You would think that states such as California, , and New York, with sky-high prices for parking in the metropolitan area, would be the most expensive places to own and operate a car.
But while California comes in at No. 2 , New York is way down at No. 20. No. 1 is Georgia, followed by California and then Wyoming.
To determine the annual cost of operating a car in each state, Bankrate drew data from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners on average car-insurance costs, from CarMD.com on average repair costs and from Kelley Blue Book on taxes and fees. It estimated gasoline costs by using average pump prices from GasBuddy.com for 2012. Bankrate said it didn't include data on vehicle depreciation “since geography isn't a major factor in determining that cost.”
While lots of attention is given to fuel prices, the high gas prices can be offset by lower insurance premiums and the cost of taxes and fees. In fact, for the top five states on its list, gas prices varied from a high of $1,129 per year in No. 1 Georgia to a low of $811 in No. 5 Nevada.
And even though Alabama had the second-highest annual fuel cost ($1,284) after No. 3 Wyoming ($1,643), it ranked 34th on the list since repairs ($352), taxes and fees ($662) and insurance ($667) in the state are all below the U.S. averages of $353, $1,058 and $762, respectively.
Most expensive
Georgia ($4,233)
California ($3,966)
Wyoming ($3,938)
Rhode Island ($3,913)
Nevada ($3,886)
Least expensive
Oregon ($2,204)
Alaska ($2,227)
South Dakota ($2,343)
Montana ($2,660)
Indiana ($2,698)