Mine is a 2022 Lariat and my fathers is a 2023 Pro. Both were reserved in my name.Are your cars 2022 model or 2023 model?
There is no maximum.Full tax rebate $7500. I’m applying for two of them. That’s the maximum.
You have to have enough in federal Taxes taken out of your salary to get the full $7500.
You cannot take a tax credit for a truck titled in his name.Mine is a 2022 Lariat and my fathers is a 2023 Pro. Both were reserved in my name.
The model year is irrelevant from a tax perspective.Are your cars 2022 model or 2023 model?
Both are in my name.There is no maximum.
Has nothing to do with your withholding.
You cannot take a tax credit for a truck titled in his name.
There is no limit on the number of vehicles.Both are in my name.
I meant a maximum of $7500 per vehicle, not maximum income.
I thought there were only two spots on the federal tax forms to take advantage of, two EVs?
I also thought if you didn't make enough income to justify the full $7500 in tax credit, you can only claim the amount you owe/paid in taxes?
Both titles will be in my name and both are insured through my insurance. I definitely make enough to claim the liability on both. I won’t have a problem. It’s all legal.There is no limit on the number of vehicles.
You need enough tax liability to use the tax credit(s). What you withheld or paid in estimated taxes is irrelevant.
Seems like you should talk to a tax expert. Unless you've titled both vehicles, and have the insurance in your name, this is pretty iffy. Make sure you read the IRS rule.
Thanks for the detailed information that you got from DOE. So should I consider it yes/no/can't say as per your understanding?I asked the same question to the department of energy. Here is their response.
In short, we think the 2023 Ford F150 Lighting will be added to the list of eligible vehicles but we cannot say for sure when.
Since the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, it has become increasingly difficult to provide simple definitive answers to questions like yours. However, we think it will be listed because the 2022 model was listed as eligible and it remains unchanged for the 2023 model year as far as we know. Like the 2022 model, the 2023 Ford F150 Lighting model also meets the new requirement for final assembly in North America as noted on this NHTSA 583 Report for 2023:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/part-583-american-automobile-labeling-act-reports
The EPA has not yet released data for the 2023 Ford F150 Lightning to post on fueleconomy.gov. We think that as soon as the EPA releases that data to us, it will get added to the following list which the IRS is currently directing people to:
https://afdc.energy.gov/laws/electric-vehicles-for-tax-credit
I hope this is at least somewhat helpful.
Sincerely,
Fueleconomy.gov