Alabama

Alabama does not offer a state research tax credit. Click here to find out if you qualify for the federal research credit.


Contact Us


Contact your local Swanson Reed office to speak with a representative in your area today. 

Swanson Reed

700 Lavaca Street
Suite 1400
Austin, TX 78701

T: 512-333-2076
F: 512-256-8157

View Map Information

Swanson Reed

700 Lavaca Street Suite 1400Austin, Texas78701

(512) 333-2076

Swanson Reed

3839 McKinney Avenue
Suite 155-2013
Dallas, TX 75204

T: 469-522-3369
F: 512-256-8157

View Map Information

Swanson Reed

5161 San Felipe Street
Suite 320-1005
Houston, TX 77056

T: 281-899-0056
F: 512-256-8157

View Map Information

[mk_padding_divider size=”80″]

Swanson Reed

5161 San Felipe Street Suite 320-1005Houston, TX77056

(281) 899-0056

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-users-4″ icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”Why Swanson Reed” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/about-us/” animation=”left-to-right”]

We provide full, hands-on support from start to finish.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-signup” icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”Are You Eligible?” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/rd-tools-training/are-you-eligible/” animation=”left-to-right”]

Take our eligibility wizard to find out if you qualify for a tax credit.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-calculate” icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”Calculate Your Benefit” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/rd-tools-training/rd-calculator/” animation=”right-to-left”]

Use our quick calculator to determine your R&D tax credit benefit.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-calendar-5″ icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”Know Your Deadline” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/rd-tax-credit-filing-deadline-extension-calculator/” animation=”right-to-left”]

Never miss a deadline again with our R&D Tax Credit filing deadline calculator.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-user-7″ icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”For Accountants” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/for-accountants/” animation=”right-to-left”]

Take advantage of our extensive database of videos, case law and recent news.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_icon_box2 icon_size=”32″ icon=”mk-moon-folder-6″ icon_color=”#ffffff” icon_background_color=”#0f5885″ icon_border_color=”#0f5885″ icon_hover_color=”#ffffff” icon_hover_background_color=”#006cd8″ icon_hover_border_color=”#006cd8″ title=”Industry Case Studies ” title_size=”18″ title_weight=”normal” title_color=”#222222″ title_top_padding=”20″ read_more_url=”http://www.swansonreed.com/case-study/” animation=”right-to-left”]

Find out the qualifying R&D activities specific to your industry.

[/mk_icon_box2]

[mk_padding_divider size=”120″]

[mk_blog style=”grid” count=”4″ cat=”162″ disable_meta=”false”]

Bill To Make R&D Tax Credit Permanent Passes The House

On May 20, 2015, the House of Representatives passed bill H.R. 880 which would make the Research and Development Tax Credit permanent and increase the credit rate from 14% to 20%.

U.S. businesses are thrilled with the outcome and are hoping for a very similar result in the Senate.

“We strongly support making the R&D tax credit a permanent part of the tax code, not subject to yearly extensions, as it has played a vital role in supporting the search for cures and breakthrough medicines,” says James C. Greenwood, CEO of the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO), according to Chemical & Engineering News.

A permanent R&D tax credit would be beneficial in more ways than one. Not only would it allow companies to plan ahead for their R&D projects and  tax liability, but it would also help American businesses stay relevant in the global marketplace.

“The U.S. tax system must evolve in order to provide globally competitive R&D incentives that can be counted on by businesses,” said the R&D Credit Coalition, according to Chemical & Engineering News. “The certainty of a strengthened, permanent credit is critical to maintaining U.S. leadership in advanced research and encouraging companies to spend R&D funds and create jobs in the U.S.”

Bill H.R. 880 has many supporters, both in Congress and among U.S. industry professionals, but President Obama is not one of them.  The President has talked about vetoing the bill because he believes it would increase the federal deficit by more than $180 billion over a decade.

The White House is in opposition of the bill until its sponsors devise a plan to compensate for the tax revenue that would be lost if the R&D tax credit becomes permanent and the credit rate is increased.

The Senate received the bill on May 21, 2015 and has yet to reach a verdict.

