If you’re thinking of buying a car this year, get the one that fits your life – school drop-offs, Costco runs, weekend escapes, and then make the financing earn its…
If you’re thinking of buying a car this year, get the one that fits your life – school drop-offs, Costco runs, weekend escapes, and then make the financing earn its…
If you’re thinking of buying a car this year, get the one that fits your life – school drop-offs, Costco runs, weekend escapes, and then make the financing earn its keep. Thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), a few changes actually help your personal taxes, and this is one of them: from 2025-2028, the interest on a first-lien loan for a new U.S.-assembled vehicle can reduce your tax bill even if you take the standard deduction 2025 - so long as your income’s in range and the VIN makes it onto your return. No tricks, just timing, clean paperwork, and not letting the finance desk rush you.

Congress snuck in a brand new, above the line deduction for personal auto loan interest. Not business. Personal. And yes, even if you take the standard deduction. (No, your dealer’s lease pitch didn’t come with that memo.) The law lives in Section 70203 of the “One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act” (now Public Law 119 21) and the IRS has a plain English fact sheet to match.
A temporary rule lets many people deduct interest on new personal car loans for tax years 2025-2028, capped at $10,000 of interest per year. You do not have to itemize. Leases don’t qualify. Used cars don’t qualify. The vehicle’s final assembly must be in the U.S. And there’s a MAGI phase out that quietly kneecaps higher earners. (Details below; yes, they made it complicated, of course they did.)
This isn’t a box checking line in the software. It’s a planning item that lives at the intersection of income projections, car selection, lien structure, and purchase timing. If your average CPA default is “we’ll file whatever you already did,” you’ll either miss it or accidentally trip a disqualifier (hello, lease). Strategic work wins here; compliance alone does not. (Respectfully: if the plan is “we’ll see what the software allows,” that’s not a plan, that’s a vibe.)
The law reduces your otherwise allowable deduction by $200 for every $1,000 (or part of $1,000) that your MAGI exceeds $100k single / $200k MFJ. Because the annual cap is $10,000, the benefit fully phases out over a $50,000 band, i.e., at $150k single / $250k MFJ you’re out. MAGI = AGI plus any amounts excluded under §§ 911, 931, or 933 (foreign/territory income adjustments).

You’re generally over the cap. So either get under it intentionally, or accept that this one isn’t your hill.
Max pre-tax: 401(k)/403(b)/457, HSA, and – if you’re a business owner, Solo 401(k)/SEP or a cash balance plan. If you control comp (S Corp), keep comp reasonable and fund the plan. These levers hit AGI/MAGI directly. Don’t starve cash flow or play games with “reasonable comp.”
Sabbatical, partial year retirement, a heavy pre-tax funding year – interest is front loaded, so start the loan early in your qualifying year to capture more deductible interest. Translation: if you have a dip year between now and 12/31/2028, that’s your buy window.
Title/loan personally (keeps this deduction alive). Have your S Corp/LLC reimburse mileage under an accountable plan. You preserve the personal interest deduction and still get business value via the standard mileage rate. Just don’t double count interest if you ever switch to actual expense; allocate cleanly. (The statute requires personal use, not business or commercial use.)
Delay a bonus, push an invoice, accelerate ordinary deductions inside the business. Pair with retirement plan moves to nudge MAGI under the line. Caveat: don’t create bigger problems (EBL caps, basis, or timing that messes with other goals).
If rates drop, a no cash out refi can keep the interest qualified, but only up to the refinanced balance, not new cash out. Also: try to finish the loan by 2028; interest after that isn’t deductible.
Reality check: At a 24% bracket, $3,000 of interest saves $720. Nice, but don’t twist your entire life into a pretzel for $720. If the move is only rational because of this deduction, it’s probably irrational.
There is a short window to stack: the federal new clean vehicle credit (30D) and used EV credit (25E) end for vehicles “acquired” after Sept. 30, 2025 under this same law. “Acquired” means a binding written contract + payment by 9/30 – delivery can be later. After that, the EV credits go dark under current guidance. So if your plan was “buy U.S. assembled EV + deduct car loan interest + take the EV credit,” the window exists- but it’s brief.
You’re not late. Keep the lender’s statement, track MAGI, and make sure the VIN makes it onto the return. The window runs through 2028. (And yes, you’ll probably need to nudge your CPA to check the new § 163(h)(4) rules.)
This isn’t a loophole; it’s a window. Used right, it trims cash taxes for four years. Used sloppy, it disappears at filing time. Average CPAs stop at compliance. Strategic advisors coordinate income, entity choices, and documentation so you actually keep the benefit, the same mindset we use on S corp basis, EBL caps, and bonus depreciation timing.
Ask one question:
“What’s our plan to use (or intentionally ignore) the 2025–2028 auto interest deduction based on my income and the car I’m considering?”
Bring their answer into chat and we’ll tighten it up before you sign anything.
Ask your average CPA one question: “What’s our plan to use (or intentionally ignore) the 2025–2028 auto-interest deduction based on my income and the car I’m considering?” Bring their answer into Chat and we’ll tighten it up before you sign anything.
Written by Jose Ortiz, CPA, CTC
Jose is the founder of The Scale Collective and a strategic tax advisor to high-earning entrepreneurs and real estate investors. He helps clients design forward-thinking tax plans that
align with their business goals, not just their past returns. If you’re building something and want to make sure your tax strategy keeps up, reach out or subscribe for more insights.
(Statute: “No tax on car loan interest,” MAGI phase-out, VIN, U.S. final assembly, and non-itemizer rule: H.R. 1 (119th), Sec. 70203 & related amendments; EV credit terminations at Subchapter A, Sec. 70501–70503. Congress.gov+1. Consumer explainer: CBS MoneyWatch overview updated July 14, 2025. CBS News)
Originally published on Substack.
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