Section 179 Vehicle Deduction: A Decision Guide
Section 179 lets self-employed taxpayers expense the full cost of qualifying business equipment in the year purchased — including vehicles. The rules for vehicles are uniquely tricky: passenger vehicles face strict luxury limits, but vehicles over 6,000 lbs gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) get vastly more generous treatment. This guide walks through when Section 179 vehicle deduction makes sense and when standard mileage is better.
Section 179 basics
Section 179 of the tax code allows immediate expensing of business equipment up to $2.56 million in 2026 (with phase-out starting at $4.09M of total qualifying purchases). Most freelancers and small business owners stay well under these limits.
For qualifying vehicles, Section 179 essentially lets you treat a vehicle purchase as an expense rather than depreciating it over 5+ years. The catch: vehicles have special caps that don't apply to other equipment.
The luxury vehicle limits
Passenger vehicles (cars, SUVs under 6,000 lbs GVWR, light trucks) hit Section 179 caps from the IRS:
- 2026 first-year limit (with bonus depreciation): approximately $20,200 for new passenger vehicles, $20,200 for used.
- Year 2: ~$19,500
- Year 3: ~$11,700
- Each subsequent year: ~$6,960 until fully depreciated.
This means a $50,000 Tesla Model 3 used 100% for business gets a year-1 deduction of about $20,200 — not the full $50,000.
The 6,000-lb GVWR exception (the big one)
Vehicles with gross vehicle weight rating over 6,000 lbs are NOT subject to the luxury vehicle limit. They can be Section 179'd up to $32,000 in year 1 (for SUVs specifically), with bonus depreciation potentially boosting the year-1 deduction further.
Vehicles that qualify (typical examples; verify GVWR on the manufacturer specs):
- Tesla Model X, Model S Plaid (often)
- Cadillac Escalade
- Chevrolet Tahoe, Suburban
- Ford Expedition, F-150 (some configurations)
- Toyota Sequoia, Land Cruiser
- Mercedes G-Wagen, GLS
- Range Rover
- BMW X5, X6, X7 (some configurations)
Vehicles that do NOT qualify (under 6,000 lbs GVWR):
- Most sedans (Tesla Model 3, BMW 3-Series, Honda Accord)
- Compact SUVs (RAV4, CR-V)
- Compact trucks (Ranger, Tacoma — depending on config)
The 100% bonus depreciation phase-down
Bonus depreciation is a separate (often combined) deduction allowing additional first-year writeoff. The TCJA phase-down (80% in 2023 → 60% / 40% / 20% / 0%) was reversed by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21), which permanently restored bonus depreciation to 100% for property placed in service after January 19, 2025:
- 2023: 80% (TCJA phase-down)
- 2024: 60%
- 2025 (pre-OBBBA): 40% — applied to property placed in service before Jan 19, 2025
- 2025 (post-OBBBA, after Jan 19): 100% (permanent)
- 2026 onward: 100% (permanent)
For a 6,000+ lb GVWR vehicle in 2026, you can combine Section 179 ($32,000 max for SUVs) PLUS 100% bonus depreciation on the remainder. A $100,000 G-Wagen used 100% for business in 2026: $32,000 Section 179 + $68,000 bonus (100% of remaining basis) = $100,000 first-year deduction. Subject to the §179(b)(3) taxable-income cap — excess carries forward.
Section 179 vs. standard mileage
You can't have both. The choice is binding for the vehicle's lifetime.
Standard mileage ($0.70/mile in 2026):
- Best for high-mile, low-purchase-price vehicles (Honda Civic doing 25,000 business miles/year)
- Simpler bookkeeping (mileage log only)
- Includes implicit depreciation in the rate
Section 179 + actual expenses:
- Best for high-cost, low-mileage vehicles (especially 6,000+ lb GVWR)
- Better for short-term ownership (drive 100% business for 2 years, then sell)
- Requires receipts for gas, insurance, maintenance, registration
Recapture risk
If you take Section 179 and then drop business use below 50% in any subsequent year, you must recapture (add back to income) the excess deduction. A vehicle Section 179'd in 2026 and used 30% business in 2027 triggers recapture of the difference between Section 179 and what 30%-business depreciation would have allowed. This can create surprise tax bills.
The 50% business-use threshold
To use Section 179 OR actual expenses (vs standard mileage), you must use the vehicle 50%+ for business. Below 50% business use, you're stuck with straight-line depreciation, no Section 179, no bonus.
When Section 179 wins
Section 179 vehicle deduction makes sense when:
- The vehicle is over 6,000 lbs GVWR (avoiding the luxury limit)
- Business use is 80%+ (low recapture risk)
- You're in a high tax bracket (more value per deduction dollar)
- You have enough business income to absorb the deduction (Section 179 can't create a net business loss — excess carries forward)
- You're planning to keep the vehicle long-term in business use
When standard mileage wins
- The vehicle costs under $35,000
- You drive 15,000+ business miles/year
- Business use is variable (some years 80%, others 50%)
- You don't want to track every gas receipt and oil change
- The vehicle is under 6,000 lbs GVWR (luxury limit kills the math)
The Trump-era SUV loophole
The combination of $32,000 SUV Section 179 + 100% bonus depreciation (down from 100% in 2022) creates a still-substantial first-year deduction for heavy SUVs used in business. It's why "G-Wagen tax writeoff" became a meme on TikTok 2022-2024. The math still works in 2026, just less aggressively.
Common Section 179 vehicle mistakes
- Buying a passenger vehicle expecting full Section 179. Luxury limits cap deductions at ~$20,200 year 1 regardless of price.
- Not verifying GVWR. Manufacturer spec page is the source of truth — not "I think this counts as a heavy SUV."
- Dropping business use mid-life. Below 50% business use triggers recapture.
- Mixing Section 179 with standard mileage on the same vehicle. Pick one method — switching is restricted.
- Forgetting bonus depreciation phase-down. The math is different in 2026 than in 2022.
Bottom line
Section 179 vehicle deduction is a powerful tool — but only for the right vehicle. If you're buying a 6,000+ lb GVWR SUV or truck and using it 80%+ for business, run the numbers vs standard mileage. If you're buying a passenger sedan, standard mileage almost always wins. Talk to a CPA before purchase if the deduction matters to your decision. Run our calculator to see your overall tax picture.