Electric Vehicles Rebates & Incentives in New York
New York homeowners can save up to $4,000-$12,000 on electric vehicles through federal, state, and utility programs.
Available Programs
| Program | Amount | Type | Provider | Expires |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Clean Vehicle Credit (30D) - New EV Federal tax credit up to $7,500 for new qualifying electric vehicles. | Up to $7,500 | Tax Credit | Federal Government | Dec 31, 2032 |
| Federal Used Clean Vehicle Credit (25E) Federal tax credit for purchasing a qualifying used electric vehicle from a dealer. | Up to $4,000 | Tax Credit | Federal Government | Dec 31, 2032 |
| New York EV Rebate State rebate for new electric vehicle purchase or lease. | $2,500 | Rebate | New York Energy Office | Dec 31, 2026 |
| PSEG Long Island EV Charger Rebate Utility rebate for Level 2 home EV charger installation. | $250 | Rebate | PSEG Long Island | Dec 31, 2026 |
How to Claim Electric Vehicles Rebates in New York
Verify the specific EV model qualifies at fueleconomy.gov before purchasing
Check your income eligibility against federal and state thresholds
Ask the dealer about transferring the federal credit at point of sale for immediate savings
Apply for state rebates - many require application within 90 days of purchase
File IRS Form 8936 with your tax return to claim any remaining federal credit
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Frequently Asked Questions
The federal Clean Vehicle Credit offers up to $7,500 for new qualifying EVs and up to $4,000 for used EVs purchased from a dealer. Income and price limits apply.
When you lease, the leasing company claims the federal tax credit but often passes savings to you as a lower monthly payment. State rebates vary - some apply to leases, others only to purchases.
Qualifying vehicles must meet battery component and critical mineral sourcing requirements. The list changes quarterly - check fueleconomy.gov for the current list of eligible models.
Yes, you can typically combine the federal tax credit with state rebates, utility incentives, and local programs. Some states offer $2,000-$5,000 on top of the federal credit.
Yes, the federal Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit (Section 30C) covers 30% of charger costs up to $1,000 for residential installations in eligible areas.