Donald Trump has made at least 10 new tax cut promises. Can he keep any of them?

It was at a recent campaign stop when — for the second time in as many days — Donald Trump revealed a new and potentially expensive tax promise.

The topic du jour was a call to make car loan interest fully tax deductible. The day before, he'd promised another cut for Americans who live abroad.

The two proposals were, by Yahoo Finance's count, at least the ninth and 10th distinct tax cut promises Trump has made in recent months. They include his calls for fully extending his 2017 tax cuts with modifications and an array of add-ons such as eliminating taxes on tips, overtime, and Social Security benefits.

And the former president could go even further. During a recent podcast interview, George "Tyrus" Murdoch floated the idea to Trump of eliminating taxes for veterans and police officers and others who serve.

Trump sounded intrigued, offering "I've never heard that before" calling it an "interesting thing."

But what he hasn't offered amid the flurry of ideas are ways to pay for them, and he may face opposition even from his own party in enacting them if he wins.

The closest thing to a total tab comes from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB). It finds that Trump's tax promises could cost over $9 trillion in the next decade.

But that total doesn't yet include the two new proposals unveiled last week, as well as other promises that don't have enough detail to calculate.

Kamala Harris, of course, has her own tax cut ideas, but the sheer scale of Trump's promises are notable.

The list has been met with a combination of shock and dismissive eye-rolls from tax experts, but the critics have done little to dissuade him from unveiling new proposals regularly and dangling the promised new benefits directly to the groups of voters most interested.

Trump is also promising one significant tax hike (though he'd never call it that) in the form of a new wave of tariffs that experts say could add thousands to US family budgets. Tariffs are taxes that are paid by importers at US points of entry, with the additional costs often passed on to consumers.

Here's a quick pass through Trump's many promises and the many challenges they would face before becoming law:

Former US president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the Detroit Economic Club at the Motor City Casino in Detroit, Michigan, on October 10, 2024. (Photo by JEFF KOWALSKY / AFP) (Photo by JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images)
Former president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the Detroit Economic Club on Oct. 10. (JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images) · JEFF KOWALSKY via Getty Images

Promises for significant voting blocs

Many of Trump's ideas are clearly intended to appeal directly to blocs he needs to win in November.

"Do we have any people that work in restaurants?" he asked a recent crowd in Reading, Pa., before reiterating his promise of no tax on tips. Likewise, his latest auto loan idea was unveiled in Motor City, aka Detroit.