Snowmobiles operating in the state must be registered with the Department of Licensing (DOL) and must display a snowmobile decal. A vintage snowmobile is defined as a snowmobile that was manufactured at least 30 years ago. The annual registration fee for vintage snowmobiles is $12. The registration fees are deposited in the Snowmobile Account which is used for snowmobile-related programs and activities.
In addition to the annual registration fee, a vintage snowmobile registration transaction is also subject to the following annual fees:
The total of these combined fees means that generally a vintage snowmobile is subject to $25.25 in annual fees.
According to DOL, there were 204 vintage snowmobiles registered in fiscal year 2023.
The bill as referred to committee not considered.
A new permanent vintage snowmobile registration option is created. A vintage snowmobile in good working order used only for participation in club activities, exhibitions, tours, and parades, and for occasional pleasure use, may be issued a permanent vintage registration. A snowmobile with a permanent vintage registration is exempt from annual registration renewal requirements.
The fee for the permanent vintage snowmobile registration is $70.00 which is distributed as follows:
The permanent vintage snowmobile registration transaction would also be subject to the $4.50 filing fee, the $0.50 license service fee, and the $0.25 license plate technology fee. The one-time combined fees for the newly created permanent vintage snowmobile registration totals $75.25.
A vintage snowmobile with a permanent vintage registration must display a vintage snowmobile decal assigned by DOL. A violation of these requirements is a traffic infraction with a maximum fine of $150.
The permanent vintage registration expires when the vintage snowmobile changes ownership, is permanently removed from the state, or is otherwise disposed of.
PRO: Vintage snowmobiles are special and there is a group of individuals that want to keep them because of their historic value. Some of these vintage snowmobiles also have personal significance. This bill gives the vintage snowmobile owners an additional option, not a requirement, to get a permanent vintage registration. The cost and relatively small revenue might be mitigated by the fact that some vintage snowmobilers might not be registering now. If these vintage snowmobilers start registering under the new system, there would be a positive fiscal impact.