Publication 463
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034056If you dispose of your car, you may have a taxable gain or a deductible loss. The portion of any gain that is due to depreciation (including any section 179 deduction, clean-fuel vehicle deduction (for vehicles placed in service before Jan. 1, 2006), and special depreciation allowance) that you claimed on the car will be treated as ordinary income. However, you may not have to recognize a gain or loss if you dispose of the car because of a casualty, theft, or trade-in.
This section gives some general information about dispositions of cars. For information on how to report the disposition of your car, see Publication
544.
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034057For a casualty or theft, a gain results when you receive insurance or other reimbursement that is more than your adjusted basis in your car. If you then spend all of the proceeds to acquire replacement property (a new car or repairs to the old car) within a specified period of time, you do not recognize any gain. Your basis in the replacement property is its cost minus any gain that is not recognized. See Publication
547 for more information.
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034058When you trade in an old car for a new one, the transaction is considered a like-kind exchange. Generally, no gain or loss is recognized. (For exceptions, see chapter 1 of Publication
544.) In a trade-in situation, your basis in the new property is generally your adjusted basis in the old property plus any additional amount you pay. (See
Unadjusted basis, earlier.)
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034059If you used the standard mileage rate for the business use of your car, depreciation was included in that rate. The rate of depreciation that was allowed in the standard mileage rate is shown in the chart that follows. You must reduce your basis in your car (but not below zero) by the amount of this
depreciation.
If your basis is reduced to zero (but not below zero) through the use of the standard mileage rate, and you continue to use your car for business, no adjustment (reduction) to the standard mileage rate is necessary. Use the full standard mileage rate (51 cents per mile before July 1, 2011 and
551/2 cents per mile after June 30, 2011) for business miles driven.
 | These rates do not apply for any year in which the actual expenses method was
used. |
| | | Depreciation |
| | Year(s) | Rate per Mile |
| | 2011 | $.22 | |
| | 2010 | .23 | |
| | 2008–2009 | .21 | |
| | 2007 | .19 | |
| | 2005–2006 | .17 | |
| | 2003–2004 | .16 | |
| | 2001–2002 | .15 | |
| | 2000 | .14 | |
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034061In 2006, you bought a car for exclusive use in your business. The car cost $22,500. From 2006 through 2011, you used the standard mileage rate to figure your car expense deduction. You drove your car 14,100 miles in 2006, 16,300 miles in 2007, 15,600 miles in 2008, 16,700 miles in 2009, 15,100 miles in 2010, and 14,900 miles in 2011. Your depreciation is figured as follows.
| Year | Miles x Rate | | Depreciation |
| 2006 | 14,100 × .17 | | $ 2,397 |
| 2007 | 16,300 × .19 | | 3,097 |
| 2008 | 15,600 × .21 | | 3,276 |
| 2009 | 16,700 × .21 | | 3,507 |
| 2010 | 15,100 × .23 | | 3,473 |
| 2011 | 14,900 × .22 | | 3,278 |
| Total depreciation | | $19,028
|
At the end of 2011, your adjusted basis in the car is $3,472 ($22,500 −
$19,028).
taxmap/pubs/p463-011.htm#en_us_publink100034062If you deduct actual car expenses and you dispose of your car before the end of its recovery period, you are allowed a reduced depreciation deduction for the year of
disposition.
To figure the reduced depreciation deduction for a car disposed of in 2011, first determine the depreciation deduction for the full year using
Table 4-1.
If you used a
Date Placed in Service
line for
Jan. 1—Sept. 30,
you can deduct one-half of the depreciation amount figured for the full year. Figure your depreciation deduction for the full year using the rules explained in this chapter and deduct 50% of that amount with your other actual car
expenses.
If you used a
Date Placed in Service
line for
Oct. 1—Dec. 31,
you can deduct a percentage of the depreciation amount figured for the full year. The percentage you use is determined by the month you disposed of the car. Figure your depreciation deduction for the full year using the rules explained in this chapter and multiply the result by the percentage from the following table for the month that you disposed of the car.
| Month | Percentage |
| Jan., Feb., March | 12.5% |
| April, May, June | 37.5% |
| July, Aug., Sept. | 62.5% |
| Oct., Nov., Dec. | 87.5% |
 |
Do not use this table if you are a fiscal year filer. See Sale or Other
Disposition Before the Recovery Period Ends in chapter 4 of Publication 946. |