Bad debts are any amounts charged to your customers that you cannot collect, including motor vehicle rental tax. Bad debts can be deducted from your gross rental tax receipts.
Bad debts are those amounts that are:
To reduce your tax liability, you can deduct a bad debt from your gross rental receipts. If a bad debt includes taxable and non-taxable receipts, you can only deduct the taxable amount from gross rental receipts.
If you already remitted the tax to the Comptroller’s office, you can claim credit for the tax paid on the bad debt on your next rental tax return or amend your return for the period the bad debts were written off and taken as a federal income tax bad debt deduction. You can also take credit for bad debts on multiple rental tax returns up to the amount of the bad debts, until you have satisfied the amount of the debts.
For example, if you have bad debts from the rental of a motor vehicle in the amount of $600 (all taxable rental receipts), you can take credit(s) by deducting the $600 from the amount of taxable short-term or long-term rental receipts you report on your rental tax return or on multiple rental tax returns.
To support a claim for a bad debt deduction or credit, you must keep records of:
Any amount claimed as a bad debt cannot be used as a credit against the minimum gross rental receipts tax owed on a vehicle.
96-143
(06/2021)
Bad Debt
Any amount determined to be uncollectable on a rental agreement that is written off as uncollectable. The amount must be entered on the rental company’s books as a bad debt and claimed as a deduction for federal income tax purposes.
Minimum Gross Rental Receipts Tax (Minimum Motor Vehicle Rental Tax or Minimum Rental Tax)
A tax liability that is equal to 6.25 percent of a vehicle’s taxable value. If the rental vehicle was registered tax free, the minimum motor vehicle rental tax is the amount of tax the rental vehicle must generate in order to relieve the owner of the tax liability established at registration.