A Friendly Note on Tax Rates in LA
While it's pretty well-known that LA can be expensive, it should be pointed out how different cities in the LA area have different sales taxes. I only learned that a few years ago.
I pulled up this chart from the Ca.gov website, where you can also look up the current sales and tax rate by address, but you should be aware of what some of these rates are (as of 9/22/2023):
I pulled up this chart from the Ca.gov website, where you can also look up the current sales and tax rate by address, but you should be aware of what some of these rates are (as of 9/22/2023):
Beverly Hills: 9.5%
Burbank: 10.25%
Culver City: 10.25%
Glendale: 10.25%
Hawthorne: 10.25%
Hawthorne: 10.25%
Inglewood: 10%
Long Beach: 10.25%
Los Angeles*: 9.5%
Malibu: 10%
Marina del Rey: 9.5%
Pasadena: 10.25%
San Gabriel: 10.25%
Santa Monica: 10.25%
West Hollywood: 10.25%
* includes Hollywood, North Hollywood, San Pedro, Sherman Oaks, Sun Valley, Van Nuys
This shouldn't be interpreted as don't pay your taxes (since these do pay for city services you may use at some point), but be mindful of where you do your shopping and dining. There's an In-N-Out on Venice Boulevard that you'd think would be Culver City and taxed at the higher rate, but it is Los Angeles (9.5%).
By comparison, there is a Costco on Washington Boulevard that is advertised as being in Marina del Rey, but it's taxed as Culver City. Sounds like Culver City wants all the Costco money for themselves.
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