Apply Business Tax Credits
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CPA Tax Compliance & Planning (TCP) › Apply Business Tax Credits
A retail clothing store (C corporation) with gross receipts averaging $900,000 per year and 22 employees operates in a leased storefront. In 2025 it spends $8,000 to install a wheelchair ramp, $3,500 to widen an interior doorway, and $2,000 to add accessible signage and adjust fitting rooms to improve access for customers with disabilities. The owner wants to understand which federal credit could apply to these expenditures. Which tax credit is the business eligible for based on its activities?
Small employer health insurance credit because the store reimburses employees for medical expenses
Research credit because the store redesigned its floor layout
Disabled access credit for eligible expenditures to improve accessibility for individuals with disabilities
Work opportunity tax credit because the store hired seasonal employees
Explanation
The IRS disabled access credit under Section 44 provides small businesses a credit for expenditures to improve accessibility for individuals with disabilities. Key facts include the retail store's $13,500 in expenditures for a ramp, doorway widening, signage, and fitting room adjustments. This credit aligns with IRS regulations because the business meets eligibility with gross receipts under $1 million and fewer than 30 employees, and the costs are eligible access expenditures. The work opportunity tax credit is incorrect as hiring seasonal employees does not automatically qualify without targeted group certification. The research credit and small employer health insurance credit are incorrect because floor redesign and medical reimbursements do not meet qualified research criteria or health premium requirements. Professionals should segregate eligible access costs from general improvements when claiming this credit. Documentation of expenditures and their accessibility purpose is crucial for compliance.
A C corporation with 110 employees performs product development in the United States and also outsources a portion of coding to an unrelated foreign contractor. In 2025, it pays $900,000 to the foreign contractor and $1.1 million to a U.S. contractor for similar work; both sets of work relate to resolving technical uncertainty through iterative testing. Management asks how contract research costs are treated for purposes of the research credit. What are the limitations affecting the business's credit claim?
Only eligible contract research performed in the United States is generally includible; foreign contract research costs are generally excluded from qualified research expenses
Foreign contract research costs qualify, but only if paid in U.S. dollars
No contract research costs qualify; only in-house wages can be treated as qualified research expenses
All contract research costs qualify regardless of where the work is performed, as long as the company owns the final product
Explanation
IRS guidelines for the research credit under Section 41 generally limit qualified contract research expenses to those performed in the United States. Key facts include the C corporation's $900,000 foreign and $1.1 million U.S. contractor payments for similar qualified work. This limitation aligns with IRS regulations excluding foreign costs from QRE. Option B is incorrect as location matters, not just ownership. Options C and D are incorrect because U.S. contract costs can qualify, and currency is irrelevant. Professionals should verify contractor locations for inclusion. This rule guides sourcing decisions to maximize credit eligibility.
A retail pharmacy with average annual gross receipts of $850,000 spends $9,500 in 2025 to install an accessible checkout counter and $1,000 for staff training on assisting customers with hearing impairments. The owner asks what records should be retained to support a disabled access credit claim. What documentation is needed to substantiate the tax credit claim?
A list of all customers who used the accessible counter during the year
Invoices, contracts, and proof of payment for eligible accessibility expenditures, along with descriptions showing the expenditures were made to improve access for individuals with disabilities
A copy of the business’s general liability insurance policy
Only a statement that the business complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act, with no cost documentation
Explanation
IRS guidelines for the disabled access credit under Section 44 require documentation of eligible expenditures and their accessibility purpose. Key facts include the pharmacy's $9,500 counter and $1,000 training costs. Option A aligns with IRS regulations needing invoices and descriptions for substantiation. Option B is incorrect as statements lack cost evidence. Options C and D are incorrect because customer lists or insurance policies are irrelevant. Professionals should retain purpose-specific records. This substantiation rule supports defensible claims during reviews.
A mid-sized software publisher (C corporation) performs development work in 2025. Some work is funded under a customer contract where the customer retains substantial rights to the software and bears the financial risk; other work is internally funded for the company’s own product roadmap. The company asks how this affects research credit eligibility. What are the limitations affecting the business's credit claim?
