Georgia vs Tennessee

Registering a new $35,000 vehicle costs about $2,488 in Georgia versus $2,573 in Tennessee — a $85 first-year advantage for Georgia.

Georgia
$2,488
first year, $35K gas car
vs −$85
Tennessee
$2,573
first year, $35K gas car

Cost comparison

Georgia Tennessee 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.
$2,488 $2,573 −$85
Annual renewal (year 2+)
Recurring annual cost after the first year — what you actually pay every year you own the car.
$20 $59 −$39
Sales tax (one-time)
Sales/use/excise tax owed at purchase on a $35,000 vehicle, using typical local rates.
$2,450 $2,490 −$40
Combined sales tax rate
State rate plus typical local rate (where applicable).
7.00% 9.50% −2.50 pp
EV first-year total
Same $35K scenario but as a battery electric vehicle, capturing EV-specific surcharges.
$2,723 $2,773 −$50
EV annual renewal
Recurring EV-ownership cost in year 2+.
$255 $259 −$4
EV surcharge
Annual EV-specific registration fee (zero in states without one).
$235 $200 +$35

How each state structures it

Georgia

Georgia's vehicle tax system is structurally different from every other US state. Instead of charging sales tax on the purchase and annual property tax thereafter, Georgia consolidated both into a single one-time Title Ad Valorem Tax (TAVT) of 7% of fair market value, effective since March 2013. After TAVT is paid at titling, the vehicle owes only a $20/year registration fee — no annual property tax on the vehicle. This makes Georgia front-loaded for new buyers (TAVT on a $35,000 vehicle is $2,450) but cheap to hold long-term. New residents transferring vehicles from out of state pay a reduced 3% TAVT rate. Georgia also charges a ~$235/year EV alternative fuel fee (2025 rate, indexed annually), among the highest in the US. A new $35,000 vehicle runs about $2,500 first-year (mostly TAVT), with annual renewals of just $20 — making Georgia one of the cheapest states to OWN a vehicle long-term after the initial TAVT.

Tennessee

Tennessee has one of the more distinctive sales tax structures in the US: 7% state tax on the FULL purchase price, plus a "single article tax" of 2.75% on the portion between $1,600 and $3,200 (max $44), plus local sales tax of 2.25-2.75% applied ONLY to the first $1,600 of purchase. The combined effective rate on a typical $35,000 vehicle works out to roughly 7.2% — counterintuitively LOWER than the headline 9.25-9.75% you'd see in retail stores, because local tax doesn't scale with vehicle price. Beyond sales tax: $29/year state registration, county wheel taxes from $0 to $55 (36 of 95 counties have none), $14 title fee, and a stiff EV surcharge of $200/year (rising to $274 in 2027). Tennessee has no state income tax, so vehicle fees and the gas tax carry more weight in funding state operations. A new $35,000 vehicle in Davidson County (Nashville, $55 wheel tax) runs about $2,617 in first-year costs; in a no-wheel-tax county that drops to about $2,562.

What this means for you

Frequently asked questions

Is it cheaper to register a car in Georgia or Tennessee?

Georgia is cheaper to register a new $35,000 vehicle: $2,488 first year vs $2,573 in Tennessee, and the gap continues into annual renewals.

What is the sales tax difference between Georgia and Tennessee?

Georgia charges 7.00% combined sales tax on vehicles; Tennessee charges 9.50%. On a $35,000 purchase that's $2,450 in Georgia vs $2,490 in Tennessee.

Do Georgia and Tennessee both charge EV registration fees?

Georgia: $235/year EV surcharge. Tennessee: $200/year EV surcharge. EV fees are added on top of standard registration costs.

Official sources: Georgia DOR Motor Vehicle DivisionTN Dept of Revenue / County Clerks

Data last updated: 2026-05-23