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in florida they can sell your tax lean if you don't pay your taxes but they can't kick you out for back taxes if it is your homestead. Also if your house is worth less than 25k (50k if you are 65+) you don't pay property taxes. Out in Colorado the tax on our farmland is about $1/acre.
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LOL...I know exactly the land to which you refer. I was working on a title project right down 137 a mile or so when a guy I know called me about a gig in Lafayette. Actually, I was in Stanton last Tuesday. Had a Doctors appointment there. My Doc is married to a landman and she's really good...and smokin' too. View Quote |
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@fettesbrotde seriously where ? das muss ich wissen bitte View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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The truth of the matter is that with real estate you are not 'Buying" the property as you would a pocket watch.
You are only buying certain rights to that property. The Federal Gov , the State , the county and town could have certain rights along with utilities and other folks or institutions could also have mineral,water or air rights. The trick is to get a parcel that is so far out that none of this stuff is of any value to anyone else |
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You really should shoot that asshole that dragged you over to Louisiana. In fact, please do; I've been sick for the past week trying to cough out a lung. Feel like I need to start smoking so I have a reason for the horrible hack. View Quote Feel mo betta! |
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You can move a car but you don't truly own that either. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Large numbers of cemetery plots. I have had some in my family for generations. Once you buy them outright in perpetual care, no further expense.
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•Alaska is the largest of the United States; however, for all its vastness only a small portion of the land mass is subject to a property tax.
•There are approximately 321 communities in Alaska, many of which still remain unincorporated. •There are 164 incorporated municipalities (local governments), 19 of which are incorporated into boroughs (boroughs are a rough equivalent to counties) and the remainder are incorporated as cities. •Of the 19 boroughs in Alaska, only 15 levy a property tax. •Only 9 cities located outside of boroughs levy a property tax; therefore, only 24 municipalities in Alaska (either cities or boroughs) levy a property tax. |
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Germany is cheap, costs me $38 an acre seriously where ? das muss ich wissen bitte nice area Obviously property as a whole is cheaper there... but I think you know this |
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Quoted: Which ones don't have property tax? View Quote I'm looking at an apartment that is over the minimum exemption so I expect to owe about $4/year, based on minimum wage/sq meter calculation. I'm not guaranteed that Putin won't take it as collateral for all the bills the country owes. |
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You can own mineral rights indefinitely without paying property taxes in most states.
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Quoted: This, i dont think there is a place in America where you can actually own land, car, boat, rv, etc. You will always pay the .gov rent for big ticket items. View Quote |
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William the Conqueror began the concept of a life estate in real property (i.e. owning property by individuals). Prior to that, everything was owned by the king. This was a simple estate, with full rights to do with it what the owner pleased, and it could not be taken away. The 'fee' paid to the king was service in the king's army as a knight, when called upon by the king. Thus, the fee simple estate. It is what makes America great to this day. The fee quickly became monetary, as you could get killed in a war. Truly, real property tax is the only legitimate tax in nay of the commonwealth countries.
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That works most places, if the taxing authority doesn't contest the denomination. There's also some states which have an exemption for 'classified wildlife area' acreage. Last I dealt with it the land had to be fenced and planted in wildlife food plots and timber...but it was closed to all hunting or timber harvest. I ran into that a lot buying coal rights in southern Indiana. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Be a church There's also some states which have an exemption for 'classified wildlife area' acreage. Last I dealt with it the land had to be fenced and planted in wildlife food plots and timber...but it was closed to all hunting or timber harvest. I ran into that a lot buying coal rights in southern Indiana. |
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What OP is looking for is allodial title, and I am not aware of any part of the US that grants that.
