You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
You have 2 federal tax deductions related to the purchase of a new car. However, you will only be able to claim these taxes on your federal income tax return if they were paid during the calendar year related to tax year for which you are filing.
Please note that you would only be able to claim these deductions if you itemize so if these are your only itemized deductions, you will want to just take the standard deduction.
Car Registration Deduction - the total amount of your registration fee is not deductible, just the portion that the state charged you for taxes based on the value of your vehicle. Not all state's registration fees are deductible. Please check this link to see if Is your Car Registration Deductible?
To enter your car registration fees in TurboTax Online for TurboTax Online sign-in, click Here) or Desktop, please follow these steps:
Sales Tax Deduction - You have the choice to deduct the general sales tax for your state (as opposed to state income taxes) and include the sales tax for all your major purchases. TurboTax will guide you in determining which of these provides you will the larger deduction.
To enter this transaction in TurboTax, log into your tax return (for TurboTax Online sign-in, click Here and click on "Take me to my return") type "Sales Tax Deduction" in the search bar then select "jump to Sales Tax Deduction". TurboTax will guide you in entering this information.
Alternatively, to enter your sales taxes and major purchases in TurboTax Online or Desktop, please follow these steps:
As noted above: you are only allowed the major purchase additional sales tax amount if the sales rate you used for your general state sales tax rate is the same sales tax rate on your major purchase.
So if you used a 8% general sales tax rate for your state, this would have to be the same sales tax rate for your vehicle purchase. Just make sure that when you enter this information under the "Major Purchase" section, that your sales tax divided by your cost is your general state's sales tax rate
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
theDoc
New Member
stellarun21
Level 3
cassieaitken1
Level 1
sabrinaroldan1984
New Member
ajolins1
New Member