FlasherZ
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2022
- Threads
- 9
- Messages
- 915
- Reaction score
- 1,023
- Location
- St. Louis Metro
- Vehicles
- F-150 Lightning, Tesla Model X, F250 SD diesel 6.0
Since it's a tax credit, it gets aligned with the IRS, and the IRS only cares about in-service date because that's when the accounting and tax stuff all starts, and so it naturally gets aligned with what they're familiar with.what congress should realize is that there are tens of thousands of EVs that are ALREADY ORDERED, and customers have NO CONTROL over delivery dates - so, those folks should be able to span the gap and use WHICHEVER of the bills that works best for them.
I got burned by this with the very first version of the guidance for the 30D credit which allowed Neighborhood Electric Vehicles to receive a tax credit at nearly the entire price of the vehicle. Long story short, IRS changed the rules in October 2009, effective January 2010, to reduce that credit substantially. My NEV ordered in summer 2009 didn't deliver until March, 2010. I filed for the credit anyway based on the order date, was audited, went to tax court, and stipulated dismissal when many others in same condition were losing case after case. I paid the extra 2009 tax, and filed an amended 2010 return to get at least a portion of it back.
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