Depends on the brand. I buy the cheapies and they are about $4.75 a pack. Premiums are about $6. I live in the city of Philadelphia, and the tax is higher. If you can, you are better off buying cartons in Delaware. I'm currently visiting my folks in Washington state, and the cheapies here are $6.75/pk. Premiums are $8.25/pk. So I guess we Pennsylvanians should stop complaining about the cost! LOL!
It can range anywhere from 30 Dollars to about 60, Depending on the brand you want. Also, it depends where you are within the state, Central PA seems to be cheaper rather than it's counterparts of Northern and southern. Hope I helped.
Non major brands (Pall Mall, Mavericks, ext.,) are about $4.50
Major brands (Marbolo, Camel, ext.,) about $5.50
Newports can be up to $6 something with tax.
Non major brands are around $48/carton
Major brands are around $75/carton
there between 5.00 to 5.50 for name brand. it depaends on the store.
$5.52 for Newports PLUS tax
20 shekel
$48.60 plus tax
As of 2017, prices included a $2.60/ pack excise tax and pushed carton prices over $40 in locations not subject to additional city taxes. The per-pack price ranges from $4 for off-brands to $5 or more for name brands.
Well it depends all on what cigarettes you smoke. For newports its about 60 bucks for a carton
In 1953, a carton of cigarettes cost approximately $0. 25 cents. The federal tax on a carton of cigarettes was $0. 08 cents.
Depends on where you buy them. In Moscow ID, a carton is $27.45; in Pullman WA, a carton is $48.97.
http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20090317/BUSINESS/903170383/1008/ARCHIVES Depending on the brand: 10-pack carton of Camel cigarettes was selling for $37 Doral cigarettes were selling for $30 Estimated that a brand-name carton of cigarettes will cost about $40 on April 1, up from about $28 a week ago
How much is a cartoon of cigarettes cost at Walgreens
People are always going to seek out low-cost cigarettes," says Patrick ... carton for $34.70 less than what they'd pay in California. ...
$25.00
Nebraska
98$
no. much less.