Funded research always qualifies, but internally funded research never qualifies
Research credit eligibility may be limited for funded research where the taxpayer does not retain substantial rights and/or does not bear financial risk; internally funded research is more likely to qualify
Research credit is available only if the company is a start-up with gross receipts under $5 million
All research activities qualify regardless of funding arrangements, as long as the work involves software
Explanation
IRS rules for the research credit under Section 41 exclude funded research where the taxpayer lacks substantial rights or bears no financial risk. Key facts include the software company's customer-funded work versus internally funded projects. This limitation aligns with IRS regulations favoring internally funded activities. Option B is incorrect as funding affects eligibility. Options C and D are incorrect because funded can qualify with rights/risk, and receipts are unrelated. Tax professionals should review funding agreements for rights and risk. This framework aids in classifying research for credit purposes.
A mid-sized robotics company (C corporation) develops prototypes and runs iterative tests to improve battery life and motor control, documenting failed trials and design changes. In 2025, it also performs routine quality control testing on units already in commercial production to confirm they meet established specifications. The company wants to know which activities support an R&D credit claim. Which tax credit is the business eligible for based on its activities?
Research credit for prototype development and experimentation activities intended to resolve technical uncertainty
Small employer health insurance credit because engineers are highly compensated employees
Research credit for routine quality control testing of finished goods, because it occurs in a laboratory setting
Disabled access credit because the prototypes may be used by individuals with disabilities
Explanation
The IRS research credit under Section 41 rewards activities resolving technical uncertainty through experimentation, such as prototype development. Key facts include the robotics company's iterative testing for improvements, versus routine quality control. This credit aligns with IRS regulations for the prototyping but excludes quality control as a non-qualified activity. Option B is incorrect as quality control does not meet the experimentation test. Options C and D are incorrect because compensation levels and potential use do not trigger health or access credits. Professionals should distinguish experimental from routine activities. This framework supports robust credit claims with targeted documentation.
A mid-sized software company (C corporation) incurred the following 2025 costs: $2.4 million of W-2 wages for engineers performing qualified development and testing; $600,000 of wages for customer support staff; $500,000 paid to a U.S. contractor for development (no ownership relationship); and $300,000 for cloud hosting used in production. The company wants to identify which costs are most likely includible as qualified research expenses for the research credit. Which tax credit is the business eligible for based on its activities?
Disabled access credit; engineer wages qualify if they improve accessibility features in the software
Small employer health insurance credit; engineer wages qualify if the company offers health coverage
Research credit; all operating expenses including customer support wages and production cloud hosting are qualified research expenses
Research credit; qualified research expenses generally include qualified wages and 65% of eligible contract research costs tied to qualified research activities
Explanation
The IRS research credit under Section 41 includes qualified research expenses such as wages for qualified services and 65% of U.S. contract research costs. Key facts include the software company's $2.4 million engineer wages and $500,000 U.S. contractor payments tied to development. This credit aligns with IRS regulations by including these costs while excluding support wages and production hosting. Option B is incorrect as not all operating expenses qualify. Options C and D are incorrect because engineer wages do not relate to accessibility or health coverage. Professionals should allocate expenses by activity to identify qualified amounts. This decision rule helps optimize credit claims by focusing on direct research ties.
A C corporation invests in qualifying energy property and wants to claim the energy credit for 2025. The property is delivered to the plant on December 28, 2025, but installation is not completed and the equipment is not operational until February 2026. The company wants to claim the credit in 2025 to offset higher taxable income. What are the limitations affecting the business's credit claim?
The credit generally applies when the property is placed in service (operational and ready for intended use), so it would generally be claimed in 2026, not 2025
The credit is claimed in 2025 only if the company uses cash-basis accounting
The credit is claimed in 2025 because delivery occurred in 2025
The credit is claimed in 2025 because the purchase order was signed in 2025
Explanation
IRS rules for the energy investment credit under Section 48 require property to be placed in service, meaning operational, for credit eligibility. Key facts include delivery in 2025 but operability in 2026. This limitation aligns with IRS regulations deferring the credit to 2026. Option B is incorrect as delivery alone does not suffice. Options C and D are incorrect because purchase orders or accounting methods do not determine timing. Professionals should align claims with operational dates. This framework optimizes timing for tax liability management.
