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🧾 SD · Tax, title, fees & insurance

Cost to buy a car in South Dakota

South Dakota charges a flat 4% motor-vehicle excise tax and weight-based registration, one of the cheaper overall states to title a car.

What does it really cost to buy a car in South Dakota?

South Dakota applies a 4% 4% motor vehicle excise tax to a vehicle purchase, a $10 title fee and about $75 to register, with no cap on dealer doc fees. On a $35,000 car that's roughly $1,985 in taxes and fees — about 5.7% over the price, for an out-the-door total near $36,985. Minimum liability insurance is 25/50/25.

South Dakota vehicle costs & rules at a glance

Vehicle tax regime4% motor vehicle excise tax
Tax rate on a purchase4%no local add-on
Title fee$10
Registration (base)$75varies by weight/value/age
Dealer doc-fee capNo statutory cap
Min. liability insurance25/50/25state minimum
Annual EV fee$50

Out-the-door price on a $35,000 car

Here's how the taxes and fees stack up on a $35,000 vehicle with no trade-in. Swap in your own price and trade-in with the calculator below.

Vehicle price$35,000
Sales / use tax on $35,000$1,400
Dealer doc fee$500
Title fee$10
Registration (base)$75
Total taxes & fees$1,985
Out-the-door price$36,985

Modeled estimate, not a dealer quote. Registration is a base figure that varies by the vehicle.

Minimum car insurance in South Dakota

To drive legally in South Dakota you need at least 25/50/25 liability coverage: $25,000 in bodily-injury liability per person, $50,000 per accident, and $25,000 in property damage. State minimums are the legal floor — they often don't cover a serious crash, so many drivers carry more.

Run your own South Dakota numbers

Enter 4% as the tax rate, $75 for registration and title, and the dealer's doc fee to match South Dakota.

Your numbers

Total taxes & fees

$2,930

9.2% over price

Out-the-door price

$34,930

Sales tax

$2,080

Taxable amount (after trade-in)$32,000
Registration & title$350
Dealer doc fee$500

Insight — The advertised price is rarely what you pay. Sales tax plus registration, title and doc fees commonly add 8–12% on top. Negotiate the doc fee where it isn't capped, and always agree on the out-the-door number, not the sticker.

What if Vehicle price changes?

Vehicle priceTotal taxes & fees
$20,000 $2,150
$30,000 $2,800
$40,000 $3,450
$50,000 $4,100
$60,000 $4,750

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Good to know

State-specific answers for buying and registering a car in South Dakota.

How much is car sales tax in South Dakota?

South Dakota applies a 4% 4% motor vehicle excise tax with no local add-on. On a $35,000 car the state portion is about $1,400.

What are the minimum car insurance requirements in South Dakota?

South Dakota's minimum liability limits are 25/50/25 — that's $25,000 bodily injury per person, $50,000 per accident and $25,000 property damage. These are legal minimums; higher limits are usually worth the small extra premium.

What's the real out-the-door price on a $35,000 car in South Dakota?

Roughly $36,985. That's the $35,000 price plus about $1,985 in taxes and fees — state vehicle tax of $1,400, the dealer's doc fee, a $10 title fee and about $75 to register.

Does South Dakota charge an extra fee for electric vehicles?

Yes. South Dakota charges about $50 a year in EV registration fees, meant to offset the fuel taxes EV drivers don't pay.

Where these figures come from

State-specific figures are compiled from each state's Department of Revenue / Motor Vehicles (tax regime, rate, title and registration schedules), the state Department of Insurance and NAIC compilations (statutory minimum liability limits), and the Tax Foundation (sales-tax rates). Liability minimums are statutory and the most precise values here; registration and title fees are representative base amounts that vary by a vehicle's weight, value, age and county; doc-fee caps and EV fees reflect the latest 2025–26 published amounts. All figures are estimates for guidance, not quotes or legal advice — verify current amounts with the relevant state agency before you buy.

Sources: State motor-vehicle & revenue agencies · Tax Foundation · National Association of Insurance Commissioners