This article was written by Jason Mollner, Partner.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) restores long-sought flexibility in how businesses handle Research & Experimental (R&E) expenditures. For tax years beginning after 2024, companies may expense domestic R&E or elect to capitalize and amortize under new §174A (or, in limited cases, §59(e)).
For 2022–2024, the IRS released Revenue Procedure 2025-28, which provides several transition options—letting taxpayers accelerate unamortized TCJA §174 costs, make retroactive elections, and simplify small-business compliance.
This article summarizes the four primary compliance paths and provides guidance for taxpayers who never capitalized or amortized R&E under TCJA §174.
What Applies to Whom
Who: Any taxpayer
What: Continue amortizing domestic R&E over 5 years (60 months); foreign R&E continues over 15 years.
How (2025): Adopt §174A(a) or §174A(c) for 2025 with a statement in lieu of Form 3115; no §481(a) adjustment needed.
Why Choose It: Maintains continuity; simplest if you prefer a steady, predictable deduction profile.
Watch-Outs: Slower cash-tax benefit and no acceleration of pre-2025 costs.
Deadline Notes: File the 2025 return (including any statement) by the normal due date with extensions. If you later decide to amend under a different option, the latest possible amendment window closes July 6, 2026 (or earlier if the statute expires).
Who: Any taxpayer
What:
How: File a statement in lieu of Form 3115 with the 2025 return covering both (i) the post-2024 §174A method and (ii) the accelerated recovery of pre-2025 costs. Taxpayers wishing to capitalize only some costs may pair §174A(a) with an annual §59(e) 10-year election.
Why Choose It:
Watch-Outs:
Deadline Notes: Make this change on your 2025 return filed by its due date (including extensions). Amended filings to revise this choice must be completed by July 6, 2026, or the statute expiration, whichever is earlier.
Who: Small Business Taxpayers (SBTs) under §448(c) for 2025
What: Apply §174A retroactively to 2022–2024 and amend returns to fully deduct domestic R&E and claim refunds.
How: File amended 2022 and 2023 returns (if open); for 2024, attach a statement in lieu of Form 3115.
Why Choose It: Maximizes refunds for open years and creates a clean, retroactively compliant record.
Watch-Outs: Must apply retroactive §174A to all tax years after 2021 (no selective application). Coordinate §280C(c) reductions with any §41 credits.
Deadline Notes: Amended returns and elections must be filed by July 6, 2026, or earlier if the statute for the affected year closes. For original 2024 returns timely filed before November 15, 2025, expensing may be deemed elected if other conditions are met.
Who: Small Business Taxpayers under §448(c)
What: Make an automatic 2024 accounting method change to adopt §174A and recognize a favorable §481(a) true-up for 2022–2023 on the 2024 return — no amended returns needed.
How: Attach a statement in lieu of Form 3115 to the original 2024 return filed after August 28, 2025. Taxpayers who filed before September 15, 2025, may use the automatic 6-month superseding-return extension to implement this change through November 15, 2025.
Why Choose It: Captures catch-up deductions with minimal administrative burden and no need to amend prior years.
Watch-Outs: No audit protection for retroactive portions; must still coordinate §41 and §280C(c).
Deadline Notes: The superseding-return window for this method change closes November 15, 2025. All related statements or amended actions must be completed by July 6, 2026, or earlier if the statute expires.
If You Never Capitalized or Amortized Under TCJA §174
Many small and mid-sized taxpayers never changed how they treated R&E costs after the 2017 TCJA. They simply continued to deduct R&E expenses as incurred.
With OBBBA restoring immediate expensing under §174A, it’s natural to ask:
“If I’ve been expensing R&E all along, can I just leave it alone—or can I now go back and claim the credit?”
Possibly — but it depends on your status and risk tolerance.
Bottom Line: You can “do nothing,” but it’s a risk-management choice, not a compliant one. A low-effort method change or confirming statement in 2024 or 2025 secures audit protection with minimal effort.
If you want to stay compliant without amending:
This “catch-up” filing brings you into conformity and preserves your ability to accelerate any unamortized amounts in 2025 or 2026.
Deadline Note: File the method change with your original 2024 return no later than November 15, 2025, or make any related amendments by July 6, 2026.
If you previously deducted R&E and now wish to claim the R&D credit, you must first bring those years into compliance with §174 or §174A. Your Form 6765 credit relies on QREs determined under §174—so you cannot claim a credit on costs that weren’t properly treated.
You can correct this through either:
Form 6765 credit claims filed without this correction risk denial for lack of proper §174 treatment. After alignment, you may expense under §174A(a) and still claim the credit under §41 in the same year.
Deadline Notes: If amending 2022–2023 returns for credits, do so by July 6, 2026 (or earlier if the statute closes). If you plan to fix treatment via a 2024 method change, ensure the original or superseding return is filed by November 15, 2025.
You should take affirmative steps (amend or change methods) if:
If you expensed R&E in 2022–2024 and don’t plan to claim credits, “doing nothing” may be low risk but isn’t technically correct.
If you plan to claim or amend for credits, those years must be aligned to §174 or §174A through a method change or amendment.
The new OBBBA framework provides clear paths for both situations—and simple, low-friction filings to stay compliant and maximize benefits.
Choosing a Path: Practical Decision Points
How We Help
Our R&E specialists can:
Want to know your best path? Send your last three returns, R&D workpapers, and a 2025 forecast. We’ll prepare a concise strategy memo with recommended elections and filing steps.
Let’s talk. Book a consultation with our R&E team today.
This material has been prepared for general, informational purposes only and is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on for tax, legal or accounting advice. Should you require any such advice, please contact us directly. The information contained herein does not create, and your review or use of the information does not constitute, an accountant-client relationship.
This article was written by Ashley Sullivan, CCSP, Partner MSC, President, American Society of Cost Segregation Professionals. On March 18, 2026, the Internal Revenue Service issued Revenue Procedure 2026‑17, providing...
This article was written by Ashley Sullivan, CCSP, Partner MSC, President, American Society of Cost Segregation Professionals. The OBBBA expanded the depreciation landscape by introducing Qualified Production Property (QPP), a...
This article was written by Ashley Sullivan, CCSP, Partner MSC, President, American Society of Cost Segregation Professionals. Notice 2026‑11 marks a significant turning point in the bonus depreciation landscape, reaffirming...