Are you a conservative? That would explain it :lol:PRPremack said:We bought our Nissan Leaf in March of 2012. We completed form 8936 and included it with our tax return. We had no other tax credits. We wanted to know if anyone else is being denied the credit?
:lol: :lol: :lol:LTLFTcomposite said:Are you a conservative? That would explain it :lol:PRPremack said:We bought our Nissan Leaf in March of 2012. We completed form 8936 and included it with our tax return. We had no other tax credits. We wanted to know if anyone else is being denied the credit?
PRPremack said:We bought our Nissan Leaf in March of 2012. We completed form 8936 and included it with our tax return. We had no other tax credits. We wanted to know if anyone else is being denied the credit?
If you are talking about the alternative minimum tax, that isn't necessarily true. The alternative minimum tax may partially cut into, or completely eliminate your EV tax credit. It all depends.ml194152 said:You are not eligible for the EV tax credit if you are rich enough to have to pay the alternative tax.
and for the unknowing being that "rich" is not very unusualml194152 said:You are not eligible for the EV tax credit if you are rich enough to have to pay the alternative tax.
Stoaty said:If you are talking about the alternative minimum tax, that isn't necessarily true. The alternative minimum tax may partially cut into, or completely eliminate your EV tax credit. It all depends.
Stoaty said:If you are talking about the alternative minimum tax, that isn't necessarily true. The alternative minimum tax may partially cut into, or completely eliminate your EV tax credit. It all depends.ml194152 said:You are not eligible for the EV tax credit if you are rich enough to have to pay the alternative tax.
Just a quibble, but the dealer has nothing to do with it. If you lease with Nissan financing it is Nissan Motor Acceptance Corporation which owns the car and gets the $7500 tax credit. It doesn't matter, since NMAC passes the credit on to you.apvbguy said:not to seem to be telling the OP he shouldn't have purchased, but one big reason why many people lease is that the tax deals are applied to the price of the deal and the dealer has the problem of applying for and receiving the tax credit
sorry I wasn't more specific, you are correct the dealership is only acting as an agent for NMACplanet4ever said:Just a quibble, but the dealer has nothing to do with it. If you lease with Nissan financing it is Nissan Motor Acceptance Corporation which owns the car and gets the $7500 tax credit. It doesn't matter, since NMAC passes the credit on to you.apvbguy said:not to seem to be telling the OP he shouldn't have purchased, but one big reason why many people lease is that the tax deals are applied to the price of the deal and the dealer has the problem of applying for and receiving the tax credit
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