Minnesota vs Wisconsin

Registering a new $35,000 vehicle costs about $2,245 in Wisconsin versus $3,013 in Minnesota — a $768 first-year advantage for Wisconsin.

Minnesota
$3,013
first year, $35K gas car
vs +$768
Wisconsin
$2,245
first year, $35K gas car

Cost comparison

Minnesota Wisconsin Difference
First-year total
All-in cost to register a new $35,000 gas vehicle for the first time, including sales tax, title, and registration.
$3,013 $2,245 +$768
Annual renewal (year 2+)
Recurring annual cost after the first year — what you actually pay every year you own the car.
$518 $105 +$413
Sales tax (one-time)
Sales/use/excise tax owed at purchase on a $35,000 vehicle, using typical local rates.
$2,406 $1,925 +$481
Combined sales tax rate
State rate plus typical local rate (where applicable).
6.88% 5.50% +1.38 pp
EV first-year total
Same $35K scenario but as a battery electric vehicle, capturing EV-specific surcharges.
$3,088 $2,420 +$668
EV annual renewal
Recurring EV-ownership cost in year 2+.
$593 $280 +$313
EV surcharge
Annual EV-specific registration fee (zero in states without one).
$75 $175 −$100

How each state structures it

Minnesota

Minnesota uses a value-based registration tax that's rare in its structure: $10 base fee plus 1.575% of the vehicle's original MSRP times an age depreciation factor that starts at 100% and decreases by ~10 percentage points per year, eventually flattening at a $20 minimum from year 11 onward. Combined with a 6.875% Motor Vehicle Sales Tax (MVST), full trade-in credit, and modest title/filing fees ($8.25 + $11), Minnesota is mid-cost overall. The Twin Cities metro counties all charge a $20/year county wheelage tax; rural counties may charge $10 or nothing. EVs pay an extra $75/year. A new $35,000 vehicle in Hennepin County (Minneapolis) runs about $3,050 in first-year costs, with annual renewals around $585 in year 1 dropping to about $115/year by year 10.

Wisconsin

Wisconsin has one of the simplest fee structures of any large state: a flat $85/year passenger registration with no separate plate fee, a 5% state sales tax with modest local additions (most counties charge 0.5%), and full trade-in credit. The two costly outliers are the $214.50 title fee (the highest in the US after a $50 hike on October 1, 2025) and a steep $175/year EV surcharge. County wheel taxes apply in only 10 of 72 counties — most Wisconsin drivers pay $0 in local wheel taxes. Sales tax tops out around 5.5% in most counties (5% state + 0.5% county), making Wisconsin meaningfully cheaper than Illinois (7-11%) or Iowa (5-7%) for vehicle purchases. A new $35,000 vehicle in a typical wheel-tax-county (like Milwaukee) runs about $2,225 in first-year costs, with annual renewals just $105.

What this means for you

Frequently asked questions

Is it cheaper to register a car in Minnesota or Wisconsin?

Wisconsin is cheaper to register a new $35,000 vehicle: $2,245 first year vs $3,013 in Minnesota, and the gap continues into annual renewals.

What is the sales tax difference between Minnesota and Wisconsin?

Minnesota charges 6.88% combined sales tax on vehicles; Wisconsin charges 5.50%. On a $35,000 purchase that's $2,406 in Minnesota vs $1,925 in Wisconsin.

Do Minnesota and Wisconsin both charge EV registration fees?

Minnesota: $75/year EV surcharge. Wisconsin: $175/year EV surcharge. EV fees are added on top of standard registration costs.

Official sources: Minnesota DVSWisconsin DMV

Data last updated: 2026-05-23