Lenders and other recipients who receive interest from customers on such auto loans are required to file information returns with the IRS. They are also obligated to provide taxpayers with statements showing the total amount of interest received for a taxable year.
“Under today’s guidance, the IRS will consider that lenders have met their reporting obligations for interest received on a qualified passenger car loan in 2025 if they make a statement available to the buyer indicating the total amount of interest received,” the agency said in its statement.
Lenders can make this information available through an online portal that buyers can access easily, via regular monthly statements, on an annual statement provided to buyers, or by other similar means aimed at providing such information.
“In addition, the IRS will not impose penalties on lenders for a failure to file information returns and provide payee statements if they satisfy their reporting obligations as described in the Notice,” the agency stated.
All businesses that receive at least $600 in interest from a customer in a calendar year on a qualified vehicle loan are required to comply with the reporting requirements, according to the IRS.

According to the agency, out of the roughly 2.4 million new passenger cars sold in the United States last year, more than 80 percent were financed, often via dealerships.
In the notice, the IRS stated that the agency and Treasury “understand that recipients may need additional time to make the necessary changes to their systems to comply with their new information reporting responsibilities.”
“In addition, the IRS needs additional time to make necessary programming and form updates [to implement the changes,]” the notice reads.
“The sheer amount of debt consumers are carrying in their trade-ins should be a wake-up call,” said Ivan Drury, Edmunds’s director of insights. “Nearly one in three upside-down car owners owe between $5,000 and $10,000—and a growing share owe far more than that.”
In an Oct. 15 statement, auto services company Cox Automotive said the typical payment for a new vehicle rose by 1.9 percent to $766, which is the highest monthly payment in 15 months.
Under such tight affordability conditions, the interest tax relief provided by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eases some of the financial burdens on new car buyers.
A key driver of growth was a surge in electric vehicle sales ahead of the Sept. 30 consumer EV tax credit expiration, it stated.
S&P stated that it was expecting auto demand levels to moderate toward the end of the year, forecasting 2025 fourth-quarter sales to be lower than in the same quarter of 2024.
“Automakers have so far managed the potential impact of US tariffs better than expected, helping to avoid a rise in vehicle prices for consumers,” said Chris Hopson, S&P Global Mobility’s principal analyst.







