Vanessa A
Employee Tax Expert

Deductions & credits

I am assuming you are talking about a car and the car loan interest deduction?  If so, no, it does not count.  In order to claim the deduction, the car must be a new car and the loan must have originated during the tax year that you are filing.  

 

In order to claim this interest the following criteria must be met:

  • The car was purchased not leased
  • Final assembly occurred in the US
  • It is NOT a business use, but was purchased for personal use
  • It has a GVWR of less than 14,000lbs (car, truck, SUV, mini van or motorcycle)
  • Loan was originated in 2025 and must be secured by a lien on the vehicle or the title
  • Your income must be less than $100,000 if single or $200,000 if married filing jointly to receive the full deduction. 
  •  If your income is over $150,000 if single or $250,000 if Married filing jointly, you are not eligible

Note:  The interest deduction is capped at $10,000.  This is an above the line deduction, not a credit meaning it will lower your AGI and taxable income.  It will not be an amount that is refunded to you, but it could result in a refund by lowering your taxable income.  If you already received a refund of all of the money you had withheld, then you may not see a difference in your return.


 

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