One common area where companies incur most of the qualifying R&D credit costs is also the area of most R&D tax credit calculation mistakes: wages.
How not to claim wages for the R&D credit is in IRS Field Attorney Advice 20171601F released in April, which relates how the IRS concluded that one taxpayer used an impermissible method to determine eligible wages related to research expenses.
The taxpayer claimed credit for increasing research activities for at least four years. Employees of the taxpayer performed both qualified and nonqualified services. But in short (see end of post), the controller of the company simply estimated the level of R&D in terms of wages—what percentage of what employees’ salary was devoted to legitimate R&D activities—then took a statistical sample of the projects and multiplied the estimated wages by the estimated R&D project for the year.
The taxpayer did not use the method provided in Regulation 1.41-2(d)(1), which states:
“If an employee has performed both qualified services and nonqualified services, only the amount of wages allocated to the performance of qualified services constitutes an in-house research expenses. In the absence of another allocation method that a taxpayer can demonstrate to be more appropriate, the amount of in-house research expense shall be determined by multiplying the total amount of wages paid to or incurred for the employee during the taxable year by the ratio of the total time actually spent by the employee in the performance of qualified services for the taxpayer to the total time spent by the employee in the performance of all services for the taxpayer during the taxable year.”
The underlying issue in the case related by the IRS: The taxpayer failed to maintain adequate records reflecting the costs of its qualified research activities and couldn’t determine how much time its employees spent performing qualified services with respect to a particular project.
It seems the taxpayer described above was “penny-wise and pound-foolish,” as it appears they didn’t hire a qualified professional to help them pay attention to the methods to claim the R&D tax credit. The following are five things our firm would have advised this company to do when substantiating the wages allocable for the R&D credit:
The taxpayer only considered whether the project involved qualified research at some point and did not determine what percentage of total project costs were attributable to the performance of qualified services, such as wages. The taxpayer provided no reasonable basis to apply their methodology, and the process looked at no detail of how the employees’ work time actually contributed to the R&D. Thus, taxpayer’s methodology is not more appropriate than the method provided by Treasury Regulation 1.41-2(d) and was rejected by IRS.