Now, it certainly doesn't say gas or diesel .... ;-)

looking at the list, the Dodge Ram 2500 seems like a nice little
pickup (hehehehehe). Time to start that business ....

Yummie:

http://www.dodge.com/ram_hd/model_overview/index.html


James Slayden

On Sun, 22 Dec 2002, Keith Addison wrote:

> http://www.detnews.com/2002/autosinsider/0212/18/c01-38875.htm
> - 12/18/02
> Wednesday, December 18, 2002
> 
> David Coates / The Detroit News
> 
> Karl Wizinsky, a health care consultant in Novi, was able to write
> off $32,000 of the $47,000 purchase price of a Ford Excursion as a
> business expense. It's perfectly legal, and accountants and auto
> dealers are starting to catch on.
> 
> SUV, truck owners get a big tax break
> 
> Loophole allows hefty write-off for vehicles
> 
> By Jeff Plungis / Detroit News Washington Bureau
> 
> Eligible vehicles
> 
> Here are the 38 light truck models that qualify for an extra $24,000
> accelerated depreciation tax break:
>   BMW X5
>   Cadillac Escalade
>   Chevy Astro
>   Chevy Avalanche
>   Chevy Express
>   Chevy Silverado
>   Chevy Suburban
>   Chevy Tahoe
>   Dodge Durango
>   Dodge Ram Van
>   Dodge Ram Maxi Van
>   Dodge Ram Wagon
>   Dodge Ram 1500
>   Dodge Ram 2500
>   Dodge Ram 3500
>   Ford Excursion
>   Ford Expedition
>   Ford Econoline E-150
>   Ford Econoline E-250
>   Ford Econoline E-350
>   Ford F-150
>   Ford F-250
>   Ford F-350
>   GMC Yukon
>   GMC Safari
>   GMC Savana
>   GMC Sierra
>   GMC Sierra Denali
>   Land Rover Discovery
>   Land Rover Range Rover
>   Lincoln Blackwood
>   Lincoln Navigator
>   Mercedes ML 320
>   Mercedes ML 500
>   Mercedes ML55 AMG
>   Toyota Land Cruiser
>   Toyota Sequoia
>   Toyota Tundra
> 
> Comment on this story
> Send this story to a friend
> Get Home Delivery
> 
> WASHINGTON -- Karl Wizinsky wasn't thinking about buying a new
> vehicle, and certainly not a big SUV. So why is there a brand-new
> $47,000 Ford Excursion sitting in his driveway?
> 
> He was able to write off $32,000 of the purchase price as a business
> expense.
> 
> "We really did it because it was a pretty hefty deduction," said
> Wizinsky, a health care consultant in Novi.
> 
> At the same time the tax code sanctions $30,000 write-offs for SUVs,
> prospective purchasers of a fuel-efficient hybrid vehicles qualify
> for a relatively small $4,000 tax credit.
> 
> A deal to extend similar tax credits to other environmentally
> friendly vehicles remains stalled in Congress.
> 
> It's all legal, and accountants and auto dealers are beginning to catch
> on.
> 
> "If it can save the consumer money, it's most likely that the dealer
> is going to know about it," said Andrew Beck, spokesman for the
> National Automobile Dealers Association. So far, there is no
> indication anyone in Congress wants to close the loophole. In fact,
> even higher depreciation tax breaks are on the table as part of the
> next round of tax cuts President Bush is planning.
> 
> The SUV tax break is becoming a staple of advice in the accounting
> world, as small business owners such as Wizinsky are advised on ways
> to reduce end-of-the-year tax bills.
> 
> The size of the tax break has been growing under a schedule that
> became law in 1996. That's when Congress changed tax law to encourage
> business investment.
> 
> The scale of the tax break surprises accountants and tax experts, who
> feel bound to recommend SUVs and other light trucks to small-business
> clients.
> 
> "As I understood it, the reason (for the tax break) is to encourage
> business investment. That's what happened in my case," Wizinsky said.
> 
> At the same time, the tax break seems to contradict other national
> goals, such as improving vehicle fuel efficiency. A more economical
> fleet would aid two important national goals: reducing U.S.
> dependence on foreign oil and cutting greenhouse gasses.
> 
> The total cost of the loophole hasn't been calculated by the
> government, but Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan Washington
> watchdog group, estimates the SUV tax loophole could cost taxpayers
> between $840 million and $987 million for every 100,000 vehicles sold
> to businesses.
> 
> Aileen Roder, the group's program director, questioned whether there
