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States Where Trade-In Reduces Your Sales Tax

Most US states give you a "trade-in credit" — when you trade your old car at the dealership, the trade-in value is deducted from the new car's price before sales tax is calculated. On a typical $35,000 new car with a $10,000 trade-in at 8% tax, that's $800 in savings. These are the states that offer full trade-in credit.

  1. 1

    Alabama

    Trade-in credit:

    2% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  2. 2

    Alaska

    Trade-in credit:

    0% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  3. 3

    Arizona

    Trade-in credit:

    5.6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  4. 4

    Arkansas

    Trade-in credit:

    6.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  5. 5

    Colorado

    Trade-in credit:

    2.9% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  6. 6

    Connecticut

    Trade-in credit:

    6.35% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  7. 7

    Delaware

    Trade-in credit:

    5.25% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  8. 8

    Florida

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  9. 9

    Georgia

    Trade-in credit:

    7% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  10. 10

    Hawaii

    Trade-in credit:

    4% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  11. 11

    Idaho

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  12. 12

    Illinois

    Trade-in credit:

    6.25% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  13. 13

    Indiana

    Trade-in credit:

    7% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  14. 14

    Iowa

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  15. 15

    Kansas

    Trade-in credit:

    6.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  16. 16

    Kentucky

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  17. 17

    Louisiana

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  18. 18

    Maine

    Trade-in credit:

    5.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  19. 19

    Maryland

    Trade-in credit:

    6.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  20. 20

    Massachusetts

    Trade-in credit:

    6.25% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  21. 21

    Michigan

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  22. 22

    Minnesota

    Trade-in credit:

    6.875% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  23. 23

    Mississippi

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  24. 24

    Missouri

    Trade-in credit:

    4.225% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  25. 25

    Montana

    Trade-in credit:

    0% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  26. 26

    Nebraska

    Trade-in credit:

    5.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  27. 27

    Nevada

    Trade-in credit:

    4.6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  28. 28

    New Hampshire

    Trade-in credit:

    0% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  29. 29

    New Jersey

    Trade-in credit:

    6.625% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  30. 30

    New Mexico

    Trade-in credit:

    4% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  31. 31

    New York

    Trade-in credit:

    4% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  32. 32

    North Carolina

    Trade-in credit:

    3% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  33. 33

    North Dakota

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  34. 34

    Ohio

    Trade-in credit:

    5.75% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  35. 35

    Oklahoma

    Trade-in credit:

    4.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  36. 36

    Pennsylvania

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  37. 37

    Rhode Island

    Trade-in credit:

    7% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  38. 38

    South Carolina

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  39. 39

    South Dakota

    Trade-in credit:

    4% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  40. 40

    Tennessee

    Trade-in credit:

    7% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  41. 41

    Texas

    Trade-in credit:

    6.25% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  42. 42

    Utah

    Trade-in credit:

    4.85% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  43. 43

    Vermont

    Trade-in credit:

    6% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  44. 44

    Washington

    Trade-in credit:

    6.5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  45. 45

    West Virginia

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  46. 46

    Wisconsin

    Trade-in credit:

    5% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

  47. 47

    Wyoming

    Trade-in credit:

    4% state sales tax — trade-in deducted before tax

What this means

In these states, every dollar of trade-in directly reduces your taxable amount, dollar for dollar. This makes trading in a car at the dealer meaningfully better than selling privately and bringing cash — even if the dealer offers you a slightly lower price for your trade. Big outliers that DON'T offer trade-in credit: California, Maryland, Hawaii, Michigan (partial, capped), Virginia, and Washington D.C. Buyers in those states should compute carefully whether trading at the dealer beats selling private-party.

Frequently asked questions

How much do I save with a trade-in in these states?

Your savings equal your trade-in value times your combined sales tax rate. On a $10,000 trade-in in an 8% sales tax state, that's $800. On a $25,000 trade-in (like a high-end SUV) in a 9% combined state, it's $2,250 — sometimes meaningful enough to flip the private-vs-dealer trade decision.

What about partial trade-in credit?

A few states (Michigan, until recently; some MI/MA scenarios) cap the trade-in credit at a specific dollar amount per year. Above that cap, additional trade-in value doesn't reduce your taxable amount. Most "full credit" states don't have a cap.

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