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The $2,417 is not for the car. Most of it is from the sales tax table. You pay sales tax on almost everything you buy. The sales tax table allows you to deduct an average amount of sales tax for someone with your income and family size. If you provide the following information I can try to figure out how much the sales tax table allows you to deduct.
@arvind-doraiswam wrote:
Is this the sales tax table you speak about - https://apps.irs.gov/app/stdc/stdc.html?
The link that you posted doesn't work because you copied it after you had started going through the calculator, but yes, that's the IRS sales tax table. The tables are also in the IRS Instructions for Schedule A, starting on page 14. Here's the link for the start of the Sales Tax Deduction Calculator on the IRS web site.
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/individuals/sales-tax-deduction-calculator
@arvind-doraiswam wrote:
That works out to a bit less than what Turbo Tax calculated
Remember that the deduction that TurboTax calculates is the amount from the IRS table plus the amount that you entered for the car.
Your sales tax deduction is the amount from the IRS sales tax table plus the tax you paid on the car. The amount from the sales tax table depends on what state you are in, your income, and your family size.
Thank You for your reply. I'm just a little concerned I've done something wrong. This is not a new car, I only paid 6000$ but am getting back 2417$ of it as a sales tax credit, even though I paid no sales tax (apart from some small amount at the DMV).
Does the fact that it is a used car not count?
The $2,417 is not for the car. Most of it is from the sales tax table. You pay sales tax on almost everything you buy. The sales tax table allows you to deduct an average amount of sales tax for someone with your income and family size. If you provide the following information I can try to figure out how much the sales tax table allows you to deduct.
Thanks - I think that makes sense and sorry for the delay, I got busy yesterday. Is this the sales tax table you speak about - https://apps.irs.gov/app/stdc/stdc.html?
That works out to a bit less than what Turbo Tax calculated but I guess that depends on the exact amount?
@arvind-doraiswam wrote:
Is this the sales tax table you speak about - https://apps.irs.gov/app/stdc/stdc.html?
The link that you posted doesn't work because you copied it after you had started going through the calculator, but yes, that's the IRS sales tax table. The tables are also in the IRS Instructions for Schedule A, starting on page 14. Here's the link for the start of the Sales Tax Deduction Calculator on the IRS web site.
https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/individuals/sales-tax-deduction-calculator
@arvind-doraiswam wrote:
That works out to a bit less than what Turbo Tax calculated
Remember that the deduction that TurboTax calculates is the amount from the IRS table plus the amount that you entered for the car.
Ah that all ties in then - thank you so much and that makes sense. This is a flat rate that I get then; the other alternative would be to keep all the receipts etc etc over the year which sounds very tedious 🙂 but could earn me more, who knows?
Is that understanding right?
Yes, that's right.
Adding up the sales tax on all your receipts for the year could come out to more that what the IRS table gives you, but it could also come out to less, in which case the effort is wasted.
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