> is a national need to subsidize sales of the largest light trucks --
> given Americans are buying SUVs in record numbers.
> 
> "This is one of the most lucrative breaks in the tax code," Roder
> said. "We're making it a fiscal no-brainer for businesses to buy
> giant SUVs."
> 
> To get an idea of the scale of the SUV tax break, a credit aimed at
> making it easier for small businesses to comply with the Americans
> with Disabilities Act costs $525 million per 100,000 uses.
> 
> A tax credit to reimburse teachers for classroom supplies annually
> costs the treasury $250 million per 100,000 uses.
> 
> And a provision allowing taxpayers to put up to $3,000 of tax-free
> earnings per year in private retirement accounts costs about $90
> million per 100,000 taxpayers, according to Taxpayers for Common
> Sense.
> 
> There are long-standing limits on deductions to prevent taxpayers
> from subsidizing luxury-car purchases. But the limits do not apply to
> 38 light trucks that weigh 6,000 pounds or more, including the
> Cadillac Escalade, Dodge Durango, Excursion and Lincoln Navigator.
> 
> "We recognized it immediately and started informing people about how
> to use it," said James Jenkins, an accountant in Southfield. "It's
> just fabulous. My clients have been drooling."
> 
> Jenkins said five clients have used the loophole so far and five more
> are considering it. Jenkins even considered using the break,
> test-driving several SUVs.
> 
> "It makes you think very hard about it," Jenkins said. "But it was a
> 30 percent larger vehicle than I wanted."
> 
> Here's how the SUV tax break works:
> 
> Suppose a business owner wants to purchase a $45,000 luxury SUV for
> use in his business. He or she could write off $24,000 of the cost
> under section 179 of the tax code as accelerated depreciation. Then
> the buyer could write off additional depreciation of the remaining
> $21,000 under a five-year schedule -- 20 percent, or $4,200, in the
> first year.
> 
> That's a total $28,200 tax write-off.
> 
> The balance of the vehicle could be written off over the next five
> years. A more expensive large vehicle, like a Mercedes E-class SUV, a
> Range Rover or a BMW X5, would qualify for an even greater tax break.
> 
> The break for trucks got bigger this year under a schedule Congress
> adopted in 1996 when businesses could claim $17,500 in accelerated
> depreciation on equipment.
> 
> That lump sum increased to $20,000 last year. It went up to $24,000
> this year. Next year and thereafter the deduction will be $25,000.
> 
> In 1996, Congress estimated the five-year cost of the tax break --
> for all business equipment -- to be $1.6 billion. But luxury SUVs had
> barely cracked the market at that time.
> 
> IRS spokesman Bruce Friedland said the agency does not keep data on
> how much the tax break has cost. According to figures supplied by
> Autodata, there were 3.8 million of the 6,000-pound light truck
> models sold in 2001.
> 
> There are no estimates for how many of the vehicles that qualify were
> sold to businesses or how many businesses that bought vehicles took
> advantage of the deduction.
> 
> The code is not as generous for luxury cars.
> 
> A business owner wanting to purchase a Lincoln Town Car would have to
> live with a $7,660 deduction, one-fourth what he might save by buying
> a Lincoln Navigator. It would take more than 15 years to recoup the
> entire cost of the car.
> 
> After Sept. 10, 2004, the luxury-car write-off will revert to $3,060.
> 
> Tax experts say the light-truck tax loophole was originally targeted
> for farmers, so their working pickup trucks would not be treated, for
> tax purposes, like luxury cars.
> 
> There was no mention of the need to stimulate the luxury truck market
> in the 1996 tax debate.
> 
> The House of Representatives attempted to make the SUV tax break even
> more generous as Congress debated an economic stimulus package in
> March.
> 
> Under the House plan, the cap for accelerated depreciation would have
> risen from $24,000 to $35,000. That effort died in negotiations with
> the Senate.
> 
> You can reach Jeff Plungis at (202) 662-7378 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 
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