Stop Unfair Ad Valorem Taxes on Boats in Georgia

Recent signers:
James Walsh and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Stop Unfair Ad Valorem Taxes on Boats in Georgia

Petition to Reform Georgia’s Boat Ad Valorem Tax

Georgia boat owners are being unfairly taxed through annual ad valorem property taxes on recreational boats, often in addition to sales tax, trailer registration fees, and other ownership costs. This system is inequitable, inconsistent, and out of step with how boats are actually used.

Why This Matters

Boats are not homes.
Recreational boats are not lived in, do not attend schools, and do not utilize county services in the way real property does—yet owners are charged school and county property taxes annually.
Double and triple taxation is occurring.

Boat owners already pay:

Sales tax at purchase
Trailer registration and tag fees
Fuel taxes
Marina or storage fees
Adding annual ad valorem taxes amounts to punitive double taxation.


Values are often inflated and inaccurate.
Many tax assessments:

Ignore high engine hours
Ignore mechanical issues or damage
Assume pristine condition
Fail to account for depreciation
Owners are forced to fight assessments every year to avoid overpayment.


Georgia is losing revenue long-term.


Excessive taxation discourages:

Boat purchases in Georgia
Marina development
Marine service businesses
Registration within the state
Owners increasingly store, register, or purchase boats in neighboring states with fairer systems.

How Georgia Compares

Many states have moved away from annual ad valorem taxes on boats and instead use:

One-time purchase taxes
Flat registration fees
Modest annual use fees

Georgia’s system is outdated and anti-business.

What We Are Asking For

We call on Georgia legislators and county tax authorities to:

Eliminate or cap ad valorem taxes on recreational boats.
Replace them with a fair, predictable registration or use fee.
Remove school taxes from non-residential, non-habitable vessels.
Standardize valuation methods statewide
Create exemptions or relief for high-hour, damaged, or aging vessels.

This Is a Fairness Issue

Boat owners are not asking for special treatment — we are asking for reasonable, logical taxation that reflects:

Actual use
True value
Basic fairness

A recreational asset should not be taxed like a home, a business, or a source of public education funding.

Sign This Petition If You Believe:

Taxation should make sense.
Double taxation should be eliminated
Georgia should support, not punish, recreational boating.
Counties should not rely on boats to prop up property tax rolls.


Sign and share this petition to demand reform now.

35

Recent signers:
James Walsh and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

Stop Unfair Ad Valorem Taxes on Boats in Georgia

Petition to Reform Georgia’s Boat Ad Valorem Tax

Georgia boat owners are being unfairly taxed through annual ad valorem property taxes on recreational boats, often in addition to sales tax, trailer registration fees, and other ownership costs. This system is inequitable, inconsistent, and out of step with how boats are actually used.

Why This Matters

Boats are not homes.
Recreational boats are not lived in, do not attend schools, and do not utilize county services in the way real property does—yet owners are charged school and county property taxes annually.
Double and triple taxation is occurring.

Boat owners already pay:

Sales tax at purchase
Trailer registration and tag fees
Fuel taxes
Marina or storage fees
Adding annual ad valorem taxes amounts to punitive double taxation.


Values are often inflated and inaccurate.
Many tax assessments:

Ignore high engine hours
Ignore mechanical issues or damage
Assume pristine condition
Fail to account for depreciation
Owners are forced to fight assessments every year to avoid overpayment.


Georgia is losing revenue long-term.


Excessive taxation discourages:

Boat purchases in Georgia
Marina development
Marine service businesses
Registration within the state
Owners increasingly store, register, or purchase boats in neighboring states with fairer systems.

How Georgia Compares

Many states have moved away from annual ad valorem taxes on boats and instead use:

One-time purchase taxes
Flat registration fees
Modest annual use fees

Georgia’s system is outdated and anti-business.

What We Are Asking For

We call on Georgia legislators and county tax authorities to:

Eliminate or cap ad valorem taxes on recreational boats.
Replace them with a fair, predictable registration or use fee.
Remove school taxes from non-residential, non-habitable vessels.
Standardize valuation methods statewide
Create exemptions or relief for high-hour, damaged, or aging vessels.

This Is a Fairness Issue

Boat owners are not asking for special treatment — we are asking for reasonable, logical taxation that reflects:

Actual use
True value
Basic fairness

A recreational asset should not be taxed like a home, a business, or a source of public education funding.

Sign This Petition If You Believe:

Taxation should make sense.
Double taxation should be eliminated
Georgia should support, not punish, recreational boating.
Counties should not rely on boats to prop up property tax rolls.


Sign and share this petition to demand reform now.

Support now

35


The Decision Makers

Brian Kemp
Georgia Governor
Brad Raffensperger
Georgia Secretary of State
Petition updates

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Petition created on January 21, 2026