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:: Credit for Increasing Research Activites - Research Credit
Computation
3.
RESEARCH CREDIT COMPUTATION
a. In
General
The research
credit is an incremental credit
that equals 20 percent of a
taxpayer’s excess QREs (if any)
for the taxable year over their
base amount. The current
carry-back is one year and
carry-forward is 20 years
(section 39). In many
instances, verifying the base
amount computation can have a
more significant impact on audit
results than the determination
of allowable credit year QREs.
Therefore, a review of the
mechanical computation of the
research credit is an essential
step in the examination process,
and should be performed in all
examinations. All necessary
documents, as determined during
the pre-audit analysis, should
be requested to insure that the
taxpayer properly computed its
research credit for all year(s)
under examination.
The scope and
extent of the computation review
may be influenced by the
following non exclusive factors:
-
Proper
determination of gross
receipts, including
prior audit adjustments
made to gross receipts.
-
A spike
in the credit year’s
QREs relative to the
base years.
-
Acquisitions and/or
dispositions of major
portions of trades or
businesses. I.R.C. §
41(f).
-
Changes
to the fixed base
percentage from prior
years.
-
Inconsistent treatment
of expenses in the base
years versus the credit
years (e.g., the
taxpayer claims that
certain costs in the
credit years are QREs,
but has not treated
those types of costs as
QREs in the base years).
In general, for
tax years beginning after
December 31, 1989, the base
amount is computed by
multiplying the taxpayer's
fixed-base percentage by its
average annual gross receipts
for the preceding four years.
I.R.C. § 41(c)(1).
A taxpayer's
fixed-base percentage is the
percentage determined by taking
aggregate QREs of the taxpayer
for taxable years beginning
after December 31, 1983, and
before January 1, 1989 over
aggregate gross receipts of the
taxpayer for the same such
taxable years. I.R.C. §
41(c)(3)(A).
The maximum
fixed-base percentage is 16
percent. I.R.C. § 41(c)(3)(C).
In no event may
the base amount be less than 50
percent of the QREs for the
credit year. I.R.C. § 41(c)(2).
Acquisition or
dispositions of trades or
businesses should be identified
and verified (from the base
years to the current year) to
confirm that they are properly
reflected in the computation.
I.R.C. § 41(f).
The credit
year’s QREs and the base years’
QREs are determined based upon
application of the law in effect
for the current year under
examination. Consistency
between the credit year’s and
the base years’ QREs are
required. I.R.C. § 41(c)(5).
Therefore, in addition to base
year workpapers, the examiner
should ascertain the existence
and availability of books and
records from the relevant base
years in order to determine
consistency.
There may be
instances where the calculation
of the credit was not properly
made. For example, taxpayers
using the regular (non-AIRC)
computation method who
experience years of high growth
in their gross receipts and flat
expenditures on qualified
research may find that they no
longer are eligible for the
research credit under the
regular computation rules,
because the credit year’s QREs
do not exceed the base amount.
The examiner should be alert to
the possible inclusion of non
qualified expenses as QREs.
Another
aggressive strategy is for
taxpayers to understate their
“base amount” by understating
the “fixed base percentage”
and/or by understating “gross
receipts” in the prior four
years. The examiner should also
be alert to applying the
computational rules properly and
verifying that all gross
receipts are identified and
reported.
When taxpayers
can no longer maintain or
increase spending on qualified
research relative to gross
receipts, they often transition
to the Alternative Incremental
Research Credit (“AIRC”).
b. The
Alternative Incremental Research
Credit (AIRC)
Starting with
taxable years beginning after
June 30, 1996, a taxpayer may
elect to compute the research
credit using the AIRC. I.R.C. §
41(c) (4). The election must be
made on an original return and
is binding on all subsequent
years unless formally revoked
(with the consent of the
Commissioner). However new
temporary regulation (TD 9205)
now provides for an automatic
consent to change this election,
by simply completing the
appropriate portion of Form 6765
on a timely filed original
return for the year of the
change. A taxpayer cannot
elect or revoke an AIRC election
on an amended return. An
examiner has no authority to
make this change or allow the
election for the taxpayer during
an examination. Treas. Reg. §
1.41-8. If properly elected,
the AIRC equals the sum of:
4
-
2.65
percent of so much of
the QREs for the taxable
year as exceeds 1
percent of the
taxpayer's average
annual gross receipts
for the preceding four
years. However, this
amount cannot exceed 1.5
percent of taxpayer's
average annual gross
receipts for the four
preceding taxable years.
-
3.2
percent of so much of
the QREs for the taxable
year as exceeds 1.5
percent of taxpayer's
average annual gross
receipts for the
preceding four years.
However, this amount
cannot exceed 2 percent
of taxpayer's average
annual gross receipts
for the four preceding
taxable years.