With alloidal title you are not subject to property tax, nor can eminent domain be used to seize it. |
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•Alaska is the largest of the United States; however, for all its vastness only a small portion of the land mass is subject to a property tax. •There are approximately 321 communities in Alaska, many of which still remain unincorporated. •There are 164 incorporated municipalities (local governments), 19 of which are incorporated into boroughs (boroughs are a rough equivalent to counties) and the remainder are incorporated as cities. •Of the 19 boroughs in Alaska, only 15 levy a property tax. •Only 9 cities located outside of boroughs levy a property tax; therefore, only 24 municipalities in Alaska (either cities or boroughs) levy a property tax. View Quote |
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They cry about schools and roads when they want to raise taxes here. We don't have any school kids and the roads are crappy and wont get fixed if even patched........so tell me again why we pay land taxes? The fuckers have even started to tax the little outbuildings and metal carports. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
They cry about schools and roads when they want to raise taxes here. We don't have any school kids and the roads are crappy and wont get fixed if even patched........so tell me again why we pay land taxes? The fuckers have even started to tax the little outbuildings and metal carports. Earth sheltered structures are hard to spot with aerial photomaps. Building under the cover of large trees seems to have some effectiveness for small structures, but they eventually found out about the cabin on a neighboring parcel (been there since at least the 1970s, and they finally added the cabin to the parcel maps a couple years ago). Must have finally done an update in the winter, when the leaves were off the trees. Quoted: They tax us here for rain falling on our yards, 25 a year, watershed. |
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No such thing as properly ownership as long as you have to pay the tax man. It’s just cheap rent.
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What OP is looking for is allodial title, and I am not aware of any part of the US that grants that. With alloidal title you are not subject to property tax, nor can eminent domain be used to seize it. View Quote |
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Ag land around here is cheap taxes from my limited knowledge View Quote Which is good to keep land in the family. A ranch around Jackson taxed on it's value as a development property could not hope to pay the taxes by running a hundred head of cows. |
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Good luck. I don’t mind paying for some services with taxes. Fire, EMS, and a road to get to my house...
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Quoted: A properly filed land patent takes care of the part in red see Summa Corp vs. CA. View Quote |
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Yes. If you own 10 acres you homestead 2 and pay regular taxes. The rest you ag. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Is there any way to own property indefinitely i.e. without paying property taxes? As far as I know, if I buy a chunk a property today with cash, I have to pay taxes on it or the government will seize it/sell it. How can I buy land that I can actually *own* without any further costs? I was thinking about this as a place to go in case of job loss/going broke for whatever reason, etc. It doesn't work if I still have to pay a large sum of money every year. View Quote |
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No. If you could, everyone would be doing it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Is there any way to own property indefinitely i.e. without paying property taxes? As far as I know, if I buy a chunk a property today with cash, I have to pay taxes on it or the government will seize it/sell it. How can I buy land that I can actually *own* without any further costs? I was thinking about this as a place to go in case of job loss/going broke for whatever reason, etc. It doesn't work if I still have to pay a large sum of money every year. |
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There are a couple of States that still grant allodial titles to the land. I can't remember which ones for sure, but IIRC they are NV and TX, but I could be quite wrong regarding which ones.
The modern implementation is for a person to pay up front the projected property taxes that the land would be expected to provide over the owner's projected lifetime from that point on. If granted, and the monies paid, the person receives a title which gives him much more absolute ownership rights (IIRC, there may be some protections against eminent domain and other seizures by the State; historically, such titles definitely offered protection as the owner in essence had eminent domain over the land rather than the state or some other person or entity, such as a feudal lord or monarch) and no further need to pay property taxes of any sort, even if they go up and would exceed what was paid, or new ones are levied. However, unlike many historical allodial titles, they are not inheritable by heirs and cannot be sold or transferred as such. Upon sale or transfer, or the death of the owner, the allodial nature of the title is terminated. The new owner would have to apply for such a title himself and pay up again. Such titles only are worth something with respect to State and local governments; they have no impact on Federal taxation of property (direct taxes were sometimes assessed as property taxes) or Federal eminent domain. Personally, I think that there should indeed be a title that does indeed grant you absolute rights, freeing it from seizure or use by the government for any purpose other than as punishment for a felony; freeing it from any usage regulations and the like that do not impact the health, safety, or property of others; freeing it from any further taxation; which includes mineral/subsurface rights and such; and that there should be an ability to get it recognized by the Federal government as such, ceding eminent domain over the land. There should also be an option for such titles to be either lifetime, inheritable, or fully transferrable. Basically, the State would assess the potential for use by the State or local government for essential purposes, and if it finds that there isn't a high probability of a need to acquire the property for such essential use (whether by purchase from a voluntary seller or the use of force via an eminent domain proceeding), and suitable monies are paid, the title is granted. The fees should be reasonable, though, with higher fees being allowed for more permanent or transferrable titles. |
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Wait, if I'm paying property taxes on 2 acres anyway, what's the ag part for? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Quoted: Can you live on ag land and still have it qualify as ag land? The rest you ag. Much cheaper. |
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