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Startup Company Tax Credits - The PATH Act of 2015

Startup Company Tax Credits - The PATH Act of 2015

 

On December 18th, 2015, the "Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes" (PATH) Act was signed into law by President Obama. This law makes billions of dollars in incentives and cost reduction programs available to Startup Companies. The PATH Act instituted the most sweeping tax code changes in 33 years.

 

Startup Companies Now Qualify
 

The definition of a Startup under the PATH Act is simply, any company formed within the past 5 years with gross receipts less than $5M in 2016.

Qualifying businesses may capture up to $250,000 of incentives and tax credits annually and be able to claim credits against payroll taxes. Companies that don't meet these criteria still qualify for Federal Tax Credits under the PATH Act with the expanded R&D Tax Credit. Sole Proprietorships can qualify if the individual meets the gross receipts test with respect to all trades or businesses.
 

Startups that can claim the credit come from a variety of industries, all of which are making incremental improvements to their products. These industries include the on-demand economy, big data, chemistry, agriculture, technology, software, manufacturing, wine, oil & gas, aerospace subcontracting, pharmaceutical, and biotech. Basically, any company that is designing new products could take advantage of this.

Startup and Tech companies due to their nature should take advantage of Specialized Tax Incentives that are available to offset tax liability. GMG's expertise lies in programs such as the R&D Tax Credit, Cost Segregation, Hiring Incentives and Property Tax Mitigation. Programs that prior to the PATH Act were out of reach for small to mid-sized companies are now attainable for Startups.


 

Benefits
 

Prior to The PATH Act companies without income tax liability or companies who fell under Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) either did not qualify for or had to carry forward R&D tax credits. Now, small businesses qualifying under The PATH Act can capture the R&D tax credit within the immediate tax year against payroll taxes, AMT, or Federal Income Taxes. A Small Business qualifying under The PATH Act with a payroll of $250,000 would normally have to pay $15,500 in FICA. The available (estimated) Start-up Tax Credit of $16,000 would offset their tax liability 100%.

 

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