Ciancagl
Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Long post, but hopefully valuable so nobody is disappointed when they don’t get the full EV Tax Credit. For starters, the EV tax credit is a “non refundable” credit, unlike other credits like a Child Tax Credit.
Why is that important? If you don’t have enough “tax liability” in a given year, you don’t get the full credit, and refundable credits are deducted first. The federal taxes you’ve withheld on your paycheck don’t factor in either.
Basic Tax Example (without factoring any tax credits): If your Tax Liability is $10,000 and you withheld $14,000 throughout the year, you get a tax refund of $4,000.
Tax Example with 2 kids: Tax Liability of $10,000, withheld $14,000. Child tax credit (this year $3,600/kid) of $7,200 reduces your Tax Liability to $2,800. $14,000 - $2,800 = your refund of $11,200 (Biden is prepaying $3,600 in advance so at tax time your refund will be $7,600)
Now we’ll factor in the EV credit. That’s deducted AFTER all other credits. So, following the above example, after factoring in the Child Tax credit, your Tax Liability is only $2,800.
The EV tax credit is $7,500. Since it’s a “non refundable” credit, you can’t go past $0…..so now the $7,500 credit you thought you were getting is only $2,800.
Just something to keep in mind!!!! If you typically do pre tax contributions into an HSA account you may want to pass on that next year if you plan to buy so that you have as much Tax Liability as possible. Wouldn’t recommend changing any pre tax 401k contributions though.
Why is that important? If you don’t have enough “tax liability” in a given year, you don’t get the full credit, and refundable credits are deducted first. The federal taxes you’ve withheld on your paycheck don’t factor in either.
Basic Tax Example (without factoring any tax credits): If your Tax Liability is $10,000 and you withheld $14,000 throughout the year, you get a tax refund of $4,000.
Tax Example with 2 kids: Tax Liability of $10,000, withheld $14,000. Child tax credit (this year $3,600/kid) of $7,200 reduces your Tax Liability to $2,800. $14,000 - $2,800 = your refund of $11,200 (Biden is prepaying $3,600 in advance so at tax time your refund will be $7,600)
Now we’ll factor in the EV credit. That’s deducted AFTER all other credits. So, following the above example, after factoring in the Child Tax credit, your Tax Liability is only $2,800.
The EV tax credit is $7,500. Since it’s a “non refundable” credit, you can’t go past $0…..so now the $7,500 credit you thought you were getting is only $2,800.
Just something to keep in mind!!!! If you typically do pre tax contributions into an HSA account you may want to pass on that next year if you plan to buy so that you have as much Tax Liability as possible. Wouldn’t recommend changing any pre tax 401k contributions though.
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