U.S. to End $7,500 EV Tax Credit by September 30

Date:

Share post:

New bill phases out major incentives, reshaping EV market outlook

Congress has passed legislation that will officially end the $7,500 tax credit for new electric vehicles (EVs) and the $4,000 credit for used EVs, with both programs set to expire on September 30. The move marks a major shift in U.S. electric vehicle policy and is expected to accelerate near-term purchases before a significant sales drop-off.

The decision comes as part of sweeping tax and budget reforms that also ease penalties for automakers failing to meet fuel economy targets, signaling a softened regulatory stance on emissions. While U.S. carmakers are set to benefit from relaxed compliance costs, the end of EV tax credits could curb momentum in the transition to clean transportation.

“This bill forfeits America’s role in that future to China,” said the Electrification Coalition, an EV advocacy group. The group warned the policy shift undermines the U.S. EV sector just as global demand accelerates.

Originally introduced in 2008, the EV credit was expanded in 2022 to include leased vehicles and lifted the cap per manufacturer. Its sudden repeal is expected to cause a surge in EV demand in the short term, followed by a sharp slowdown. Barclays analyst Dan Levy projected a “pre-buy” phenomenon, as consumers rush to lock in savings before the credit disappears.

A Harvard study estimated that eliminating the tax credits would reduce U.S. EV adoption by 6% by 2030, while saving $169 billion in federal expenditures over ten years.

Congress also dropped a proposed $250 annual EV road-use fee and a mandate for the U.S. Postal Service to divest its EV fleet. The bill’s passage reflects a broader pivot in transportation policy, favoring flexibility for traditional automakers even as global rivals invest heavily in electrification.

Related articles

YouTube Debuts New Recap Feature Highlighting Your Year in Video

A Personalized Look Back at 2025 YouTube is introducing a new end-of-year Recap experience that gives users a curated...

Study Links Shingles Vaccine to Slower Dementia Progression

New Evidence Suggests Therapeutic Benefits A major new study has found that the shingles vaccine may do more than...

TSMC Expands Abroad as Geopolitics Reshape the Chip Industry

Silicon Valley’s Lifeline Starts in Taiwan Taiwan’s high-tech corridor has long supplied the most critical component of modern electronics:...

WHO Says GLP-1 Weight-Loss Drugs Mark a New Phase in Obesity Care

Major Potential, Limited Access The World Health Organization says medications such as Mounjaro and other GLP-1 weight-loss drugs are...