How LLC Owners Save on Taxes in 2026

VEHICLE Check if any expense is tax deductible — type it below
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DEDUCTIBILITY VERDICT
Car Purchase (Under 6,000 lbs)
Passenger cars under 6,000 lbs GVWR are subject to luxury auto depreciation caps -- you can still deduct, but the annual limits are much lower.
Yes -- With Limits
IRC §280F
Up to $12,400 Year 1 (luxury auto limits)

What the IRS Says

Under IRC §280F, passenger vehicles under 6,000 lbs GVWR face annual depreciation caps. For 2024, the Year 1 limit is approximately $12,400 (or $20,400 with bonus depreciation). The deduction is spread over 5+ years.

How to Structure This Properly

Getting the deduction right is not just about whether it is allowed — it is about how you set it up.

1

Establish Business Use

Document all business trips. The deduction is prorated by business-use percentage.

2

Track Usage and Documentation

Mileage log is essential. Save purchase invoice.

3

Choose the Right Structure

Consider using the standard mileage rate (67 cents/mile in 2024) instead of actual expenses -- it may yield a larger deduction for lower-cost vehicles.

4

Avoid Common Mistakes

Do not confuse the standard mileage rate with actual expense method -- you must choose one and stick with it.

5

Optimize for Maximum Benefit

For high-mileage business drivers, the standard mileage rate often beats actual expenses on smaller cars.

When structured correctly, this deduction can significantly reduce your taxable income.

Real Examples

Here is how this deduction typically works in real situations:

Self-Employed / Freelancer

A consultant drives 20,000 business miles/year in a Toyota Camry.

Result: Standard mileage: 20,000 × $0.67 = $13,400 deduction.
Audit Risk: Low -- with mileage log.
Business Owner (LLC / S-Corp)

An S-Corp reimburses the owner for business miles under an accountable plan.

Result: Reimbursement is deductible to the corporation, tax-free to the owner.
Audit Risk: Low.
Mixed Use -- High Risk

Owner claims 100% business use on a car also used for personal errands.

Result: IRS requires substantiation. Personal use disallowed.
Audit Risk: High.

Key Takeaway: The difference between a valid deduction and a denied one usually comes down to documentation, usage percentage, and proper structuring. The same expense can be fully deductible, partially deductible, or not deductible at all — depending on how it is handled.

Frequently Asked Questions

Verdict
Yes -- With Limits
IRC §280F
Up to $12,400 Year 1 (luxury auto limits)
Want to make sure you're doing this right?

A 30-minute strategy call with Uncle Kam shows you exactly how to structure this — and finds 10–20 more deductions you're probably missing.

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