $350 in year 3, and just $118 from year 5 onward.

What this means for you

Frequently asked questions

Is it cheaper to register a car in Florida or Massachusetts?

Florida is cheaper to register a new $35,000 vehicle: $2,498 first year vs $3,080 in Massachusetts, and the gap continues into annual renewals.

What is the sales tax difference between Florida and Massachusetts?

Florida charges 7.00% combined sales tax on vehicles; Massachusetts charges 6.25%. On a $35,000 purchase that's $2,150 in Florida vs $2,188 in Massachusetts.

Do Florida and Massachusetts both charge EV registration fees?

Florida: no EV surcharge. Massachusetts: no EV surcharge. EV fees are added on top of standard registration costs.

Official sources: FLHSMVMA RMV

Data last updated: 2026-05-23