Starting in November, the cars 0km of more than $42,400,000 in public price will be reached by the first scale of the “Luxury” tax.
The data arises from the quarterly adjustment that the AFIP will apply to the tax base of $28,512,373 that will be in effect until the end of October, which will go to $29,772,276 in wholesale price, that is, before 21% VAT and 15%. of the concessionaire’s commission.
This causes the public value achieved by Internal Taxes to rise from the current $40,500,000 to around $42,400,000.
It must be taken into account that it is a estimated amount since it will depend on the method of paying taxes and the possibility of reducing the commission margin by sellers.
If measured in official dollars, it would be equivalent to 0km of US$42,500, while at “blue” It would be US$34,700.
This value will be valid, in principle, until the end of January if the Government does not make changes.
The update of the value for cars is a consequence of the 4.74% adjustment that the AFIP will make, corresponding to the increase in wholesale prices of vehicles in the quarter of July, August and September, according to the automotive wholesale price index released last week
Due to the way Internal Taxes are calculated, the 20% rate, which corresponds to the first scale, equivalent to a price increase of around 25%, which means that the models that are affected are out of the market.
That is why brands tend to keep 0 km just below that limit to avoid paying the tax surcharge.
If you look at the price lists, there are many models “topped” below $40,500,000.
For this reason, it is expected that, starting in November, many 0km will have a greater price adjustment to accommodate the new cap.
Although it is true that the quarterly adjustment of only 4.74% is low in relation to the levels of months ago. At the beginning of the year, a quarterly adjustment of more than 90% was achieved. In that case, the situation of the “capped” models was a problem.
For the second scale, the tax base goes from $52,479,204 to $54,964,205. This implies that cars worth more than $78,000,000, approximately, pay this tax.
Source: Ambito

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