Buy an EV

  • EVs for sale
  • Learn about EVs
  • Articles
  • Charging

Sell or trade

  • How it works

Financing

  • Get pre-qualified
  • Credit application

Contact us

  • Book a consultation
  • Call us at (804) 390-5910
  • Email us at hello@recharged.com
  • Visit our Experience Centers
    • Richmond, VA
    • Fairfax, VA
    • Charlotte, NC

© 2025 Recharged. All Rights Reserved.

7-Day Return Policy·Privacy Policy·SMS Opt-In·Do Not Sell or Share My Information·
TikTokYouTubeInstagramLinkedInFacebook
    EV Tax Credit 2026 Guide: What Still Applies And How To Claim It
    Incentives & Tax Credits·11 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    EV Tax Credit 2026 Guide: What Still Applies And How To Claim It

    ev-tax-credit-2026clean-vehicle-credit-30dused-ev-credit-25ehome-charging-credit-30cira-ev-incentivesobbba-changesform-8936used-ev-buyingrecharged-scorebattery-health

    Table of Contents

    • EV tax credit 2026 at a glance
    • What actually changed in late 2025?
    • Grandfathered EV credits you can still claim in 2026
    • How the $7,500 new clean vehicle credit worked (30D)
    • How the $4,000 used EV credit worked (25E)
    • Claiming your EV credit on 2025 and 2026 tax returns
    • The home charging credit that still runs through mid‑2026
    • How expired credits affect used EV prices in 2026
    • Using Recharged to navigate incentives and total cost
    • Checklist: Documents you should keep for EV tax credits
    • EV tax credit 2026 FAQ
    • Key takeaways for 2026 EV shoppers

    If you’re trying to make sense of the EV tax credit in 2026, you’re not alone. Congress extended generous credits under the Inflation Reduction Act, and then turned around and largely shut them off for new purchases after September 30, 2025. The result: a confusing mix of “expired” credits, grandfather rules, and a home‑charging credit that still lives on. This guide untangles what actually matters for your 2025 and 2026 tax returns and for anyone buying a used EV today.

    Quick reality check for 2026

    For most buyers, the federal tax credits for purchasing **new** or **used** EVs ended for vehicles acquired after **September 30, 2025**. But you may still claim credits in 2026 if you bought or ordered an eligible vehicle before that cutoff, or if you’re installing home charging equipment before mid‑2026.

    EV tax credit 2026 at a glance

    Key EV tax credit facts for 2026

    $7,500
    Max new EV credit (30D)
    Available only for qualified new EVs acquired on or before Sept. 30, 2025.
    $4,000
    Max used EV credit (25E)
    For qualified used EVs ≤$25,000 acquired on or before Sept. 30, 2025.
    Form 8936
    Primary IRS form
    Used to claim clean vehicle credits on your 2025 and 2026 returns.
    Jun 30, 2026
    Charging credit end
    Home charging (Section 30C) continues for property placed in service through mid‑2026.

    The headline for 2026 is simple: **you can no longer earn a new federal purchase credit by buying an EV today**, but you may still see credits show up on your 2025 and 2026 tax returns if you bought earlier or are installing charging equipment. That has major implications for how you compare new vs. used EVs, and for why the used EV market, where Recharged operates, looks the way it does this year.

    What actually changed in late 2025?

    The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) originally set EV credits (for new, used, and commercial vehicles) to run into the 2030s. In 2025, the **One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA)** rewrote that plan. The new law terminated the main consumer EV purchase credits, Section 30D for new clean vehicles and Section 25E for previously owned clean vehicles, for vehicles **acquired after September 30, 2025**. It also set a sunset for the refueling infrastructure credit (Section 30C) at **June 30, 2026**.

    Before October 1, 2025

    • Up to $7,500 credit for qualified new EVs (Section 30D).
    • Up to $4,000 credit for qualified used EVs ≤$25,000 (Section 25E).
    • Transferable credits allowed you to take the value off the purchase price at the dealership.
    • Separate credit for home and commercial charging equipment (Section 30C).

