Wednesday, October 26, 2011

How to Avoid Cell Phone Taxes: Save an instant 16% on your monthly cell bill

How Expensive Are Washington Cell Phone Taxes?
Washington charges 23% on top of everyone's cell phone bill!  ( Washington is 2nd worst in the nation)  Compare 23% that with residents of Oregon (6.5%) or Nevada (7%) and you start realize Washington is taxing cell phones like cigarettes.

Understanding How AT&T Determines What Tax Rate Your Bill Gets
A Forbes article explains that cell phone companies determine what tax to apply to your account based on the "billing address."  For example, you live in Washington, you have your bill sent to your home, you get Washington State's 23% cell tax.  If you live in Las Vegas, you have your bill sent to your Vegas home, you get taxed at Nevada's 7% cell rate.

But What If....
You live in Washington, but have Las Vegas, Nevada as your billing address.  You get Nevada's 7% cell tax.  If you don't know someone in Vegas, just turn on paperless billing on your account.

To recap:  Saving 16% today
By changing your billing address to a dummy address in Vegas, and enabling paperless billing two things will happen instantly:
1  You'll start receiving all your bills via your email account.
2.  Your bill will be charged Nevada tax rates and you'll save 16% off your cell phone bill (which could be a lot of money if you have a family or business plan)

It took me only a few minutes online to find the right spot to change it (It can be a dummy address; the zip code has to match up with the address)

I'm currently spending $316 a year in cell taxes alone as a single user!  This will reduce it to $96, saving me $220 a year -- enough to buy a new iPhone.  Every year.

Calculating The Savings in 7 seconds
Take your current total bill (with taxes) and multiply it by 1.56 and that's what you'll save each year going forward in taxes!

Monday, October 17, 2011

What does it cost to leave a light bulb on all night?

Wonder what it costs to leave a light on all night? How much money is bleeding out of your wallet?
 
I polled 12 college educated friends.  The answers varied widely from $0.10-$5.00/night.  The average was $1.17. It’s nice to be educated. The reality is surprising.  It costs $.03 to leave a light on all night.  Lacking data, best guessers are off by 300%, and most people are unknowingly exaggerating the real cost energy by 3900%.  That’s a problem because it causes people to focus their time trying to save money when they’re really saving pennies instead of dollars.

Here is a very easy to use energy calculator for a variety of home appliances.  In Benton County, WA rates are $.0649 (plug into the calculator).

Interesting data that puts expenses in perspective.  How much electricity does it cost to:
Leave a 60W light on all night? $0.03/night
Run a dryer, full load, on high?  $0.19/load
Leave a 32” TV on all night?     $0.14
--etc--

Bottom-line:  electricity is cheap.  Really cheap.  Much cheaper than people think.  It’s a human tendency to focus on expenses you can see, but ignore the “unseen” expenses.  Things that people see (the hallway light left on at night while they’re lying in bed) “seem” expensive.  For example, leave a light on every night for a year (and it’s unlikely a light will be left of 365 days in a row) will cost $11.  However, most people don’t know what they pay each year for house insurance.  A little shopping around on house insurance could save you $150, or $250 on car insurance.  Another example of a killer unseen expense: Depreciation.  Buy a new car and depreciation could be an average of -$2,400 a year for the first 5 years.  Make that mistake and you might as well leave 20 lights on 24 hours a day for 18 years.  My house barely has more than 20 60watt candecent lights!

Do a little research and make sure you are making data-based decisions.  Over a long period of time it will make a huge financial difference.

Stepping up the electricity awareness another notch:
In some areas, power companies charge up to 4 times more for electricity at different times of the day.  It’s called peak vs non-peak hours.  For example, my friend Janalyne is moving to Las Vegas, Nevada.  Vegas peak time (1pm-7pm) during summer is 4 times more expensive than non-peak times.  (Source)  This means you’re much less expensive to cool off the house at noon than at 1pm, or to dry all the clothes at 7:01pm)

Benton County, WA doesn’t have peak rates.  If you live in another county, to find the cost of electricity, simply call the utility company on your electric bill and ask, “What does electricity cost per kilowatt hours?”  Also ask, “Is there a peak rate?  If so, when are the dates/times peak rates are in effect?”  You now know more real life data about electricity costs than 90% of the population – now you can make decisions on reality instead of an mis-leading sense.  Easy.