I am writing to seek clarification regarding the eligibility criteria for the electric vehicle (EV) tax credit, particularly concerning specific income parameters and cosigning arrangements.
My understanding is that the current stipulations set an income ceiling of $300,000 for married couples filing jointly, which my parents exceed. However, as an individual filer whose income falls within the qualifying range, I am exploring the possibility of strategically leveraging my eligibility status.
One avenue under consideration involves a cosigning scenario with my father for the purchase. This approach prompts two pivotal questions about the tax credit's applicability:
In a cosigning arrangement, would the income eligibility criteria be based on my individual income, thereby making the purchase eligible for the EV tax credit despite my parents' typically non-qualifying joint income?
Should we meet the eligibility prerequisites, is there a provision allowing my father, as a cosigner, to claim the entirety of the tax credit? The rationale for this inquiry stems from the higher tax liability associated with his income, positioning him to potentially harness the full extent of the tax credit, a scenario less likely in my case due to a comparatively lower tax burden.
Your insights into these matters will be immensely valuable in our decision-making process surrounding this potential investment.
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@jwglyph co-signing (presumably the loan) is immaterial to how the tax credit works.
Please restate your question(s) in context of whose name is on the title. THAT is what matters.
Well in which scenario will it be possible? Whose name being on the title isn't much of an issue. Both names can be on the title or only just one of us, either way is possible.
@jwglyph one of the requirements is that the auto is for YOUR personal use. So if your name is on the title and the auto is for your parent's personal use, then you are not eligible for the credit.
it works if you buy the car and it is for YOUR personal use.... and that assumes that your tax liabiltiy (line 22 on Form 1040) exceeds $7500 prior to the credit - otherwise, your income is not high enough to consume the entire credit.
Be serious, the IRS is smarter than all of us. Everytime you think of a scheming way to get the credit, the IRS is one step ahead of all of us.
Congress did not authorize the tax credit to people making over $300,000 per year as they don't need help buying the car - they can afford it in Congress' view.
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/credits-for-new-clean-vehicles-purchased-in-2023-or-after
To qualify, you must:
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