Construction

New Congressional Support for Patent Tax Breaks

As the need for innovation and economic growth in America becomes more apparent, Congressional tax writers are becoming more accepting to new tax breaks for corporate innovation.

These intellectual-property tax breaks, also known as a “patent box” or “innovation box” have already been established in multiple developed countries, leaving America behind once again in the universal race for innovation.

Countless U.S. businesses, especially the high-tech and drug industries, have been promoting the idea behind a patent box for awhile now as an incentive to keep their research and business in America.

A patent box enforces an extremely low tax rate on business income that is a result of  intellectual property. For example, the U.K.’s patent box imposes a 10% rate for these profits, which is half of the country’s general corporate rate.

In a recent article in The Wall Street Journal, Senator Charles Schumer of New York (D.), one of the leading supporters of the U.S. patent box said, “we have to protect ourselves. Whether it’s high tech, pharma or high-end manufacturing, we believe research is best kept here….These are our crown jewels.”

The patent box in return will help create jobs and promote higher wages, which is high on America’s to-do list.

The Pfizer Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Ian Read said that a patent box would “foster the creation of well-paying R&D and manufacturing jobs in the United States.” And that the U.S. “now lags behind the most major economies and some emerging economies in tax incentives for R&D,” according to The Wall Street Journal. 

Senator Rob Portman of Ohio (R.), another big supporter in Congress, is in full agreement.  In the same article, Portman states, “for years, the U.S. has been uncompetitive because we have the highest corporate rate in the developed world. Now, there is another reason that the U.S. is falling behind — patent boxes. By standing still, the U.S is falling behind and it is U.S. workers and wages that suffer.”

Even though the advantages of being a patent-box country are indisputable and the support is high, the realistic and political hurdles of implementing the idea is still weighing heavy on lawmakers. Regulating who and what qualifies for the patent box seems to be the biggest concern at the moment.

*UPDATE :

On July 8, 2015, the International Tax Reform Working Group released its Comprehensive Tax Reform Report. The group, co-chaired by Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Chuck Schumer (D-NY), focused on seven different topics, including creating a patent box regime.

The Report predicts that innovation capital and workforces will be pulled towards countries with a patent box and says that “the anticipated impact of the new nexus requirements on innovation box regimes will have a significant detrimental impact on the creation and maintenance of intellectual property in the United States, as well as on the associated domestic manufacturing sectors, jobs and revenue base.”

While indicating that the adoption of a patent box will come along with many issues that will have to be settled beforehand, such as what types of intellectual property should be covered, the Report advocates that the U.S. needs to act quickly or else we will get left behind.

“The co-chairs agree that we must take legislative action soon to combat the efforts of other countries to attract highly mobile U.S. corporate income through the implementation of our own innovation box regime that encourages the development and ownership of IP in the United States, along with associated domestic manufacturing.”

Test-Tubes-small

Congressman Introduces Legislation to Modernize and Make Permanent the R&D Tax Credit

U.S. Congressman Kevin Brady recently wrote a piece for The Woodlands Villager as a guest columnist titled, “Keeping America Safe, Strong and Innovative.”

Brady begins his article by describing the real world we live in today and the everyday threats we face from the terrorism that exists around us.

“In Congress, my most important constitutional duty is the defense of our country and the Americans who live within it. The world is a dangerous place these days. This is no time to allow our military or intelligence to be hollowed out. In the next few weeks, Congress will consider measures to ensure our military and intelligence warriors have what it takes to keep our families and communities safe.”

Two weeks ago, a bipartisan bill was passed by the Senate that  requires Congress to vote on any nuclear deal with Iran proposed by the President before further action occurs.

The House will be voting on the bill next, along with Brady’s  newly proposed legislation to “restore America’s leadership in innovation.”

Brady’s bill will make the Research and Development tax credit modernized and permanent, promoting R&D investment in America instead of overseas.

Brady says the legislation is necessary to “create jobs, breakthrough technologies and economic growth here in the U.S.”

“America is rapidly falling behind our global competitors in research — especially China, which could surpass us by the end of the decade. Unless we act to encourage more U.S. research, our economy will suffer while middle-class families and talented college graduates will see jobs and opportunity lost to foreign countries.”


