Skip to main content

GM may be the next automaker to lose its electric car tax credit

General Motors Chevrolet Bolt EV
Chevrolet

Following Tesla, General Motors may be the next automaker to reach 200,000 electric car sales, triggering the phaseout of a $7,500 federal tax credit, Reuters reports. While Tesla has said it will lower prices by $2,000 to compensate for the gradual reduction in tax credit amounts, GM won’t comment publicly on the matter.

Citing an unnamed source familiar with the matter, Reuters reported that GM hit the 200,000-car ceiling in the fourth quarter of 2018. That means the federal tax credit for GM electric cars will be halved to $3,750 in April, then halved again to $1,875 in October. It will remain at that level for six months before disappearing altogether in April 2020. GM vehicles may still qualify for state and local incentives after the federal tax credit expires, however.

Recommended Videos

GM declined to comment to Reuters, but the news outlet noted that the automaker previously said it would hit 200,000 electric car sales before the end of 2018.

Nissan will likely be the third automaker to lose the federal tax credit. The Japanese firm has sold roughly 130,000 Leaf electric cars in the United States, according to Reuters. Ford may be fourth in line, although it has sold far more plug-in hybrids (which count toward the total) than all-electric cars.

The tax credit has become a significant political issue, with lawmakers proposing to both eliminate it altogether and to remove the 200,000-unit cap. Critics of the tax credit claim that it forces taxpayers to unnecessarily subsidize electric cars. Advocates claim the tax credit and other incentives are vital to getting people to ditch their internal-combustion cars for electric models.

In March, GM CEO Mary Barra called for an expansion of the tax credit as GM prepared to increase production of the Chevrolet Bolt EV to meet claimed customer demand. She repeated the request during a December visit to Capitol Hill, according to Reuters.

Tax credit or not, GM is planning more electric cars. The automaker previously said it will launch 20 all-electric models by 2023. The cash to develop these cars will come from a massive restructuring that will see GM purge staff and kill off many vehicles. One of those cars is the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid, which played a major role in getting GM to that 200,000-unit ceiling in the first place.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Why some Teslas are losing tax credits, and which cars still qualify
Tesla's Model 3 refresh, codenamed Highland, features a sleeker front.

 

It looks like Tesla's federal tax credit status could change pretty significantly in the near future.

Read more
Bold style alone can’t muscle Chevy’s new Blazer EV to the head of its class
Front three quarter view of a 2024 Chevrolet Blazer EV RS.

They say good things come to those who wait. General Motors is hoping customers will take that maxim to heart.

The 2024 Chevrolet Blazer EV, an electric crossover SUV sharing the name of a similarly sized gasoline model, but nothing else, was first shown in the summer of 2022 and quietly entered production a few months ago. But few cars have made it to customers due to production issues that have plagued not just the Blazer, but all of GM’s new EVs, which use a shared component set branded Ultium that’s proving tricky to scale up.

Read more
GM to cut funding for beleaguered driverless startup Cruise, report claims
A passenger getting into a Cruise robotaxi.

It’s not getting any easier for beleaguered autonomous-car startup Cruise after a report on Tuesday suggested its main backer, General Motors (GM), is about to slash funding for the startup.

Cruise recently suspended nationwide testing on U.S. streets following a string of troubling incidents involving its autonomous cars, the most serious of which occurred in San Francisco last month when a Cruise car came to a halt on top of a woman who seconds earlier had been knocked over by a human-driven vehicle.

Read more