-
3.75
percent of so much of
the taxpayer's QREs as
exceeds 2 percent of
such taxpayer's average
annual gross receipts
for the four preceding
taxable years.
c. Start-Up Companies
A “start-up
company” is generally defined as
a company that did not have both
gross receipts and QREs in at
least three of the base period
years, or the first taxable year
in which there were both QREs
and gross receipts began after
December 31, 1983. (The second
provision did not take effect
until July 1, 1996). For a
start-up company, I.R.C. §
41(c)(3)(B) assigns a fixed-base
percentage of 3 percent. The 3
percent start-up rate continues
each of the first five years
beginning after 1993. In years
6 through 9, a statutory
fraction of the ratio between
aggregate QREs and aggregate
gross receipts is used to
determine the start-up’s
fixed-base percentage. Only
years in which the taxpayer has
QREs are counted in this
computation. See I.R.C. §
41(c)(3)(B)(ii) to determine the
start-up’s fixed base percentage
after its initial 5-year period.
Spun-off
companies may or may not be
considered start-up companies
for purposes of computing the
base amount. Their base year
activities carry over with
them. A taxpayer that is
created as a result of a
spin-off may refer to themselves
as a start-up, but if it had the
relevant base year QREs and
gross receipts, then it will be
treated as a start-up company.
d.
Gross Receipts
Section
41(c)(6) does not provide a
definition of the term “gross
receipts”, other than to provide
that gross receipts for any
taxable year are reduced by
returns and allowances made
during the taxable year. In the
case of a foreign corporation,
only gross receipts effectively
connected with the conduct of a
trade or business within the
United States, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico (for amounts
incurred after June 30, 1999),
or any possession of the United
States (same) are taken into
account. As a result, a
taxpayer may have included in
gross receipts only the figure
on Form 1120, line 1c. Treasury
Regulation section 1.41-3(c)(1)
provides that for purposes of
section 41, gross receipts means
the total amount, as determined
under the taxpayer's method of
accounting, derived by the
taxpayer from all its activities
and from all sources (e.g.,
revenues derived from the sale
of inventory before reduction
for cost of goods sold) with the
exception of the following items
that are specifically excluded
by Treasury Regulation section
1.41-3(c)(2):
-
Returns
or allowances.
-
Receipts from the sale
or exchange of capital
assets, defined under
section 1221.
-
Repayments of loans or
similar instruments.
-
Receipts from a sale or
exchange not in the
ordinary course of
business, such as the
sale of an entire trade
or business or the sale
of property used in a
trade or business as
defined under section
1221(2).
-
Amounts
received with respect to
sales tax or other
similar state and local
taxes if, under the
applicable state or
local law, the tax is
legally imposed on the
purchaser of the goods
or service, and the
taxpayer merely collects
and remits the tax to
the taxing authority.
-
Amounts
received by a taxpayer
in a taxable year that
precedes the first
taxable year in which
the taxpayer derives
more than $25,000 in
gross receipts other
than investment income.
Selected issues
include:
-
A
foreign branch of a
United States company
should have its receipts
included as part of the
gross receipts
computation.
-
Gross
receipts of the entities
required to aggregate
their expenditures under
section 41(f)(1)(A) and
(B) should be included
regardless of whether
the entity companies
have QREs.
-
Gross
Receipts should not be
reduced by cost of goods
sold.
-
Tax
exempt interest and
other tax exempt income
should be included in
the gross receipts
computation.
The examiner
should secure information to
determine the taxpayer's average
annual gross receipts for the
preceding 4 years as well as the
gross receipts relevant to the
fixed-base percentage. A good
starting point to verify income
is line 11 of Form 1120, page 1,
adding back the cost of goods
sold. The amount on line 11
should be reduced for capital
gain, sales taxes, and other
excluded amounts per Treasury
Regulation section 1.41-3(c)(2)
reported in the line 11 amount.
Verify that the correct
definition of gross receipts was
used, and applied consistently
for the prior 4 years and the
base years. Confirm
incorporation of any prior audit
adjustments to gross receipts,
when applicable.
e.
Special Rules
The Research
Credit Technical Advisor Team
has identified the following
recurring computational issues:
(1)
Aggregation Rules of Section
41(f)
The examiner
should take steps to insure that
the taxpayer has included all
relevant members in its research
credit computation. Section
41(f)(1) requires that all
members of the same controlled
group (greater than 50 percent
control), and all trades or
businesses under common control,
be treated as a single
taxpayer. Care should be taken
to ensure that all members have
been included, as the section 41
definition of control is broader
than the definition for
consolidated return groups.
In May 2005,
the IRS issued new temporary and
proposed regulations (TD 9205
and REG-134030-04) under section
41(f)(1). These regulations
retain the computation of the
group credit from the July 2003
proposed regulations
(REG-133791-02) except for a
slight modification of the
start-up company rules.
However, these temporary
regulations make significant
changes to the allocation of the
group credit to the members of
the group. The July 2003
proposed regulations replaced
proposed regulations issued in
January 2000.
