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Registering a new car in Montana has a loophole that allows owners to avoid paying sales tax. The state has the highest number of registered cars per person in the United States.
Many luxury car owners register their vehicles in Montana because the state doesn't charge personal sales tax or require emissions tests on vehicles.
A freight train derailed in Paradise, Montana, on Sunday, according to the Sanders County Sheriff’s Office. Approximately 25 cars were derailed around 9:20 a.m. near Highway 135, dispatcher Bill ...
Basically, the Utah law says if you or your Montana LLC buys a car that is mostly used and resides in Utah, the sales tax should be paid in Utah and it should be registered here, too.
At least 25 cars derailed from a train in Montana on Sunday, spilling their contents onto the ground and into a nearby body of water. First responders say there is no threat to the public, ...
The wife of a man who died on a chairlift in Red Lodge last winter is channeling her grief into organizing a memorial car ...
Montana Rail Link, the company operating the train, said in a statement that "several hazmat cars" plunged into the river. No injuries were reported among the train crew, it added.
The DMV states that California dealers sold 10,000 cars with a combined value of $2 billion to Montana LLCs since 2022. The agency's investigations have collected $1.6 million in back taxes ...
'That's not my dog': Video shows Montana man on pizza run drive off in wrong car Not only did Vincent Zepeda get in the wrong Honda CR-V when he ran out for pizza, but he actually drove off in it ...
So, yes, you probably need a car to cross those vast open spaces—but Montana weirdly has the highest car ownership by population in the United States, more than double that of car-crazed California.
Montana isn't a state you'd associate with ultra-expensive cars, but more and more luxury vehicles are sporting Montana license plates these days. Here's why.
A train traveling through Montana derailed 25 of its cars on Sunday, spilling unknown contents onto the ground. First responders say there is no danger to the public.