A simple Google search tells you that a binding contract is any agreement that is legally enforceable. A normal car order is not legally enforceable. You cannot make them sell you the car, they cannot make you buy it. They can keep your deposit if it's non-refundable (most are refundable). Therefore, an order would have to be converted to a binding contract, i.e. a sales agreement, where the dealership promises to deliver a car and the customer promises to buy it, and cannot back out. A non-refundable deposit is also not a binding contract. Lawyers, and tax professionals, are going to have an income bonanza with this.What is it exactly mean to enter into a binding contract? How was that accomplished?
Correct. I had to sign a sale agreement (attached). Hyundai corporate sent correspondence on Thursday to the dealers showing them they had to do this to maintain the rebate before the Bill is signed.A simple Google search tells you that a binding contract is any agreement that is legally enforceable. A normal car order is not legally enforceable. You cannot make them sell you the car, they cannot make you buy it. They can keep your deposit if it's non-refundable (most are refundable). Therefore, an order would have to be converted to a binding contract, i.e. a sales agreement, where the dealership promises to deliver a car and the customer promises to buy it, and cannot back out. A non-refundable deposit is also not a binding contract. Lawyers, and tax professionals, are going to have an income bonanza with this.
That is true under current not but not the soon to be enacted IRA. Thatās the problem.No, you can't claim a tax credit if you don't yet own the vehicle.
āBindingā is just another word for āenforceableā contract. Offer + acceptance + consideration (money) = contract. The lost deposit is a form of liquidated damages if you back out. Because of poor wording in the IRA, you can back out after you claim the tax credit if you have a contract for a car that wonāt be delivered for 2+ years so long as the contract was already signed. So if you do that, you should inform the IRS and properly return the tax rebate, but there is absolutely no way the IRS has the resources to monitor that. Theyāre not gonna audit the average personās 2022 tax returns in 2023 or beyond so it really encourages tax fraud. The IRS will try to figure out a form addendum that allows the credit to be taken without a VIN number since many of us wonāt have one in 2022. This is a significant change versus the current law.If some one can back out and not take the car and suffer on a lost deposit, is it truly binding?
need a lawyer to add their 2 cents. I am sure the IRS will.
This form looks very similar to all the car deals I've ever signed. I placed an order for a GV60 and signed this very similar order form. In the signature box, it states that "this order shall not become binding until accepted by dealer". Yes the sales manager and I signed it. The question is, is it enough for the IRS in case they come knocking on your door? Originally I wanted the Advanced trim but no VIN is available. Dealer informed me that he has a Performance VIN, due to arrive in 2-3 weeks. I opted for it and wrote a new order with the VIN written on it. I'm still not sure if this will satisfy the IRS in the event of an audit.Correct. I had to sign a sale agreement (attached). Hyundai corporate sent correspondence on Thursday to the dealers showing them they had to do this to maintain the rebate before the Bill is signed.
Iām not sure thatās how it works. The transition rule explicitly states that the car will be placed into service before the enactment/signing of the act (i.e Aug 14th 2022 for a car delivered in Feb 10th 2024). The reason for that is because the old tax credit is valid then. I didnāt read that you could use the tax credit in the 2023 or 2024 tax year.That isnāt how it works! The tax credit will apply to the year in which you actually pay for and take delivery of the vehicle, not the year you order the car. By placing a firm binding order now, Iām simply able to use the existing $7,500 tax credit whenever I actually purchase the EV.
In 2024, you basically submit an adjustment to your 2022 taxes after youāve taken delivery of your Rivian or Fisker. The spirit of this transition rule is for cars almost being sold just before next weeks signing and most will have VINs for the 2022 tax year. Itās Rivians and Fiskers that might be delivered in 2023 that will require 2022 tax readjustment at a later date.Hahaha! How could anyone claim a tax credit for a year when the vehicle hasnāt even been built, paid for, or delivered?! By the end of 2022, I doubt weāll even have VIN numbers for 2023 EVs we order today! And IRS Form 8936 requires a VIN number.
The bill isnāt suggesting that weāll all be required to take the tax credit in 2022. That would be nonsensical. Rather, my read is that the bill is using the day prior to the President signing the bill as a ātrigger dateā for purposes of determining eligibility for the existing $7,500 tax credit. Here's the relevant language:
Anyone having a written binding contract to purchase prior to the date the President signs the bill, "may elect (at such time, and in such form and manner, as the Secretary of the Treasury, or the Secretaryās delegate, may prescribe) to treat such vehicle as having been placed in service on the day before the date of enactment of this Act."
So the IRS will need to promulgate regulations regarding how this will work. One thing is certain: If you don't secure a written binding purchase contract before the President signs the bill, you have zero chance of securing the $7,500 tax credit unless both the purchaser and the vehicle happen to qualify.
Technically, I donāt know how valid these ābinding ordersā are. Probably the IRS wonāt be too strict on challenging them because so many people are doing it, but for it to be a binding order, there needs to be much more at stake than $100 of a deposit.Because Ford isn't accepting new orders for the F150 Lightning (except from existing reservation holders), I reserved a 2023 Rivian R1T and immediately converted my reservation to a binding order. That makes $100 of my $1,000 deposit non-refundable ($900 of my deposit remains fully refundable).