No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsCosta RicaCosta Rica upholds tax breaks for electric cars, solar panels

Costa Rica upholds tax breaks for electric cars, solar panels

Costa Rica’s Attorney General has ruled solar panels, efficient bulbs and electric vehicles will maintain their tax exemptions.

“We celebrate that this exemption is maintained. The transport sector is key in our National Decarbonization Plan and the incentives of the electric transport law are key in the objectives toward electric mobility,” said the Vice Minister of Energy, Rolando Castro.

These products are exempt from 13% sales tax by law 7447, in the case of bulbs and panels, and law 9518, in the case of electric cars.

With the July 1 change of sales tax for a value-added tax (VAT), the Ministry of Finance had consulted the Attorney General to determine what would happen to these exemptions.

The Attorney General, however, interpreted that the new VAT law does not repeal the previous tax law, but rather modifies it. That is why, according to the resolution, “it can not be understood that exemptions from the so-called sales tax granted by other laws have been tacitly repealed.”

“It should also be clarified that the exemptions from sales tax that were granted for terms determined under Law 6826 remain in effect,” the Attorney General’s Office said in its ruling.

The incentives for electric cars came into force less than two years ago, in February 2018. After a year of exemptions, imports grew almost sixfold, according to data from the Treasury.

In 2018 alone, more electric vehicles entered the country than had entered over the previous seven years combined.

According to the President of the Environment Commission of the Legislative Assembly, Paola Vega, the resolution also gives the assembly the task to make an “authentic interpretation” to leave the picture even clearer.

“We will proceed as soon as we return from vacation to make that authentic interpretation and everything will remain the same,” the deputy said.

Semanario Universidad Logo

This story was originally published by Semanario Universidad on July 5, 2019. It was translated and republished with permission by The Tico Times. Read the original report at Semanario Universidad here.

Trending Now

Costa Rica’s UN Ocean Conference Role Slammed as Hypocritical

Costa Rica’s high-profile role in the 2025 United Nations Ocean Conference (UNOC3) in Nice, France, has triggered fierce criticism from lawmakers and environmentalists, who...

Costa Rica Law Now Requires Corporations to Register an Email for Legal Notices

Costa Rica has recently approved a very important law which establishes a new obligation for commercial corporations, and that obligation is that they must...

The Hidden Costs of Living in Costa Rica: Tariffs, Monopolies, and More

‘Tariffs’ is one of the buzzwords of 2025. Defined as taxes imposed by one country on goods imported from another country, tariffs are essentially...

Costa Rica’s Social Crisis Deepens Amid Political Clashes

Costa Rica is sliding into a state of structural violence fueled by political clashes, social division, and weakening institutions, according to a new National...

Gold Cup 2025: Costa Rica, Mexico and Canada Aim for Glory

While other CONCACAF teams have their sights set on the 2026 World Cup, Mexico, Costa Rica, and Canada are raising the stakes by targeting...

Costa Rica Expat’s Bus Journey to the Border: A Ride Like No Other

I can’t say what compelled me to buy a ticket to the border on a collectivo bus. I got to the station too early....
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica