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This Is The Time To Buy An EV — Tax Credits Will Expire Soon And Musk Doesn’t Care

CleanTechnica EVs

continued] The post This Is The Time To Buy An EV Tax Credits Will Expire Soon And Musk Doesn’t Care appeared first on CleanTechnica. There’s a great FLO charger in White River Junction at Hampton Inn, halfway between his two homes, which offers a nice boost.

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Ford, GM, & Other Automakers Pushing to Keep US EV Tax Credits, Especially Leasing One

CleanTechnica EVs

As I just wrote, the wheels are now in motion to kill the US EV tax credit (or, well, all three of them the $7,500 one for certain new EV purchases, the $7,500 one for EV leasing, and the $4,000 one for used electric cars). One would think that.

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Concerned About US EV Tax Credit Going Away? Lease Any EV Today! Or Buy One Of These 15.

CleanTechnica EVs

At the moment, the US Department of Energy (DOE) and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) indicate that the following fully electric vehicles are eligible for the $7,500 US ZEV tax credit: Acura ZDX Cadillac LYRIQ Cadillac OPTIQ Chevrolet Blazer EV Chevrolet Equinox EV Chevrolet Silverado EV Ford F-150 Lightning Honda Prologue.

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Tesla, GM, Nissan band together to extend electric-car tax credits

Green Car Reports

As tax credits for buyers of America's two most popular electric-car brands begin to sunset, automakers and advocates are banding together to restructure the tax-credit program and extend them. Tesla, General Motors, and Nissan—the top three sellers of electric cars in the U.S.—have

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US updates EV tax credit rules, enabling more electric cars to be eligible

Electrek

Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) updated the EV tax credit rules today with new requirements that should enable more electric cars to become eligible.

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Electric car US tax credit proposed to $12,500, less for Tesla vehicles

Electrek

A new bill to reform the federal electric car tax incentive in the US has passed the US Senate Finance Committee. It includes increasing the electric vehicle tax credit to up to $12,500, but it was expertly crafted to give less to Tesla vehicle buyers.

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Tesla expects to lose full $7,500 tax credit on its cheapest electric car

Electrek

Tesla told employees that it expects to lose the full $7,500 federal tax credit on its cheapest electric car because the batteries come from China. more… The post Tesla expects to lose full $7,500 tax credit on its cheapest electric car appeared first on Electrek.