Bill

Bill > S1557


NJ S1557

NJ S1557
Excludes value of certain manufacturer rebates from sales price of motor vehicles taxable under sales and use tax.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill excludes the value of certain manufacturer rebates from the sales price of motor vehicles taxable under the sales and use tax. A manufacturer rebate is an amount paid by the manufacturer to the customer for buying a product. Typically, a customer pays the full price to a retailer and uses some "proof of purchase" to obtain a rebate from the manufacturer. Although the later rebate payment reduces the customer's total outlay for the product, the rebate does not reduce the actual payment that the customer made to the retailer, so a rebate does not reduce the amount of the actual sales price or the amount of sales tax due on a sale. This can become very confusing for the customer in certain motor vehicle purchases involving manufacturers' rebates in which the car dealer allows the customer to apply the rebate to the purchase at the time of the sale. In these sales the customer turns over the rights to the rebate to the dealer (who later collects it). Because the application of the rebate reduces the amount of the customer's outlay to the dealer, it appears to the customer that the customer has been provided a discount on the dealer's sale price, and expects to pay sales tax on the discounted price. However, under current law the customer and the manufacturer have together paid the full sale price, and the customer owes sales tax on that full price: the customer's outlay plus the rebate amount. This bill provides a special rule for manufacturer rebates in motor vehicle sales. Under the bill, if the rebate is a cash payment granted as a true manufacturer rebate (and not a credit acquired under a credit or financing plan) and the rebate is used at the time of the retail sale to reduce the sale price of the motor vehicle (and not provided later), then the amount of the rebate is not counted as part of the "sales price" on which sales tax liability is calculated.

AI Summary

This bill amends the definition of "sales price" for motor vehicle sales to exclude the value of certain manufacturer rebates from the taxable amount. A manufacturer rebate is a cash payment from the vehicle manufacturer to the customer. Currently, even if a customer uses a manufacturer rebate to reduce the amount they pay to the dealer at the time of sale, sales tax is calculated on the full original price of the vehicle. This bill provides an exception: if a cash manufacturer rebate is applied directly at the time of the retail sale to reduce the purchase price of a motor vehicle (and is not part of a financing or credit plan), then the amount of that rebate will not be included in the "sales price" for the purpose of calculating sales tax. This change aims to align the tax calculation with the customer's actual out-of-pocket expense at the point of sale.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Commerce Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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