Alaska tire fees form 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Alaska Tire Fees Quarterly Return in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your Alaska Business License Number and FEIN at the top of the form. Ensure these details are accurate as they are essential for processing.
  3. Fill in your name, mailing address, city, state, ZIP code, phone, fax, contact person, title, contact phone, and email address. If you have a new address, check the corresponding box.
  4. Proceed to the Fee Calculation section. Enter the number of new tires sold (including studded tires) in line 1. Then note any exempt sales on line 2.
  5. Calculate taxable new tires by subtracting line 2 from line 1 and enter this value on line 3. Next, input the tire fee rate per tire on line 4.
  6. Multiply the taxable new tires (line 3) by the fee rate (line 4) to find total fees due for new tires on line 5.
  7. Continue with similar calculations for studded tires and installations in lines 6 through 12. Ensure all calculations are accurate before proceeding.
  8. Finally, review your entries for accuracy and sign at the bottom of the form before submitting it through our platform.

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Tire tax, also known by the name of scrap tire fee, solid waste fee, and tire disposal tax, is a fee imposed on the sale of a new tire or replacement of an old one. This fee exists to help with the disposal process of tires since tires are nonbiodegradable and cannot be compacted.
Tire sellers must collect a $1 tire fee on the retail sale of every new tire sold for vehicles. Tire sellers must collect a $5 studded tire fee and the $1 tire fee for each retail sale of studded tires.
Form 04-611 is the standard Alaska Corporation Net Income Tax Return form designed to accommodate any taxpayer including the most complex filing under the waters edge method.
Alaska does not have an individual income tax. Alaska has a graduated corporate income tax, with rates ranging from 0.0 percent to 9.4 percent. Alaska does not have a state sales tax but has an average combined state and local sales tax rate of 1.82 percent.
Alaska Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens Alaska has a 1.07 percent effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing value. Alaska does not have an estate tax or inheritance tax. Alaska has an 8.95 cents per gallon gas tax rate and a $2.00 excise tax rate.

People also ask

No person may drive a vehicle with a tire in unsafe operating condition or with a tread depth of less than 2/30 of an inch measured in two adjacent tread grooves at three equally spaced intervals around the circumference of the tire.
Tire places charge the disposal fee because they have to: its a government-mandated charge to help with the cost of recycling programs. I tried to taking my old tires with me to give to someone else, but I still got dinged. I looked up the fee program online, unfortunately theres no way around it.
General Instructions: In the state of Alaska, there is a $2.50 tire fee imposed on the sale of all new tires (whether studded or not) for motor vehicles designed for use on a highway. New tires include unused tires customarily sold by tire dealers, as well as retreaded or remanufactured tires.

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