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Reddit's silver "apes" now targeting silver, opportunity or fool's gold?
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I just bought a 1 kilo silver bar for $832 plus sales tax of about $75. I don't recall ever paying sales taxes on precious metals. A quick web search shows each state's sales tax and my state CA has a 7.5% tax under $1500. It is too late on this purchase since I already made the purchase but now I know to buy over $1500 to avoid the sales tax.- Alabama: No sales tax on bullion
- Alaska: No sales tax at a state level
- Arizona: No sales tax on bullion
- Arkansas: 6.5% on all precious metal sales
- California: 7.5% on transactions below $1,500
- Colorado: No sales tax on most precious metals
- Connecticut: 6% on purchase values below $1,000
- Delaware: No sales tax
- Florida: 6% on values below $500, with an exemption for legal tender
- Georgia: No sales tax
- Hawaii: 4% general excise tax paid by the seller, often added to the purchase price
- Idaho: No sales tax
- Illinois: 6.25% on South African Krugerrands only, all other bullion is exempt
- Indiana: No tax on high-purity bullion, 7% on other types of precious metal
- Iowa: No sales tax
- Kansas: No sales tax
- Kentucky: 6% on all orders
- Louisiana: No tax on precious metals
- Maine: 5% flat rate
- Maryland: 6% on order values below $1,000
- Massachusetts: 6.25% on transactions below $1,000
- Michigan: No sales tax on high-purity bullion
- Minnesota: 6.88%
- Mississippi: 7%
- Missouri: No sales tax on high-purity bullion
- Montana: No sales tax
- Nebraska: No sales tax
- Nevada: 6.85% with some exemptions
- New Hampshire: No sales tax
- New Jersey: 7%
- New Mexico: 5% paid by the seller
- New York: 4% on transactions below $1,000
- North Carolina: No sales tax
- North Dakota: 5%, but with high-purity bullion exempt
- Ohio: Basic sales tax of 5.75% applies to silver and gold bezels, high-purity bullion is exempt
- Oklahoma: No sales tax on precious metals
- Oregon: No sales tax on any precious metals purchase
- Pennsylvania: 6% on silver and gold coins which are not legal tender, bullion is exempt
- Rhode Island: 7% tax applies only to bullion that’s not been refined or smelted
- South Carolina: Most precious metals are exempt, but some coins and processed items attract 6%
- South Dakota: No sales tax on investment-grade bullion or legal tender
- Tennessee: No sales tax on gold or silver bullion
- Texas: No sales tax on gold or silver bullion
- Utah: A 4.75% tax applies to bullion with purity below 50%
- Vermont: 6% on all precious metal transactions
- Virginia: 5.3% levied on all precious metals with no exemptions
- Washington: No tax on any non-collectible precious metals
- West Virginia: Investment-grade bullion and coins are tax-exempt
- Wisconsin: A 5% tax on all precious metal purchases
- Wyoming: A basic 4% rate on all precious metal purchases
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QMM - wow a kilo of silver sounds quite nice.
Did you get one of the better brands? My understanding is brands like Englehard sometimes have a bit of a premium in the market if you want to sell your silver. People think they're less likely to be fake or adulterated.james.c.hendrickson@gmail.com
202.468.6043
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This article explains why stocks & bonds have no sales tax but precious metals have sales tax. And it explains that imposing a sales tax on precious metals may discourage prudent investing.
Sales Tax on Gold and Silver - Rules For Every State (noblegoldinvestments.com)
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Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan View PostGold & silver bugs are seeing some nice gains as people are flocking into precious metals as a flight to safety.
Can anyone guarantee that gold and silver will earn at least 5% over the next couple of years? I don't think so.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan View PostI buy precious metals more as an insurance measure should the BRICS & OPEC somehow make USD no longer the world reserve currency. I hope we can keep the status as the world reserve currency but in the unlikely event that it topples, hence the insurance.
I'm not a conspiracy theorist or a doomsdayer so I don't worry about stuff like this. I've heard the same reasons given for owning gold my entire life. It wasn't true 50 years ago; it isn't true today. There's a reason why precious metals are taxed as collectibles and not as investments. I've got no issue with someone owning them. You do you. It's just not for me.
Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan View PostCan you spot the fake silver? The top 5 silver American eagles are the fakes.
Still, I'd take them somewhere and have them checked (or get a home test kit).Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Here is a 5x camera zoom close up (hard to see the markings) of the 1 grain gold (not 1 gram). For comparison a 1 gram gold bullion on APMEX is $100. So a 1 grain gold bullion is about $5 each x 20 grains = $100. Remember 1 grain = .065 gram. And 31 grams = 1 troy ounce. As you can see the mark up on a 1 gram gold bullion at APMEX is outrageous $100 for a 1 gram bullion x 31 grams = $3100 an ounce. The spot price of gold today is $1975. The last pic is 5 grams of natural gold pickers, size 6 mesh for comparison to these extra small pieces of gold. Each of these small gold pickers are about 1/2 gram each.
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