Form 2290 has two costs that are easy to conflate: the HVUT tax itself (paid to the IRS) and the service fee (paid to whoever prepares and transmits the return). A carrier owes both, and understanding which is which matters when comparing e-file providers.
The HVUT Tax (Paid to the IRS)
The HVUT is a flat annual tax by weight category — not a percentage of revenue. The IRS publishes the rate schedule in the Form 2290 Instructions. The short version:
- Vehicles at exactly 55,000 lbs taxable gross weight owe $100 for a full tax period.
- The rate climbs in per-thousand-pound increments above 55,000 lbs.
- Vehicles above 75,000 lbs owe the maximum of $550 per year.
- Logging vehicles (trucks used exclusively to haul timber from a forest site) get a reduced rate.
- Suspended vehicles — those expected to run 5,000 miles or less on public highways during the tax period (7,500 for agricultural) — owe no HVUT but still have to be reported.
A truck first used mid-year pays a prorated amount based on the first-use month through June 30. The prorated tables are in the Form 2290 Instructions.
The Service Fee (Paid to the E-File Provider)
E-file providers charge separately for preparing and transmitting the return. The market splits into two tiers.
| Factor | Self-serve portals | Managed filing services |
|---|---|---|
| Typical price per vehicle | $20 - $60 | $149 (Fast 2290) |
| Human review of return | No | Licensed preparer |
| VIN correction included | Sometimes extra fee | Typically included |
| Re-filing on rejection | Often per-rejection | Free |
The extra cost at the managed tier buys the preparer's eyes on the VIN list, EIN status, and weight category before transmission — the kind of pre-flight check that prevents most of the common Form 2290 mistakes that get returns rejected.
Free Filing Options
Paper filing has no service fee but still triggers the HVUT itself and a four-to-six-week wait for the stamped Schedule 1— usually too slow for a DMV deadline. Large fleets with their own IRS Electronic Transmitter credentials can transmit MeF filings directly at no service fee, but maintaining an ETT account is overhead most small fleets don't want.
What's Typically Included?
At the managed tier, a reputable provider includes: preparing Form 2290 and Schedule 1, transmitting through MeF, free re-filing if the return is rejected for a correctable error, a downloadable copy of the stamped Schedule 1, and typically VIN correctionsat no additional charge. Low-cost portals sometimes charge per rejection and for VIN corrections, so the advertised price can understate the total. If a vehicle later turns out to qualify for a refund — sold mid-period, low mileage, or destroyed — recovery runs through Form 8849 Schedule 6 rather than the original 2290.