The computation
of the aggregate group research
credit under these new
temporary regulations is
computed by treating all of the
members of the group as a single
taxpayer. The group credit is
computed under either the
regular method or the AIRC
method, whichever method
produces the greater group
credit. The temporary
regulations provide that the
decision to use one method or
the other will be made by the
designated member or the group.
The designated member is the
member of the group that is
allocated the greatest amount of
the group credit. If the group,
as a whole, meets the start-up
company provisions of section
41(c)(3)(b), then the group is
considered a start-up company.
However, if any one member had
gross receipts prior to December
31, 1983 and another member had
QREs prior to December 31, 1983,
then the group as a whole does
not qualify for start-up company
status. The group credit is then
allocated to the individual
members of the group, using
whatever method yields that
member the greatest credit,
regardless of whether or not
they use the same method used to
compute the group credit.
However, the allocation to the
individual members cannot exceed
100% of the group credit.
These new temporary regulations
are effective for taxable years
ending on or after May 24,
2005. However, the temporary
regulations also provides that
for taxable years ending on or
after December 29, 1999,
taxpayers can use any reasonable
method of computing and
allocating the group credit,
provided that the members of the
group do not claim more than 100
percent of the group credit.
(2)
Short Years
a) Short Credit Year
If a credit
year is a short taxable year,
then the average annual gross
receipts of the taxpayer for the
4 prior taxable years used in
determining the base amount
under section 41(c)(1) must be
modified by multiplying that
amount by the number of months
in the short taxable year and
dividing the result by 12.
Treas. Reg. § 1.41-3(b).
b) Short Taxable Year Preceding
the Credit Year
If one or more
of the four taxable years
preceding the credit year is a
short taxable year, then the
gross receipts for such year are
deemed to be equal to the gross
receipts actually derived in
that year multiplied by 12 and
divided by the number of months
in that year.
c) Short Taxable Year in
Determining Fixed-Base
Percentage
No adjustment
is made on account of a short
taxable year to the computation
of a taxpayer’s fixed-base
percentage.
(3)
Acquisitions/Dispositions
Section
41(f)(3) generally requires an
adjustment to be made to the
base amount in the case of the
acquisition or disposition of a
major portion of a trade or
business. Therefore, the
examiner must ascertain whether
the taxpayer made any
acquisitions or dispositions
that could affect the research
credit computation. Compare the
prior years and question any
large discrepancies.
Change in
ownership of a business is
discussed under section
41(f)(3). Acquisition of the
stock of another company, or
disposition of stock, standing
alone, does not trigger
application of section
41(f)(3). See I.R.C. §
41(f)(1).
(4)
Partnership Issue
Section 41
requires that a taxpayer incur
credit-eligible research
expenditures "in carrying on"
any "trade or business“. Thus,
two conditions must be satisfied
to qualify for the credit.
First, as under section 174,
there must be a qualifying trade
or business. Second, the
expense must be incurred in
carrying on that trade or
business.
The "in
carrying on" and "trade or
business" tests for the research
credit generally are the same as
the test for the purposes of
section 162. The expenses must
relate to a particular trade or
business of the taxpayer that is
being carried on at the time the
expenses are paid or incurred.
Thus, expenses paid or incurred
in connection with a trade or
business within the meaning of
section 174 are not necessarily
paid or incurred in carrying on
a trade or business for purposes
of section 41.
As is the case
with section 174, when a
taxpayer contracts out research
and intends to sell or license
the results thereof, the section
41 trade or business requirement
is not satisfied if the activity
is merely a financing
arrangement.
a) Application of Test at
Partnership Level
Under section
162, it is well established that
the determination of the
existence of a trade or business
with respect to a partnership
must be made at the partnership
level, without regard to the
existing businesses of the
corporate or individual
partners. The research credit
regulations generally follow the
section 162 approach to the
application of the trade or
business requirement to a
partnership. Thus, if a newly
formed research partnership
initially has no active trade or
business, the "in carrying on"
requirement generally bars
eligibility for the research
credit.
b) Special Exception for
Qualifying Joint Ventures
The research
credit regulations provide that
an in-house research expense or
contract research expense paid
or incurred by a partnership
other than in carrying on a
trade or business of the
partnership is eligible for the
credit if certain conditions are
met. The regulations do not
require that all partners meet
the "in carrying on" test, but
do contain limits similar to
those in section 168(h)(6)
(relating to tax-exempt use
property).
c) Expenditures Relating to a
Startup Business
Special rules
for startup ventures in applying
the trade or business
requirement are set forth in
section 41(b)(4).
4 The
Tax Relief Extension Act of 1999
amended section 41(c)(4)(A) by
striking 1.65 percent and
inserting 2.65 percent, by
striking 2.2 percent and
inserting 3.2 percent, and by
striking 2.75 percent and
inserting 3.75 percent. This
change applies to taxable years
beginning after June 30, 1999.
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