    After September 30, 2025

    • No new 30D or 25E credits for vehicles acquired on or after Oct. 1, 2025.
    • Commercial clean vehicle credit (45W) also ended for vehicles acquired after that date.
    • Home and commercial charging credit (30C) remains through June 30, 2026.
    • Credits earned before the cutoff can still be claimed on 2025 and 2026 tax returns.

    “Acquired” date matters more than model year

    For tax purposes, what counts is **when you acquired the vehicle**, not the model year on the window sticker. A 2025 EV picked up from the dealer on October 5, 2025 will generally not qualify, even though it’s the same car you could’ve bought credit‑eligible a week earlier.

    Grandfathered EV credits you can still claim in 2026

    Even though you can’t generate *new* EV purchase credits with a 2026 purchase, the law didn’t claw back credits validly earned before the shutdown. That means your 2025 and 2026 tax returns can still include clean‑vehicle credits in three main situations.

    How the $7,500 new clean vehicle credit worked (30D)

    • Vehicle had to be a new, qualified clean vehicle (mostly EVs and fuel‑cell vehicles) from a manufacturer reporting VIN data to Treasury.
    • MSRP caps applied: generally $55,000 for cars and $80,000 for SUVs, pickups, and vans.
    • Buyer income limits applied (based on modified adjusted gross income): roughly $150,000 single / $300,000 joint at the end of the program.
    • Final‑assembly, battery‑components, and critical‑minerals rules determined whether you got $3,750 or the full $7,500.
    • For many buyers in 2024–2025, the credit could be "transferred" to the dealer, instantly reducing the price at the point of sale.

    If you acquired a qualifying new EV **on or before September 30, 2025**, you may still need to deal with the 30D credit on your **2025 or 2026 tax return**. That’s true whether you claimed it up front at the dealership, or you’re planning to claim it yourself when you file using Form 8936.

    How the $4,000 used EV credit worked (25E)

    The used clean vehicle credit, Section 25E, was designed to open up EV ownership to value‑focused buyers, exactly the shoppers Recharged serves. It provided a credit of **30% of the sale price, capped at $4,000**, for qualified previously owned EVs and fuel‑cell vehicles.

    Key rules for the used EV credit (25E) before it ended

    These rules still matter if you bought a used EV before October 1, 2025 and are claiming the credit on a 2025 or 2026 return.

    RuleRequirement
    Price capSale price must have been $25,000 or less.
    Vehicle ageAt least 2 model years older than the year of sale.
    Buyer typeIndividual (not a business), not claimed as a dependent.
    First resaleVehicle’s first qualified sale since August 16, 2022 (beyond the original owner).
    Income limitsMAGI roughly ≤$75,000 single / $150,000 joint at the end of the program.
    FrequencyYou could claim the used EV credit only once every 3 years.

    Remember: no new 25E credits are available for vehicles acquired on or after September 30, 2025.

    Why this still matters for 2026

    If you bought a qualifying used EV from a dealer on or before **September 30, 2025**, you may still be finishing the paperwork with the IRS in 2026, especially if you extended your 2025 return or transferred the credit at the point of sale and need to reconcile it.

    Claiming your EV credit on 2025 and 2026 tax returns

    From the IRS’s perspective, 2026 is about **cleanup and reconciliation** for the EV credits, not about issuing new ones. Here’s how you’ll typically see the credits flow through your tax filing if you acquired a vehicle before the deadlines.

    Two ways EV credits show up on your tax return

    Your paperwork looks a bit different depending on whether you took the credit at the dealership or are claiming it yourself.

    1. You claim the credit directly

    If you did not transfer the credit to the dealer:

    • You’ll file Form 8936 with your federal tax return.
    • You’ll enter vehicle details from the seller’s report (VIN, battery capacity, purchase date, etc.).
    • The credit reduces your tax liability dollar‑for‑dollar, but generally can’t create a refund beyond the tax you owe.