A manufacturing C corporation installs energy-efficient lighting and building controls in 2025 and also undertakes a separate project to develop a new production process involving pilot runs and experimentation to reduce scrap rates. Management wants to know which credit option should be pursued for each project but prefers to file a single combined credit claim. Based on the provided details, which credit option should be pursued?
Claim only the research credit for both projects because any efficiency improvement is treated as qualified research
Claim only the energy credit for both projects because pilot runs are considered energy-saving activities
Pursue an energy credit for qualifying energy property and separately evaluate a research credit for the experimentation-based process development; they are distinct credits with separate eligibility and documentation requirements
Claim the small employer health insurance credit because manufacturing firms are prioritized for federal credits
Explanation
IRS tax credits like the energy investment credit under Section 48 and research credit under Section 41 have distinct eligibility for energy property and experimentation activities. Key facts include the manufacturing corporation's separate lighting installation and process development projects. This approach aligns with IRS regulations allowing pursuit of both credits independently. Option B is incorrect as efficiency alone does not trigger research. Options C and D are incorrect because pilot runs are not energy activities, and health credits are unrelated. Professionals should evaluate projects against specific credit criteria. This rule enables maximizing benefits through targeted claims.
A small bakery organized as an LLC taxed as a partnership has 18 full-time equivalent employees and average annual wages of $31,000. In 2025, it begins offering a group health plan through the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) Marketplace and pays 55% of employee-only premiums. The bakery’s owners want to know which credit option should be pursued based on these facts. Based on the provided details, which credit option should be pursued?
Energy investment credit because the bakery replaced lighting with LED bulbs
Research credit because developing new pastry recipes is treated as qualified research
Small employer health insurance credit because coverage is purchased through SHOP and the employer pays at least 50% of employee-only premiums
Disabled access credit because the bakery provides printed menus in large font
Explanation
The IRS small employer health insurance credit under Section 45R incentivizes small businesses to provide health coverage by offsetting a portion of premiums paid. Key facts include the bakery's 18 full-time equivalent employees, average wages of $31,000, and purchase of coverage through SHOP with 55% employer contribution. This credit aligns with IRS regulations because the business meets eligibility criteria of fewer than 25 FTEs, average wages below the threshold, SHOP purchase, and at least 50% premium payment. The research credit is incorrect as developing pastry recipes typically does not involve technological uncertainty or experimentation required under Section 41. The energy investment credit and disabled access credit are incorrect because replacing lighting with LEDs and providing large-font menus do not qualify as energy property investments or eligible access expenditures. Tax professionals should assess small employer credit eligibility by calculating FTEs and average wages annually. Pursuing this credit requires coordinating with SHOP enrollment and tracking premium contributions precisely.
A mid-sized technology company (C corporation) with 140 employees is evaluating whether its 2025 engineering work qualifies for the research credit. The work involves building a new machine-learning feature for its SaaS platform, including experimentation with multiple model architectures to resolve uncertainty about accuracy and latency; it also includes routine data labeling and cosmetic user interface changes. The company maintained design documents and test results but did not track employee time by project until the last quarter. What documentation is needed to substantiate the tax credit claim?
Only a signed statement from the chief technology officer asserting the work was innovative
Contemporaneous project records demonstrating permitted purpose, technical uncertainty, and a process of experimentation, supported by payroll records for qualified wages
Invoices for all software subscriptions used by the company, regardless of relation to research activities
A copy of the company’s audited financial statements showing total R&D expense under GAAP
Explanation
IRS guidelines for the research credit under Section 41 require substantiation of qualified research activities through contemporaneous documentation demonstrating the four-part test. Key facts include the technology company's machine-learning feature development with design documents and test results, but incomplete time-tracking. Option A aligns with IRS regulations by requiring records of permitted purpose, uncertainty, experimentation, and qualified wages. Option B is incorrect as a signed statement alone lacks detail on activities and expenses needed for substantiation. Options C and D are incorrect because unrelated invoices or GAAP financials do not tie expenses to qualified research. Tax professionals should implement project-tracking systems to capture contemporaneous evidence. This framework ensures claims are defensible during audits by linking documentation to specific credit criteria.