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Disposition of a Car Print E-mail
IRS Tax Regulations

Will You Have a Gain or a Loss When You Change Vehicles?

If you dispose of your car, you may have a taxable gain or a deductible loss. The portion of any gain that is due to depreciation (including any section 179 or clean-fuel vehicle deduction) that you claimed on the car will be treated as ordinary income. However, you may not have to recognize a gain or loss if you dispose of the car because of a casualty, theft, or trade-in.

This section gives some general information about dispositions of cars. For information on how to report the disposition of your car, see Publication 544 on the IRS web site.

Casualty or theft. For a casualty or theft, a gain results when you receive insurance or other reimbursement that is more than your adjusted basis in your car. If you then spend all of the proceeds to acquire replacement property (a new car or repairs to the old car) within a specified period of time, you do not recognize any gain. Your basis in the replacement property is its cost minus any gain that is not recognized. See Publication 547 for more information.

Trade-in. When you trade in an old car for a new one, the transaction is considered a like-kind exchange. Generally, no gain or loss is recognized. (For exceptions, see chapter 1 of Publication 544.) In a trade-in situation, your basis in the new property is generally your adjusted basis in the old property plus any additional amount you pay. (See Unadjusted basis, earlier.)

Depreciation adjustment when you used the standard mileage rate. If you used the standard mileage rate for the business use of your car, depreciation was included in that rate. The rate of depreciation that was allowed in the standard mileage rate is shown in the chart that follows. You must reduce your basis in your car (but not below zero) by the amount of this depreciation.

 

These rates do not apply for any year in which the actual expenses method was used.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Depreciation

 

 

 

Year(s)

 

 

 

Rate per Mile

 

 

 

1994 - 1999

 

 

$ .12

 

 

1992 - 1993

 

 

.11 1/2

 

 

1989 - 1991

 

 

.11

 

 

1988

 

 

.10 1/2

 

 

1987

 

 

.10

 

 

1986

 

 

.09

 

 

1983 - 1985

 

 

.08

 

 

1982

 

 

.07 1/2

 

 

1980 - 1981

 

 

.07

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