New Study Says Solar Energy Is the Answer to Climate Change, but Requires Improvements in the R&D World

Solar energy may be the one and only answer to climate change.

According to a new study from MIT, “The Future of Solar Energy,” solar has the ability to reverse the effects of climate change by mid-century, but it comes with major obstacles.

“It is going to have to be solar,” explained MIT Economics and Management Professor Emeritus and study chair Richard Schmalensee. “That leads to the question of whether today’s technology, with incremental improvements, can do it. We have serious doubts.”

There will have to be powerful advances in solar technology before solar energy can become the leading universal electricity provider.

“It will take increasing solar by a factor of 65. Not doubling, but a factor of 65,” Schmalensee said, describing how solar could prevent the world from enduring the worst consequences of climate change. “And it has to be done globally, in China and India and sub-Saharan Africa. That means it has to be cheap.”

The researchers at MIT are saying that this change will be difficult, but not impossible. There are policy changes that need to happen immediately in order to get where we need to be.

Schmalensee emphasized that we need to “get R&D right,” because “it is not automatic that there will be new technologies.” There will be many hurdles that will require major R&D spending.

He also stressed the importance of fixing the subsidies “so we are getting more solar per dollar.”

The study states that, “policies that reward production are generally superior in terms of return per dollar spent to policies that subsidize investment in solar generation.”

The study’s suggestion on the issue: “Subsidies for solar and other renewable technologies should reward generation, not investment, and should reward generation more when it is more valuable…Tax credits should be replaced by direct grants, which are more transparent and more effective. If this is not possible, steps should be taken to avoid dependence on the tax equity market.”

Click here for the full study.

DALLAS

A Plan to Keep America the Home of Innovation

On Tuesday, May 12th, Governor Chris Christie of New jersey gave a policy speech at The University of New Hampshire in Manchester in which he revealed his proposal for economic growth in America.

He called his strategy the “Five-Point Plan for Four Percent Growth,” which consists of:

  1. pro-growth tax reform,
  2. getting regulation under control,
  3. launching a national energy strategy,
  4. creating incentives and removing disincentives to work,
  5. ensuring that America is the home of innovation.

He harped on his final bullet point, stressing the importance of America remaining the home of innovation in the world and explained that for this to happen, “we need to take steps today to preserve the building blocks that got us here.”

According to Christie, our first step is to “spend less on entitlements and more on research that leads to innovation.” As government spending on entitlements and health care has skyrocketed, research and development investment has been stagnant.

For example, last year spending on Medicaid went up 16.2%, while the budget for the National Institutes of Health went up 0.1% and the budget for the National Science Foundation declined 4.3%.

“Yet it is this exact investment in basic R&D, in such areas as bio-medical research, materials science, and high performance computing – delivered in a large part through individual investigators at universities – that has laid the vital groundwork for so much innovation in America’s fastest growing industries, such as technology and biotech. America will not remain the home of innovation if we allow our crown jewels – the great research universities that lead the world – to wither on the vine,” said Christie.

Christie suggested making the R&D tax credit permanent to boost private sector innovation. He stated that in 2009, over 12,000 companies, including over 5,000 manufacturers, used the R&D tax credit.

Christie voiced that remaining the leader in innovation would also require more focus on education and assurance that new, growing companies have access to capital.

He closed with asking the American people to look around them and understand that something has to be done. Unfortunately, innovation on it’s own can not dig us out of this rut when we are surrounded by heavy regulation and a lack of investment in our economy, said Christie.

“Other countries are adopting pro-growth policies and making forward-looking investments. In a competitive world, with talent distributed across the globe, the right to be the home of innovation has to be earned. It is not given.”

Click here for the full speech.

slide2

ISO 31000 Compliance

Swanson Reed understands security, tax risk management, compliance and audit control are critical to the success of your company’s project. At Swanson Reed pride ourselves in providing quality service with minimal risk to ensure your project receives the highest levels of quality assurance.

Swanson Reed is certified to the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 31000:2009 Risk Management Standard. As a result of this certification, you can be assured every claim prepared by Swanson Reed and our advisory services have undergone the highest level of risk control and quality assurances.

