| No-income-tax states relevant to relatively few |
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The state of Florida has been a magnet for retirees for many decades, starting in the 1950s. An average winter temperature in the low 70s in southern Florida was just too tempting to pass up for many long-suffering northerners. For wealthy retirees set for life with their stock dividend yields and healthy pension payments, the lack of an income tax in the Sunshine State saved them thousands of dollars annually. Below a certain income level, the income tax on its
own means little; other costs of living are far more
relevant. Look at the Florida metro areas of Naples and Orlando. Of course, the state income tax in the two cities is the same, zero. Property and sales taxes in Orlando are actually higher than in Naples but, in terms of overall cost of living, according to BestPlaces.net, Naples is one of the highest in the nation, 151 percentage points above the national average; Orlando is 6 points below the national average. Panama City, FL, is even cheaper, at 14 points below the national average, with the same income tax level.
The differences are largely about real estate, although Naples property values have fallen dramatically in the last 18 months, a fact BestPlaces may not have caught up with yet. But the point is that, unless you have a CEO's pension, income tax has little if anything to do with cost of living.
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| Thursday, 12 March 2009 11:06 | |||
| Last Updated on Thursday, 12 March 2009 11:09 |
