12. Electric and Clean-Fuel Vehicles
Important Change
for 2002
Electric and clean-fuel vehicles. The maximum clean-fuel vehicle
deduction and qualified electric vehicle credit were scheduled to be 25% lower for 2002
and both were scheduled to be phased out completely by 2005. The full deduction and credit
are now allowed for qualified property placed in service in 2002 and 2003. The phaseout of
the deduction and the credit will begin in 2004, and no deduction or credit will be
allowed for property placed in service after 2006.
Introduction
You are allowed a limited deduction for the cost of clean-fuel vehicle property and
clean-fuel vehicle refueling property you place in service during the tax year. Also, you
are allowed a tax credit of 10% of the cost of any qualified electric vehicle you place in
service during the tax year.
You can take the
electric vehicle credit or the deduction for clean-fuel vehicle property regardless of
whether you use the vehicle in a trade or business. However, you can take a deduction for
clean-fuel vehicle refueling property only if you use the property in your trade or
business.
Topics
This chapter discusses:
- The deduction for clean-fuel vehicle property
- The deduction for clean-fuel vehicle refueling property
- Recapture of the deductions
- The electric vehicle credit
- Recapture of the credit
Useful Items
You may want to see:
Publication
- 463 Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses
- 544 Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets
- 946 How To Depreciate Property
Form (and Instructions)
- 8834 Qualified Electric Vehicle Credit
See chapter 14 for information about getting publications and forms.
Definitions
The following definitions apply throughout this chapter.
Clean-burning fuels. The
following are clean-burning fuels.
- Natural gas.
- Liquefied natural gas.
- Liquefied petroleum gas.
- Hydrogen.
- Electricity.
- Any other fuel that is at least 85% alcohol (any kind) or ether.
Motor vehicle. A motor vehicle
is any vehicle that has four or more wheels and is manufactured primarily for use on
public streets, roads, and highways. It does not include a vehicle operated
exclusively on a rail or rails.
Nonqualifying property. This
is property used in the following ways.
- Predominantly outside the United States.
- Predominantly to furnish lodging or in connection with the furnishing of lodging.
- By certain tax-exempt organizations.
- By governmental units or foreign persons or entities.
Deductions for
Clean-Fuel Vehicle
and Refueling Property
You are allowed a limited deduction for the cost of clean-fuel
vehicle property and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property. These deductions are
allowed only in the tax year you place the property in service.
You cannot claim these deductions for the part of the property's cost you claim as a
section 179 deduction. For information on the section 179 deduction, see Publication 946.
Deduction for Clean-Fuel
Vehicle Property
The deduction for this property may be claimed regardless of whether the property is
used in a trade or business.
Clean-fuel vehicle property. Clean-fuel
vehicle property is either of the following kinds of property.
- A motor vehicle (defined earlier) produced by an original equipment manufacturer and
designed to be propelled by a clean-burning fuel. The only part of a vehicle's basis that
qualifies for the deduction is the part attributable to:
- A clean-fuel engine that can use a clean-burning fuel,
- The property used to store or deliver the fuel to the engine, or
- The property used to exhaust gases from the combustion of the fuel.
- Any property installed on a motor vehicle (including installation costs) to enable it to
be propelled by a clean-burning fuel if:
- The property is an engine (or modification of an engine) that can use a clean-burning
fuel, or
- The property is used to store or deliver that fuel to the engine or to exhaust gases
from the combustion of that fuel.
For vehicles that may be propelled by both a clean-burning fuel and any other fuel,
your deduction is generally the additional cost of permitting the use of the clean-burning
fuel.
Clean-fuel
vehicle property does not include an electric vehicle that qualifies for the electric
vehicle credit, discussed later.
Qualified property. Your property must meet the following
requirements to qualify for the deduction.
- It must be acquired for your own use and not for resale.
- Its original use must begin with you.
- Either -
- The motor vehicle of which it is a part must satisfy any federal or state emissions
standards that apply to each fuel by which the vehicle is designed to be propelled, or
- It must satisfy any federal and state emissions certification, testing, and warranty
requirements that apply.
- It cannot be nonqualifying property, defined earlier.
Deduction limit. The maximum deduction you can claim for qualified
clean-fuel vehicle property with respect to any motor vehicle is one of the following.
- $50,000 for a truck or van with a gross vehicle weight rating over 26,000 pounds or for
a bus with a seating capacity of at least 20 adults (excluding the driver).