    2. You transferred the credit at purchase

    If you let the dealer apply the credit off the top of the price:

    • The dealer should have given you a time‑of‑sale report with all required details.
    • You still report the transaction on Form 8936 to confirm eligibility.
    • If you ended up over the income limit or otherwise ineligible, you may have to repay some or all of the advance credit.

    Avoid a surprise repayment

    If your income grew between the year you bought the EV and the year you file, it’s possible to cross over an income limit. That can trigger repayment of an advance credit you took at the dealership. Run the numbers with a tax pro before you file if your situation changed.
    Person reviewing IRS Form 8936 and EV purchase paperwork at a table with a laptop and car keys nearby
    In 2026, many EV owners are still dealing with Form 8936 for vehicles acquired before the September 30, 2025 cutoff.

    The home charging credit that still runs through mid‑2026

    Even though purchase credits have ended, the **Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit (Section 30C)** for home and commercial charging equipment is still alive, at least for a short time. For qualifying property placed in service through **June 30, 2026**, you may be able to claim a credit worth **30% of the cost**, up to certain caps and subject to location and income rules that grew stricter under the IRA and subsequent guidance.

    • For homeowners, this typically covers Level 2 charging equipment and certain related installation costs.
    • The property generally must be in an eligible census tract (for example, a low‑income area or a non‑urban area) to qualify under current rules.
    • The credit is non‑refundable, so, like the vehicle credits, it can reduce your tax but won’t generate a refund on its own.
    • You claim the credit on Form 8911, separate from your EV purchase credit paperwork.

    2026 move: pair a used EV with a charging credit

    Because purchase credits for new EVs have ended but the charging credit runs until mid‑2026, one smart play is to buy a competitively priced **used EV** and use the 30C credit to offset part of the cost of installing home charging, especially if you live in an eligible census tract.

    How expired credits affect used EV prices in 2026

    The end of federal purchase credits doesn’t just matter for tax filers, it reshapes the economics of the entire EV market. In 2026, we’re already seeing a few predictable effects in the used market.

    What ending federal purchase credits means for used EVs

    Why 2026 can actually be a good year to buy used, even without a fresh credit.

    Less distortion vs. new cars

    When new EVs carried an automatic $7,500 discount for eligible buyers, they sometimes undercut lightly used models. With the new‑car credit gone, late‑model used EVs can compete on a leveler playing field.

    More pressure on transaction prices

    Manufacturers and dealers can no longer rely on the federal credit to close the gap between sticker prices and what buyers can afford. That tends to push down asking prices, which filters into the used market.

    Bigger role for condition & battery

    Without a giant federal credit masking differences, factors like battery health, warranty coverage, and real‑world range matter even more. That’s exactly what Recharged’s Score Report is built to surface.

    How Recharged helps in a post‑credit world

    Recharged focuses on transparent total cost of ownership, not just headline incentives. Every used EV comes with a Recharged Score Report showing verified battery health and fair‑market pricing, so you can compare vehicles on their long‑term economics even without a federal purchase credit.

    Ready to find your next EV?

    Browse Vehicles

    Using Recharged to navigate incentives and total cost

    Federal tax credits were a powerful headline for EV adoption, but by 2026 the action has shifted to **state and utility incentives, financing terms, and running costs**. That’s where a used‑EV specialist like Recharged can make your life easier.

    What you still might qualify for

    • Residual federal benefits, like the refueling property credit (30C) if you install home charging before June 30, 2026.
    • State rebates or tax credits for buying or registering an EV, which vary widely by state and can change year to year.
    • Utility‑sponsored programs, such as discounted off‑peak charging rates or rebates for smart chargers.

    How Recharged fits in

    • Recharged Score Report with battery diagnostics so you know what you’re getting.
    • Integrated financing and pre‑qualification so you can compare payment options alongside any remaining incentives.
    • Trade‑in and consignment options that reflect post‑credit market realities.
    • Expert EV‑specialist support online or at our Richmond, VA Experience Center.

    Think payment, not just sticker price

    In a world with fewer federal giveaways, the monthly payment matters more than ever. Recharged can help you pre‑qualify for financing with no impact to your credit, then compare EV options based on real payment, energy, and maintenance costs, not just MSRP.

