Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is celebrating what he calls a win for American families: a new tax deduction on auto loan interest that could put real money back in people's wallets. President Donald Trump's administration is now implementing the provision, which was tucked into last year's Big Beautiful Bill.
The Details: Who Gets What
Bessent took to social media platform X on Wednesday to announce that Treasury was rolling out Trump's "No Tax on American Car Loan Interest" initiative. The pitch? "Putting money back in the pockets of working and middle-class families."
Here's how it works: If you bought a vehicle assembled in the United States between 2025 and 2028, you can deduct up to $10,000 per year in auto loan interest. The Treasury and Internal Revenue Service are issuing guidance to help car owners navigate the new rules.
"This deduction helps lower monthly costs and makes car ownership more affordable," Bessent said, emphasizing the US-assembly requirement.
Income Limits Apply
The deduction isn't available to everyone. Singles earning up to $100,000 annually and married couples making up to $200,000 can claim the full benefit. But if you earn more than those thresholds, the deduction shrinks fast—you lose $200 of deduction for every additional $1,000 in income.
Trump himself promoted the tax break with characteristic flair: "We're giving them a deduction on the interest if they buy a nice Tesla car." He quickly clarified that the benefit wasn't exclusive to Tesla Inc. (TSLA) but applies to any manufacturer's vehicles, as long as they're assembled domestically.
Part of a Broader Affordability Push
The auto loan deduction fits into the administration's larger narrative about making vehicles more affordable. Trump recently signed an order rolling back Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards, arguing it would reduce costs for average consumers.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy praised the CAFE rollback, claiming it would counter what he called a "backdoor EV mandate" from the previous administration under President Joe Biden and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
Why This Matters Now
The timing isn't coincidental. Car payments in America have reached eye-watering levels. Recent data shows nearly 20% of new-car buyers are now signing up for monthly payments exceeding $1,000, often stretching loans across 84-month terms—that's seven years of payments.
With average car transaction prices hovering around $49,000 to $50,000, affordability has become a genuine pressure point. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) has even started questioning whether mandatory safety features like automatic emergency braking and rear seat occupant alerts are worth the added cost.
Whether a tax deduction can meaningfully offset those escalating prices remains to be seen, but the administration is betting that every bit helps when you're staring down a five-figure car loan.