- $5,000 for a truck or van with a gross vehicle weight rating over 10,000 pounds but not
more than 26,000 pounds.
- $2,000 for a vehicle not included in (1) or (2).
Deduction for Clean-Fuel
Vehicle Refueling Property
Your property must meet the following requirements to qualify for this deduction.
- It must be depreciable property.
- Its original use must begin with you.
- It cannot be nonqualifying property, defined earlier.
Clean-fuel vehicle refueling property. Clean-fuel vehicle refueling property is any property (other than a building
or its structural components) used to do either of the following.
- Store or dispense a clean-burning fuel (defined earlier) into the fuel tank of a motor
vehicle propelled by the fuel, but only if the storage or dispensing is at the point where
the fuel is delivered into the tank.
- Recharge motor vehicles propelled by electricity, but only if the property is located at
the point where the vehicles are recharged.
Recharging property. This property includes any equipment
used to provide electricity to the battery of a motor vehicle propelled by electricity. It
includes low-voltage recharging equipment, high-voltage (quick) charging equipment, and
ancillary connection equipment such as inductive charging equipment. It does not include
property used to generate electricity, such as solar panels or windmills, and does not
include the battery used in the vehicle.
Deduction limit. The maximum deduction you can claim for clean-fuel
vehicle refueling property placed in service at one location is $100,000. To figure your
maximum deduction for any tax year, subtract from $100,000 the total you (or any related
person or predecessor) claimed for clean-fuel vehicle refueling property placed
in service at that location for all earlier years.
If the
deduction limit applies, you must specify on your tax return the property (and the portion
of the property's cost) you are using as a basis for the deduction.
Related persons. For
this purpose, the following are considered related persons.
- An individual and his or her brothers and sisters, half-brothers, half-sisters, spouse,
ancestors, and lineal descendants.
- An individual and a corporation if the individual owns, directly or indirectly, more
than 50% in value of the outstanding stock of the corporation.
- Two corporations that are members of the same controlled group as defined in section
267(f) of the Internal Revenue Code.
- A grantor and a fiduciary of any trust.
- Fiduciaries of two separate trusts if the same person is a grantor of both trusts.
- A fiduciary and a beneficiary of the same trust.
- A fiduciary and a beneficiary of two separate trusts if the same person is a grantor of
both trusts.
- A fiduciary of a trust and a corporation if the trust or a grantor of the trust owns,
directly or indirectly, more than 50% in value of the outstanding stock of the
corporation.
- A person and a tax-exempt educational or charitable organization that is controlled
directly or indirectly by that person or by members of the family of that person.
- A corporation and a partnership if the same persons own more than 50% in value of the
outstanding stock of the corporation and more than 50% of the capital or profits interest
in the partnership.
- Two S corporations or an S corporation and a regular corporation if the same persons own
more than 50% in value of the outstanding stock of each corporation.
- A partnership and a person if the person, directly or indirectly owns, more than 50% of
the capital or profits interests in the partnership.
- Two partnerships if the same persons own, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of the
capital or profits interest in both partnerships.
- An executor of an estate and a beneficiary of the estate.
To determine whether an individual directly or indirectly owns any of the outstanding
stock of a corporation, see Ownership of stock under Related Persons in
Publication 538.
How To Claim
the Deductions
How you claim the deductions for clean-fuel vehicle property and
clean-fuel vehicle refueling property depends on the use of the property and the
kind of income tax return you file.
Deduction for nonbusiness clean-fuel vehicle property by individuals.
Individuals can claim the deduction for clean-fuel vehicle property used for nonbusiness
purposes by including the deduction in the total on line 32 of Form 1040. Also, enter the
amount of your deduction and Clean-Fuel on the dotted line next to line 32. If
you use the vehicle partly for business, see the next two discussions.
Deduction for business clean-fuel vehicle property by employees.
Employees who use clean-fuel vehicle property for business, or partly for business and
partly for nonbusiness purposes, should include the entire deduction in the total on line
32 of Form 1040. Also, enter the amount of your deduction and Clean-Fuel on the
dotted line next to line 32.
Sole proprietors. Sole proprietors must claim deductions for
clean-fuel vehicle property and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property used for business on
the Other expenses line of either Schedule C (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form
1040). If clean-fuel vehicle property is used partly for nonbusiness purposes, claim the
nonbusiness part of the deduction as explained earlier under Deduction for nonbusiness
clean-fuel vehicle property by individuals.
