In the other post on IFTA I read, I was unable to find the information I was looking for.
Are there any differences in the taxes that states charge when it comes to IFTA. In some states they charge only a excise tax and in some they charge a excise tax, sales tax and sometimes even another additional tax along with excise and sales tax.
What I really want to know if you fuel in a state i.e. (Georgia 7.5 cents excise tax and 13.8 sales tax, as opposed to Fl. which has 4 cents excise and 27.6 sales tax - In Pennsylvania it appears that there is only Oil Franchise tax of 64 cents.) which counts more toward your IFTA?
When researching the taxes that different states charge I get different info from different charts that I have seen. I took the info off the FEDERATION OF TAX ADMINISTRATORS -- JANUARY 2015 for the example I used.
I understand the logic get the lowest fuel with the highest tax to lower what you owe when filing your IFTA return, but does it matter what kind of tax a particular state is charging?
Lowering the amount you owe on your IFTA return
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by POINTDEXTER, Mar 22, 2015.
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This table shows the IFTA taxes: http://www.iftach.org/taxmatrix3/choose_tableq2.php
Any other taxes are not applicable for IFTA.
Your strategy should not be to maximize your ifta return or minimize the amount you owe at the end of the quarter, it should be to buy the lowest priced fuel ignoring IFTA taxes altogether.
You pay exactly the same IFTA total regardless of where you fuel. The difference is how much IFTA you prepay (at the pump).brian991219, wore out, randomname and 7 others Thank this. -
With few exceptions no. A handful of states have what they call a surcharge tax. All that means is you pay the tax when you file your ifta instead of at the pump when you buy fuel. The ifta tax form will show current state taxes. Use it to figure out where to buy fuel.
POINTDEXTER Thanks this. -
Use an app that shows you the cost of fuel without IFTA, and purchase where you get the lowest price that way. You're going to pay local taxes at the pump no matter what. IFTA is on miles and only changes with your route. Since all that is included in a pre-IFTA price, who cares what it is. The goal is getting the lowest cost fuel. If I subtract IFTA and GA fuel is 5¢ less than FL, it doesn't matter how the local taxes are made up. In that (rare since FL is usually a better deal) example, I'll buy my fuel in GA and save $5 on 100 gals. That's not entirely a true case though. What I would really do is buy enough fuel to get me to my home terminal NE of Atlanta plus a margin to reload and get to AL or SC. Then buy more fuel there and save even more.
Playing games with the balance due on an IFTA return is pointless and will usually end up costing you more money at the end of the quarter trying to outsmart the system. It usually doesn't take long to figure out what your averages are and budget for it.POINTDEXTER, randomname, Hammer166 and 1 other person Thank this. -
Red which apps would you suggest???
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Fuelbook. There are others, but that's what I've used the most.
randomname, double yellow and POINTDEXTER Thank this. -
Promiles is another online IFTA provider.
POINTDEXTER and ironpony Thank this. -
I live in Illinois, and we have the cheapest fuel price. Indiana has a cheaper pump price, but when you subtract it, Illinois is a better deal.
POINTDEXTER Thanks this. -
All of the above advice is spot on. Who cares if you have to cut a quarterly check for $500 if you only bought the lowest priced pretax fuel. Whether you pay that $500 at the pump or with your return, you still owe the same amount of taxes. When out west and coming east, I fill up in Oregon which charges no tax at all because that is the cheapest place for me. I am liable for 100% of the taxes in ID, UT, and WY on the quarterly that way, but I get the cheapest fuel. If I only ran Portland to Salt Lake, I would end up paying all of my IFTA on my quarterly and none at the pump, but I'd be buying the cheapest fuel possible.
Jerry12, RedForeman, Hammer166 and 1 other person Thank this. -
This may be hardest thing to get new guys to understand... too many old timers insist on the buy as you burn, a carryover from the days when permit books where and inch thick with individual state permits.
You guys rock for putting it clearly and succinctly!truckon Thanks this.
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