The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act forced capitalization of research and experimental costs.
Now, the One Big Beautiful Bill (OB3) — through new §174A — restores options. But those options come with elections, deadlines, modeling decisions, and state-level complexity.
This is not just a compliance update.
It’s a cash flow, credit, and structural tax strategy decision.
What Changed?
Under TCJA:
- Domestic & foreign SREEs had to be capitalized.
- Domestic amortized over 5 years.
- Foreign amortized over 15 years.
Under OB3:
- Immediate deduction for domestic SREEs is back.
- Acceleration of remaining amortization is available.
- Retroactive deductions may apply (for eligible small businesses).
- Foreign SREEs still require 15-year capitalization.
Small Businesses: High Opportunity, High Complexity
Eligible Small Businesses (avg. gross receipts under $31M) may:
✔ Retroactively deduct 2022–2024 SREEs
✔ Accelerate remaining amortization into 2025 (100% or 50/50 split)
✔ Continue capitalization if preferred
But there are traps:
- It’s all-or-nothing for retroactive elections.
- Amended returns trigger K-1 updates and possible AAR filings.
- Refund timing may lag due to IRS processing delays.
- §280C coordination with the R&D credit becomes mandatory.
This is a modeling decision — not an automatic deduction play.
Larger Businesses: Strategic Acceleration Choices
For businesses above the gross receipts threshold:
- No retroactive deduction allowed.
- But acceleration of remaining basis is available in 2025.
- Election statements must be filed with the return.
- Three methods exist for new 2025 SREEs:
- Continue 5-year amortization
- Immediate deduction
- 10-year amortization under §59(e)
Once chosen, the method binds future treatment unless formally changed.
R&D Credit Interplay Just Got Tighter
OB3 ties qualified research under §41 directly to §174A.
That means:
- Method alignment is critical.
- §280C adjustments are mandatory going forward.
- Book-to-tax differences will increase scrutiny.
This is where poor planning creates permanent differences.
State Conformity: The Hidden Risk
Not all states follow OB3.
States like Maryland, Michigan, and Virginia have indicated non-conformity. That means:
- Federal deduction ≠ state deduction.
- Separate capitalization tracking may be required.
- Apportionment could drive unexpected adjustments.
Multi-state taxpayers must evaluate this carefully.
Strategic Takeaway
Section 174 is no longer a forced capitalization rule.
It’s now a strategic lever.
The real question is not “Can we deduct?”
It’s “When should we deduct — and what does that do to credits, NOLs, §163(j), and cash flow?”
Accelus Global works with growth-stage and enterprise taxpayers to model scenarios, align R&D credits with §174A methods, and structure defensible elections that optimize both tax position and compliance burden.
This is a planning window. It won’t stay open forever.