Used Car Tax Cut Act

Full Title:
An Act to amend the Excise Tax Act (used motor vehicles)

Summary#

This bill would stop charging federal sales tax on most used motor vehicles. It amends the Excise Tax Act to make sales of qualifying used vehicles “zero‑rated” for GST/HST (taxed at 0%). The stated goal is to avoid taxing a vehicle again after tax was already paid when it was new.

Key changes:

  • Adds used motor vehicles designed for highway use, including motor homes, to the list of zero‑rated supplies (0% GST/HST).
  • A vehicle qualifies only if it was previously registered to a different owner under provincial law (showing it is actually used).
  • New vehicles do not qualify, even if a dealer registered them for the purpose of the first sale (demo or dealer-plated new units remain taxable).
  • Dealers would stop charging GST/HST on qualifying used vehicle sales but could still claim input tax credits on their business costs.
  • Person‑to‑person private sales generally already do not charge GST/HST; this bill mainly changes sales by dealers.
  • The bill does not change any separate provincial or territorial taxes that are outside the GST/HST system.

What it means for you#

  • Car and motor home buyers (buying from a dealer)

    • You would not be charged GST/HST on a qualifying used vehicle. In HST provinces, this would likely remove the full HST on these sales.
    • This could lower the out‑the‑door price, depending on how dealers adjust prices.
    • New vehicles remain fully taxable.
  • People buying or selling privately

    • No direct federal change. Private sales typically do not charge GST/HST today.
    • Some provinces charge their own vehicle tax at registration on private sales; this bill does not change those rules.
  • Used vehicle dealers

    • You must treat qualifying used vehicle sales as zero‑rated: charge 0% GST/HST to customers.
    • You can still claim input tax credits for GST/HST paid on business inputs (e.g., parts, repairs, overhead).
    • You would need to keep proof that a vehicle was previously registered to a different owner under provincial law.
    • Demo or new vehicles registered to the dealership for first sale remain taxable.
  • What is unclear

    • The bill refers to prior registration “under the laws of a province.” It does not say whether prior registration only in a territory (Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut) would count.
  • Vehicles covered

    • Cars, pickups, vans, motorcycles, and similar vehicles designed for highway use; motor homes are included.
    • Off‑road vehicles not designed for highway use (e.g., many ATVs, snowmobiles) are not covered by this wording.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Possible fiscal and administrative effects (not quantified):

  • Lower federal GST/HST revenue from dealer sales of qualifying used vehicles.
  • In HST provinces, zero‑rating would likely also remove the provincial portion of HST on these sales, reducing provincial HST revenue; separate provincial vehicle taxes outside GST/HST would be unaffected.
  • Dealers could see more GST/HST refunds (input tax credits) while charging 0% to customers.
  • Government and businesses would face one‑time costs to update guidance, systems, and audits to apply the new rule.

Proponents' View#

  • The bill appears intended to prevent “double taxation,” since sales tax was already paid when the vehicle was new.
  • Making used vehicles zero‑rated could lower purchase costs for people who rely on used cars and motor homes.
  • A clear, bright‑line rule (previously registered to a different owner) could be simpler to apply than case‑by‑case methods.
  • Keeping input tax credits for sellers may help ensure dealers are not penalized for business costs while charging 0% to buyers.

Opponents' View#

  • One concern is reduced tax revenue for the federal government (and likely for HST‑participating provinces), with no estimate provided.
  • Prices may not fall by the full amount of the removed tax if market conditions or dealer pricing absorb part of the change.
  • The rule depends on verifying prior registration; edge cases (e.g., lease returns, fleet vehicles, cross‑jurisdiction transfers) may add paperwork or disputes.
  • The bill does not change separate provincial or territorial vehicle taxes that apply outside GST/HST, so buyers in some places may still face significant tax at registration.
  • It is unclear whether vehicles previously registered only in a territory qualify, which could create uneven treatment unless clarified.

Amendment analysis

Compare the current law against the bill text and review the change-by-change explanation for each affected provision.

Amendments
1
Sources
14
Updated
Jun 13, 2026

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