Key Takeaways
- You can't deduct personal interest paid on credit cards for personal purchases.
- You can typically deduct credit card interest on business purchases as a business expense.
- The Tax Reform Act of 1986 eliminated the deduction for personal credit card interest.
- The interest on a qualified student loan is typically eligible as a deduction. But the interest from using a credit card to pay your education expenses is not deductible.
What is personal interest
Personal interest is interest you pay for goods and services you don't use for work or business-related purposes. Although not an exhaustive list, common examples include buying clothes, electronic equipment, cars and food using a credit card. When you make monthly payments that include interest, it is always nondeductible personal interest. This remains true even if you use the credit card to subsidize the purchase of your home.
Deductible credit card interest
One exception to the rule is if you use a credit card for business purposes. Generally many companies, whether a corporation or sole proprietorship, use credit cards to purchase equipment for use in the business, to buy necessary supplies and for many other daily transactions. When you use a credit card in this way, the interest payments you make on the credit card are deductible as a business expense. This means that you can reduce the amount of your business earnings that are subject to tax for these interest payments. However, if you use the credit card for both business and personal purposes, you need to insure that you only deduct the interest that accrues on the business-related purchases.
TurboTax Tip:
Home equity loan interest is only deductible if used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home, starting from 2018.
History of credit card interest deduction
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 changed many provisions in the Internal Revenue Code. One of the most notable was the elimination of the personal interest deduction. Prior to this, you could deduct all credit card interest payments, regardless of what you purchased.
Ways to avoid nondeductible credit card interest
Sometimes it may be possible to claim an interest deduction for your purchase by using a payment method other than credit cards. For example, instead of using your credit card to pay your school tuition this semester, you may want to look into student loans first. When you use a student loan, the IRS allows you to deduct the interest payments you make on it until it's paid off. For tax years prior to 2018, the interest on a home equity loan was deductible and could provide cash to make personal purchases and also allowed you to deduct the interest as part of your mortgage interest deduction. However, beginning in 2018, home equity loan interest is not deductible unless it is used to buy, build, or substantially improve your home.
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