California vs Florida: Vehicle Registration Cost Comparison
Comparing what the same vehicles cost to register each year in California versus Florida, computed from both states' current official fee schedules:
| Scenario | California | Florida |
|---|---|---|
| New $45k gas SUV | $620.50/yr | $46.10/yr |
| 3-yr-old $35k gas car | $355.25/yr | $46.10/yr |
| New $55k EV | $806.50/yr | $46.10/yr |
| 10-yr-old $8k car | $170.80/yr | $46.10/yr |
For most vehicles, Florida is the cheaper state to register in — though the gap varies a lot by vehicle value and age. Keep in mind annual registration is only part of the picture: sales/excise taxes at purchase, insurance, and local property taxes on vehicles can outweigh the registration difference.
California in short
California registration stacks several fees: a base registration fee, the CHP fee, the value-based Vehicle License Fee (0.65% of your vehicle's depreciated purchase price), the tiered Transportation Improvement Fee, and county add-ons. Because two of the fees scale with vehicle value, a new $60,000 vehicle can cost $700+ per year to register while an older economy car may run under $200. EVs from model year 2020 onward pay an additional Road Improvement Fee.
Florida in short
Florida's annual registration is cheap — $27.60 to $45.60 depending on vehicle weight — but first-time registrations sting: a one-time $225 Initial Registration Fee applies whenever a plate isn't being transferred from another Florida vehicle, plus title and plate fees. That means moving to Florida or buying a first car there costs roughly $350+ up front, while renewals afterward are among the lowest in the nation. Florida has no annual value-based vehicle tax.
All figures computed from official fee schedules — sources: https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/vehicle-registration/registration-fees/ — last reviewed 2026-07-16.