Risk affecting organizations has immense consequences on the economic, professional, environmental and societal performances. Therefore managing risk efficiently and effectively helps organizations to succeed in risky environments – such as R&D.

The ISO 31000:2009 provide principles, guidelines and processes for effectively managing risk. The use of ISO 31000 can help organizations increase the likelihood of achieving short-term goals and long-term objectives, improve the identification of opportunities and threats and effectively allocate and use resources for risk treatment. This means your R&D tax claim is in the best possible hands.

The ISO provides Swanson Reed with an internationally recognized benchmark from which we can continue to assess and improve our risk management strategies to ensure we’re always providing the best quality assurances for your solutions.

Want to know more about Swanson Reed? Click here for more information.

Renewed R&D Legislation under Obama Administration

Earlier this year US businesses were rewarded generously by The U.S. House of Representatives and Obama Administration with a tasty tax break for companies investing time, money and resources into research and development (R&D).

Whilst the proposal has a long way to go before it becomes law, it does give U.S. businesses a much needed breath of air after a tough economic downturn. Under the Obama Administration the R&D tax credit, which expired at the end of last year will be permanently renewed and increased from 14% to 20% for qualifying R&D activities.

Already, the research credit and related breaks save businesses more than $12 billion a year. It’s an encouraging prospect for those businesses looking to expand research and development activities within their entity.

As early as 2010 Obama called for a $100 billion business tax credit – since then Obama has continued to push to permanently extend R&D credits for businesses, rewarding companies that develop new technologies domestically and preserve American jobs (Washington Post, 2010).

Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, v Mark Mazur said the changes were made to clear up the confusion involved in the tax benefit scheme.

Mazur said the new rules “are part of our ongoing work to clarify the tax code to provide incentives for businesses that are innovating, increasing our competitiveness and promoting economic growth. They do not expand the definition of research.”

In any case, the best way to achieve the greatest benefits from the tax break is to seek valuable advice from someone in the business.

US Senate Receives Bill to Make R&D Permanent

slide2The Compete Act has been introduced to the US Senate by Tom Carper (Delaware) to simplify, grow and extend the R&D tax credit.

The COMPETE Act or The Competitiveness and Opportunity by Modernizing and Permanently Extending the Tax Credit for Experimentation according to Carper the act aims to ‘strengthen and improve incentive to invest in revolutionary, high-value research, if the US continues to lead the way in global innovation’.

“Unfortunately, the current R&D credit is too small, too complicated, poorly targeted, and not accessible to some research companies, particularly smaller businesses. The COMPETE Act would update our tax code and help encourage private investment in groundbreaking discoveries that will propel our economy forward.”  Tom Carper (D – Delaware)

His legislation would make the R&D credit permanent, and strengthen it by increasing the credit rate to 25 percent of qualifying research investments, while also simplifying the credit in order to remove administrative barriers that companies are facing with the current credit.

It would also allow firms undertaking contract-funded research projects in collaboration with other companies to claim a portion of the current R&D credit, to open access to research tax incentives to new sectors of the economy, such as clinical research, and would direct private capital toward small, profitable start-ups by enabling investors in small research companies to claim the credit.

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) has encouraged support for the new bill. BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood stated,

“The R&D tax credit is an important incentive that encourages private investment in medical, agricultural, and industrial biotechnology research. Such research not only produces groundbreaking new discoveries, but also creates millions of well-paying American jobs.” He said,

“The current environment of uncertainty about whether the credit will be extended makes tax planning extremely difficult for companies preparing their development programs,” he added. “Making the credit permanent would better effectuate its vital role in supporting America’s innovation economy while providing certainty for businesses working toward the next generation of medical and biotechnology breakthroughs.”

In May this year, the House of Representatives passed a bill to make the credit permanent – the first of several tax extenders that the House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R – Michigan) has been intent on renewing. However, his unfunded legislation was criticized by President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party (although 62 Democrats in the House voted for Camp’s bill), as its permanent renewal would cost an estimated USD $155bn over the next 10 years.

This is welcome news to those innovative firms already involved in R&D as well as the new up-and-coming businesses looking to break into competitive markets.

If you are interested in claiming the R&D tax credit in your state, contact a Swanson Reed tax professional for expert advice.