Inflation Reduction Act Tax Credit Solutions
Maximize tax credits. Save on project costs. Create community impact.
The IRA requirements are everchanging and only a limited number of tax credits are offered. Lean on our specialists to help your organization effectively position your project to maximize and receive eligible Inflation Reduction Act tax credits.
What is the Inflation Reduction Act?
The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 includes the largest energy incentive effort in U.S. history. It builds on the energy initiatives included in the American Reinvestment Recovery Act of 2009, generating opportunities for organizations across various industries to receive tax credits for implementing clean energy solutions.
The IRA includes more than 70 investment, excise and production tax credits designed to facilitate the transition to cleaner energy production, promote advanced manufacturing, encourage the adoption of clean vehicles (CVs) and reduce greenhouse gas emissions through the use of alternative fuels and energy efficient technologies. Additionally, significant enhancements have been made to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Department of Energy (DOE) loan programs.
New IRA guidance
IRA guidance is complex, but we'll help you navigate it. Our specialists do a deep dive into proposed, final and updates to IRA regulation. Our insights and key takeaways can help your organization maximize and receive eligible credits and remain compliant.
Explore the IRA regulatory guidance and check back here for continued updates.
Final regulations released for the section 48 tax credit
Explore the final regulations for the section 48 tax credit, including updates on ITC guidance and definitions for energy properties and projects.
Final regulations released for the IRA section 45X tax credit
The Treasury published final regulations regarding the IRA section 45X advanced manufacturing tax credit on Oct. 24, 2024.
Navigating the IRA energy community tax credit bonus
New guidance from the IRS helps taxpayers navigate the IRA energy community tax credit bonus to maximize potential IRA credits.
Proposed guidance for clean electricity production and investment tax credits just released
Proposed regulations related to the clean electricity production tax credit (section 45Y) and clean electricity investment tax credit (section 48E) are available.
Get started with IRA
Get your questions answered- Evaluate your project landscape for projects that involve energy efficiency, renewable energy or other eligible components under the IRA – prior, current or future projects.
- Refresh feasibility assessments on projects you may be considering and put a development plan in place for those you wish to move forward – conducting activities now may preserve credit(s) and optimize value.
- Understand what “begun construction” means in practice and determine if action on a project is needed sooner than later to minimize future compliance burden.
- If project is currently underway, assess options to defer or modify completion to recover benefits from the IRA.
What’s next for IRA credits after the 2024 election?
The 2024 election results have brought uncertainty to the future of IRA credits. Project owners must remain vigilant.
Taking advantage of IRA tax credits in energy communities
Understanding eligibility for the Energy Community Tax Credit Bonus is a critical step to ensure clean energy projects in energy communities can capture the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) bonus credit.
Inflation Reduction Act: Understanding the domestic content bonus requirement
During this on-demand webinar, we discuss the nuances of the domestic content bonus requirement under the Inflation Reduction Act and how to take advantage.
Guiding insights
On-demand webinars
The GGRF is a federal grant program comprised of $27 billion through The Nation Clean Investment Fund, the Clean Communities Investment Accelerator and Solar for All. Find out how your organization can leverage this fund.
IRA FAQ
The Inflation Reduction Act includes four broad areas of credits. Many of these credits start with a base amount and can be increased by a factor of five if a project pays prevailing wages and employs apprentices. More details are found in the overview. Baker Tilly advisors are available to help address your project’s specific needs and prevailing wage requirements for clean energy incentive programs.
- Clean energy production and investment: Production tax credit (current section 45 and new section 45Y), investment tax credit (current section 48 and new section 48E clean electricity investment credit)
- Advanced manufacturing: Advanced energy project credit (section 48C), advanced manufacturing production credit (section 45X)
- Electric vehicles and alternative fuels: Clean vehicle credit (section 30D), previously owned clean vehicles (section 25E), new credit for qualified commercial clean vehicles (section 45W), alternative fuel vehicle refueling property (section 30C), biodiesel and renewable diesel used as fuel credit (section 40A), alcohol fuel, biodiesel and alternative fuel mixtures credit (section 6426), new sustainable aviation fuel credit (section 40B), new clean fuel production credit (section 45Z)
- Energy efficiency: Nonbusiness energy property credit (section 25C), residential clean energy credit (section 25D), new energy-efficient home credit (section 45L tax credits), energy-efficient commercial buildings deduction (section 179D tax credit)
The IRA provides for a direct offset to federal tax liability in the form of a tax credit. These credits represent a financial offset for an organization’s qualified construction or production costs, making the economics of many projects work better than they would have without the credits. Most credits are good through 2032, the longest U.S. “energy policy” time frame ever.
Three ways credits bring value to projects:
- Owner(s) can simply use the tax credit against their own tax liability, in most case back three-year and forward 22 years.
- If owner(s) doesn’t have tax liability or taxable income, they can now sell certain credits to another taxpayer* (clean energy tax credit transferability).
- Tax – exempt owners can receive a “direct payment” in the form of cash payment from the IRS. These include state and local governments, not-for-profits, tribes and others (Inflation Reduction Act Direct Pay) for certain credits.
Essentially, the IRA Act is enabling all entities to utilize this legislation regardless of tax status.
*passive activity rules can apply
There are many types of federal clean energy incentives under the IRA. The below provides an overview of the existing and new tax credits. Qualifying Energy Property projects has a broad definition and can include but is not limited to the following project types:
Existing credits with enhanced features are available in the following areas:
- Biomass
- Carbon capture utilization and storage
- Combined heat and power (CHP)
- Geothermal heating and cooling
- Low carbon fuels (biodiesel, ethanol, renewable diesel, renewable natural gas, propane)
- Waste to energy recycling
- Wind, solar, hydro electric
New qualifying advanced energy project tax credits are available for the following:
- Clean hydrogen
- Clean transportation fuels
- Electric vehicles (EVs) and EV infrastructure
- Energy efficiency construction
- Energy equipment and component manufacturing
- Energy storage (batteries)
- Qualifying biogas
- Solar production tax credit (PTC)
- Sustainable aviation fuels
- Zero emission nuclear
Connect with IRA leaders
Baker Tilly energy and tax specialists can help your organization navigate The Inflation Reduction Act tax credits and guide you along the steps to secure the maximum eligible credits. We leverage industry specialization to help evaluate your projects that involve energy efficiency, renewable energy or other eligible components under the IRA – prior, current or future projects.