Partnerships. Partnerships claim the deductions for clean-fuel
vehicle property and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property on line 20 of Form 1065.
S corporations. S corporations claim the deductions for clean-fuel
vehicle property and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property on line 19 of Form 1120S.
C corporations. C corporations claim the deductions for clean-fuel
vehicle property and clean-fuel vehicle refueling property on line 26 of Form 1120 (line
22 of Form 1120-A).
Recapture of
the Deductions
If the property ceases to qualify, you may have to recapture the
deduction. You recapture the deduction by including it, or part of it, in your
income.
Clean-Fuel Vehicle Property
You must recapture the deduction for clean-fuel vehicle property if the property ceases
to qualify within 3 years after the date you placed it in service. The property will cease
to qualify if it is changed in any of the following ways.
- It is modified so that it can no longer be propelled by a clean-burning fuel.
- It ceases to be a qualified clean-fuel vehicle property (for example, by failing to meet
emissions standards).
- It becomes nonqualifying property, defined earlier.
Sales or other dispositions. If you sell or otherwise dispose of the
vehicle within 3 years after the date you placed it in service and know or have reason to
know that it will be changed in any of the ways described above, you are subject to the
recapture rules. In other dispositions (including a disposition by reason of an accident
or other casualty), the recapture rules do not apply.
If the vehicle was subject to depreciation, the deduction (minus any recapture) is
considered depreciation when figuring the part of any gain from the disposition that is
ordinary income. See Publication 544 for more information on dispositions of depreciable
property.
Recapture amount. Figure your recapture amount by multiplying the
deduction by the following percentage.
- 100% if the recapture date is within the first full year after the date the vehicle was
placed in service.
- 662/3% if the recapture date is within the second full year after
the date the vehicle was placed in service.
- 331/3% if the recapture date is within the third full year after
the date the vehicle was placed in service.
Recapture date. The recapture date is generally the date of
the event that causes the recapture. However, the recapture date for an event described in
item (3), earlier, is the first day of the recapture year in which the event occurs.
How to report. How you report the recapture amount for clean-fuel
vehicle property as income depends on how you claimed the deduction for that property.
Deducted by individuals as nonbusiness-use property.
Include the amount on line 21 of Form 1040.
Deducted by employees as business-use property. Include the
amount on line 21 of Form 1040.
Deducted by sole proprietors as business-use property.
Include the amount on the Other income line of either Schedule C (Form 1040) or
Schedule F (Form 1040).
Partnerships and corporations (including S corporations).
Include the amount on the Other income line of the form you file.
Clean-Fuel Vehicle
Refueling Property
You must recapture the deduction for clean-fuel vehicle refueling property if the
property ceases to qualify at any time before the end of its depreciation recovery period.
The property will cease to qualify if it is changed in any of the following ways.
- It ceases to be a clean-fuel vehicle refueling property (for example, by being converted
to store and dispense gasoline).
- It is no longer used 50% or more in your trade or business.
- It becomes nonqualifying property, defined earlier.
Sales or other dispositions. If you sell or otherwise dispose of the
property before the end of its recovery period and know or have reason to know that it
will be changed in any of the ways described above, you are subject to the recapture
rules. In other dispositions (including a disposition by reason of an accident or other
casualty), the recapture rules do not apply.
The deduction (minus any recapture amount) is considered depreciation when figuring the
part of any gain from the disposition that is ordinary income. See Publication 544 for
more information on dispositions of depreciable property.
Recapture amount. Figure your recapture amount by multiplying the
deduction you claimed by the following fraction.
Total recovery period for the property |
_ |
Recovery years before the recapture year |
Total recovery period for the property |
How to report. How you report the recapture amount for clean-fuel
vehicle refueling property depends on how you claimed the deduction for that property.
Sole proprietors. Include the amount on the Other
income line of either Schedule C (Form 1040) or Schedule F (Form 1040).
Partnerships and corporations (including S corporations).
Include the amount on the Other income line of the form you file.
Basis Adjustments
You must reduce the basis of your clean-fuel vehicle property or clean-fuel vehicle
refueling property by the deduction claimed. If, in a later year, you must recapture part
or all of the deduction, increase the basis of the property by the amount recaptured. If
the property is depreciable property, you can recover this additional basis over the
property's remaining recovery period beginning with the tax year of recapture.
If you were
using the percentage tables to figure your depreciation on the property, you will not be
able to continue to do so. See Publication 946 for information on figuring your
depreciation without the tables.
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