The new car loan interest deduction enacted under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act lets taxpayers deduct up to $10,000 of qualifying car loan interest per year for tax years 2025 through 2028 — but the eligibility rules are narrower than most buyers assume. The vehicle must be brand new (used vehicles don’t qualify under any circumstances), it must have undergone final assembly in the United States, and the loan must have been originated after December 31, 2024. The vehicle also must have a gross vehicle weight rating under 14,000 pounds.
The trickiest piece is the final-assembly rule. It’s a per-VIN determination, not a per-model one — meaning two vehicles of the same model from the same year can have different qualifying status depending on which plant assembled them. Before assuming a particular new car qualifies, verify the final assembly location through the NHTSA VIN Decoder, which is the official lookup tool the IRS references for this determination.
What Qualifies as a “New” Vehicle
| Vehicle Status | Eligible? |
|---|---|
| Brand new from dealer (never titled) | Yes (if other rules met) |
| Demo or loaner vehicle (never sold but driven) | Generally no — confirm with dealer and tax pro |
| Certified Pre-Owned | No |
| Used (any age, any condition) | No |
| Lease buyout | No — leases don’t generate qualifying interest |
The “new vehicle” rule is strict. A vehicle that’s been previously titled — even briefly to a dealer — typically doesn’t qualify. Get the title status confirmed in writing before assuming.
What Qualifies as a “Vehicle”
| Vehicle Type | Eligible? |
|---|---|
| Passenger car | Yes |
| SUV | Yes |
| Minivan or van | Yes |
| Pickup truck | Yes (under 14,000 lbs GVWR) |
| Motorcycle | Yes |
| Recreational vehicle (RV) | Typically no — most exceed weight limit |
| Commercial vehicles | No — different rules apply |
| ATVs/UTVs | No — not road-licensed passenger vehicles |
The 14,000-pound weight limit eliminates heavy-duty pickups, large work trucks, and most commercial vehicles. Standard half-ton, three-quarter-ton, and even most one-ton pickups stay under this limit.
The Final Assembly Rule (the Tricky Part)
The vehicle must have undergone its final assembly in the United States. This rule is determined at the VIN level — identical-looking vehicles from the same manufacturer in the same model year can have different qualifying status.
Examples:
- A Tesla Model 3 assembled in Fremont, California → qualifies
- A Tesla Model 3 assembled in Shanghai → doesn’t qualify
- A BMW X5 assembled in Spartanburg, South Carolina → qualifies
- A BMW 3-Series assembled in Germany → doesn’t qualify
- A Honda CR-V assembled in East Liberty, Ohio → qualifies
- A Honda CR-V assembled in Canada → doesn’t qualify
The rule isn’t about the manufacturer’s nationality — it’s about where the specific vehicle was assembled. Foreign-headquartered automakers with US plants produce many qualifying vehicles. Some American-headquartered automakers produce many non-qualifying vehicles in Mexican or Canadian plants.
How to Verify Before You Buy
- Get the VIN of the specific vehicle you’re considering
- Enter it into the NHTSA VIN Decoder
- Look for the “Plant Country” field (must be United States)
- Confirm the model year is current and the vehicle hasn’t been titled before
Don’t take a dealer’s word for it. Verify the VIN yourself.
Income Phaseouts
Even with a qualifying vehicle, the deduction phases out at higher incomes:
| Filing Status | Phaseout Begins | Fully Phased Out |
|---|---|---|
| Single | $100,000 MAGI | $150,000 MAGI |
| Married Filing Jointly | $200,000 MAGI | $250,000 MAGI |
If your income falls in the phaseout range, the deduction reduces gradually. Above the upper threshold, you can’t claim any of it.
A Strategic Buying Move
For buyers indifferent between two trim levels or two similar models, the assembly rule could tip the math. A US-assembled SUV at $42,000 versus a non-US-assembled competitor at $40,000 might actually cost the same after tax savings, depending on income bracket.
This isn’t a reason to buy a vehicle you wouldn’t otherwise want. It’s a reason to check the VIN on vehicles you’d buy anyway.
What Doesn’t Qualify
- Used vehicles, regardless of where assembled
- Lease payments (leases aren’t loans)
- Refinanced auto loans where the original loan didn’t qualify
- Interest paid by your employer
- Loans on commercial vehicles or vehicles over 14,000 lbs GVWR
Bottom Line
The new car loan interest deduction is real and meaningful for buyers of new, US-assembled vehicles in tax years 2025–2028. The “new” rule and the “US assembly” rule together eliminate many otherwise-similar options, so verification matters. Check the VIN on any vehicle you’re considering — the difference between qualifying and not qualifying is a few thousand dollars over the life of an average loan.