    Checklist: Documents you should keep for EV tax credits

    Must‑keep EV tax credit paperwork for 2025–2026

    1. Purchase or lease agreement

    Save a complete copy of your sales or lease contract showing the vehicle, VIN, purchase price, and the date you took possession. The precise acquisition date is crucial for proving you met the September 30, 2025 cutoff.

    2. Dealer’s time‑of‑sale report

    If you bought a new or used EV with a federal credit available, the dealer should have provided a detailed report confirming the vehicle’s eligibility and any credit amount applied at the point of sale.

    3. Proof of payment and financing

    Keep loan or lease documents, payment receipts, and any documentation showing how the advance credit affected your down payment or monthly payment if you transferred the credit.

    4. Home charging installation invoices

    If you’re claiming the 30C charging credit, retain itemized invoices from your electrician and charger manufacturer showing equipment, labor, and the date the charger was placed in service.

    5. Utility or state incentive documentation

    Many utilities and states offer their own rebates. Save approval emails, checks, and statements showing the amount and terms, your tax preparer may need them to coordinate benefits correctly.

    6. Prior‑year tax returns and Form 8936 copies

    Because income limits and once‑every‑three‑years rules apply to some credits, keeping prior Form 8936 filings handy helps avoid mistakes and IRS questions later.

    EV tax credit 2026 FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about EV tax credits in 2026

    Key takeaways for 2026 EV shoppers

    For 2026, think of the federal EV purchase credit as a **legacy issue**, not a shopping tool. You can’t buy your way into a new $7,500 or $4,000 credit this year, but you may still be cleaning up paperwork for a vehicle acquired before the September 30, 2025 deadline or taking advantage of the home‑charging credit before it expires in mid‑2026.

    The upside is that the used EV market is finally starting to stand on its own economics. Without a giant federal subsidy distorting prices, factors like battery health, charging speed, warranty coverage, and energy costs matter more than ever. That’s where a transparent, EV‑focused marketplace like Recharged can help you make a smart decision, backed by diagnostics, fair pricing, and support from specialists who live and breathe this transition.

    If you’re ready to explore used EVs in this post‑credit landscape, consider starting with vehicles that offer strong range for your needs, solid battery diagnostics, and ownership costs that fit your budget. The tax code may be less generous than it was a couple of years ago, but with the right information, 2026 can still be an excellent time to go electric.

    EVs on Recharged

    See all →
    2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E

    2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E

    GT•24K mi•257 mi range
    4.8/5Recharged Score
    $36,597
    2024 BMW iX

    2024 BMW iX

    xDrive50•41K mi•308 mi range
    4.8/5Recharged Score
    $45,997
    2025 Ford Mustang Mach-E

    2025 Ford Mustang Mach-E

    Premium•8K mi•300 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $39,997

    Related Articles

    EV Electricity Cost Per Month: U.S. Averages and How to Lower Yours
    Ownership & Costs·9 min

    EV Electricity Cost Per Month: U.S. Averages and How to Lower Yours

    See the average EV electricity cost per month in the U.S., with real examples, formulas, and tips to lower your bill, plus how it compares to gas costs.

    ev-electricity-costev-ownership-costshome-charging
    2022 Tesla Model Y Used Review: Value, Battery, and Red Flags
    Reviews & Comparisons·11 min

    2022 Tesla Model Y Used Review: Value, Battery, and Red Flags

    Shopping for a used 2022 Tesla Model Y? See real-world range, battery life, common problems, depreciation, and what to inspect before you buy.

    tesla-model-yused-ev-buyingbattery-health
    BMW i4 Range in Cold Weather: What You’ll Really Get
    Battery & Range·11 min

    BMW i4 Range in Cold Weather: What You’ll Really Get

    Learn how cold weather affects BMW i4 range, how many miles you’ll actually get in winter, and practical tips to protect range on daily drives and road trips.

    bmw-i4cold-weather-rangebattery-health