The G-Wagon Write-Off Myth

Ben Clymer
10/20/2025

Once or twice a year, a client hits me with a wild question.

Recently, it was this:
“Ben, can I buy a $150,000 G-Wagon and write the whole thing off on my taxes?”

It’s a great question — and one that’s exploded across social media lately. You’ve probably seen the posts:
“Write off your G-Wagon and save $55,000 in taxes!”

Sounds amazing, right? The problem? It’s mostly smoke and mirrors.
Let’s unpack what’s really going on here — and what smart business owners actually do instead.

Write-Offs Are Deductions, Not Magic

Here’s the first big misunderstanding: a write-off is a deduction, not a credit.

A deduction reduces your taxable income, not your tax bill.
At a 37% tax rate, a $150,000 deduction saves about $55,500 in taxes — but you still spent $94,500 out of pocket.

A credit, on the other hand, is dollar-for-dollar.

  • A $5,000 credit = $5,000 less in taxes
  • A $5,000 deduction = about $1,850 saved (at 37%)

Understanding that difference turns flashy “tax hacks” into what they really are — expensive purchases with partial discounts.

The Real Rules: Section 179 & Bonus Depreciation

Yes, the IRS allows certain large vehicles (over 6,000 lbs) to be written off faster under Section 179 or bonus depreciation.
But it’s not a free-for-all. To qualify, you need to:

  • Use the vehicle over 50% for business
  • Put it in service within the current tax year
  • Deduct no more than your business income
  • Keep detailed mileage logs & documentation

If you can’t prove that business use in an audit, you’ll lose the deduction — and possibly owe penalties.

The Hidden Costs That Hurt Cash Flow

Even if you qualify, luxury vehicles bring expensive baggage:

  • Insurance: $5,000+ per year
  • Maintenance: $2,000+/year
  • Tires: $1,500+
  • Depreciation: 20–30% in year one

That one-time deduction doesn’t offset years of ongoing costs. When business slows, those payments don’t.

What Real Wealth Builders Actually Do

Instead of chasing shiny deductions, smart business owners focus on strategies that actually grow their balance sheet:

  • Maximize retirement plans (Solo 401(k), SEP IRA, etc.)
  • Hire talent that increases revenue
  • Reinvest in marketing & client acquisition
  • Maintain liquidity to seize opportunities

Those moves compound over time. The G-Wagon doesn’t.

Substance Over Status

I’ve seen both sides:

  • Entrepreneurs making $1M+ with <$100K in net worth
  • Quiet business owners with modest lifestyles and 7-figure portfolios

The difference? One group chases write-offs. The other builds equity.

The Real Question to Ask

Before asking, “Can I deduct this?”
Ask instead, “Would I still buy this if there were no deduction?”

If the answer is no — it’s not a strategy. It’s a rationalization.

Real wealth isn’t built in chrome & leather.
It’s built with discipline, smart allocation, and long-term thinking.

Let the luxury come after your financial foundation — not as a substitute for it.

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About The Author

Ben Clymer

Ben Clymer leads Abbey Street’s Private Wealth Management division and designed the planning processes for the firm. He holds the Certified Financial Planner™ designation and has a degree in finance from the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management.

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