Does the Chevrolet Tahoe qualify for the car loan interest deduction?

The 2025–2028 deduction turns on where a vehicle is finally assembled — not the badge. Here's where the 2025–2026 Chevrolet Tahoe is built and what it means for your loan interest.

Assembly data: NHTSA vPIC + our verified plant lists · Not tax advice · Methodology
PASS — assembled in the USA
The Chevrolet Tahoe qualifies on the assembly test. Assembly is one of four gates — you also need a new vehicle, personal use, a 2025–2028 loan, and income under the phase-out.
The short answer

The Chevrolet Tahoe is built in Arlington, Texas, so this full-size SUV clears the OBBBA final-assembly test. Financed new for personal use and under the income cap, a Tahoe loan's interest can be deductible. Just remember a pass on assembly still leaves the other gates to clear.

Where the Chevrolet Tahoe is assembled

Assembly plantLocationAssembly test
Arlington Assembly Arlington, TX ✓ United States

Confirm the other three tests

A US-assembly PASS is only the first gate. Each remaining condition has its own guide:

New & personal-use — used cars and leases don't qualify Loan dated 2025–2028 — refinancing keeps eligibility Income under the phase-out — run the MAGI calculator

Frequently asked questions

Where is the Chevrolet Tahoe assembled?
The Tahoe is built at GM's Arlington Assembly plant in Texas, which also builds the Suburban, Yukon, and Escalade — all US final-assembly points.
Is the Tahoe built in the same plant as the Suburban?
Yes. Both the Tahoe and the longer Suburban come from Arlington, Texas, so both satisfy the US assembly requirement.
Does using a Tahoe to tow for work affect eligibility?
The OBBBA deduction is for personal-use vehicles. If the Tahoe is used mainly for business, separate business-expense rules apply instead.
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