Deductions & credits

Annual car registration fees may be deductible on your federal income taxes, but only under certain circumstances.

  • The portion of the registration fee that is charged based on the vehicle's value - as opposed to its size, age or other characteristics - can generally be claimed as a deduction.
  • If part of your registration is indeed deductible, you must itemize your deductions to claim it, rather than using the standard deduction.

Value-based fees

Every state has its own way of calculating the registration fee on a vehicle, and those calculations typically take several factors into account. For example, say your annual car registration fee is based on a formula that charges:

  • $2 per 100 pounds of vehicle weight,
  • $1 per $1,000 of value,
  • a flat $10 for license plate tabs, and
  • $35 in other taxes and charges.

If you had a 4,200-pound vehicle with a value estimated by the state at $25,000, then your fee would be $154.

  • (4,200-pound vehicle weight ÷ 100) x $2 = $84
  • ($25,000 vehicle value ÷ $1,000) x $1 = $25
  • $84 weight fee + $25 value fee + $10 license plate tabs + $35 taxes and charges = $154 total fee

Of that $154, only $25 would be an itemized deduction, because that's the only portion based on the actual value of the vehicle.

Annual fees

To be deductible, a value-based auto registration fee must also be assessed on an annual basis. What matters here is the frequency with which the tax is charged to you, not the frequency with which it's actually collected. A state could collect half of the fee every six months, for example, or allow you to pay two years' worth of fees at a time, but you can still take a deduction as long as the fees are assessed on a per-year basis.

 

TurboTax will help you determine how much of your registration fees are deductible, if any.

 

Here is a TurboTax article about state vehicle registration fees.