Transferable Tax Credits (also known as Transferable Renewable Energy Tax Credits, or “TTCs”) are financial instruments that taxpayers who earn TTCs can sell to an unrelated third party for cash. The buyer can then use the purchased TTCs to reduce their own income tax liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
Prior to the enactment of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), only an owner of a renewable energy project was able to use the resulting tax credits. The only way for third parties to access renewable energy tax credits was to enter a lease or partnership with the project developer through co-ownership tax equity structures, which can be complex, long-term, costly, and difficult to manage. As a result, the pre-IRA market was dominated by a small number of large financial institutions with the ability to take on such complex tax equity structures.
The enactment of the IRA allows buyers to purchase transferable renewable energy tax credits directly from the sponsor/developer to offset their federal tax liability. The IRA was intended to broaden capital access, reduce transaction friction, and speed deployment of energy infrastructure. The importance of TTCs is growing due to an increased energy demand in the US (crypto, AI, cloud, reshoring) and manufacturing incentives that have produced a multibillion-dollar annual supply of credits. Enactment of the IRA opened direct transferability, which allows entrance to corporate buyers outside of traditional tax equity. This increased demand for TTCs improves market liquidity and tax credit pricing.
There are currently 12 transferable renewable energy tax credits under the following applicable tax code sections:
|
Credit |
Scope |
Description |
|
§30C – Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property |
Refueling/charging stations |
Provides a credit for installing alternative fuel refueling infrastructure such as charging stations for electric vehicles or facilities for ethanol, natural gas, hydrogen, or biodiesel, particularly in rural and low-income communities. |
|
§40A Small agri-biodiesel producer credit |
Small agri-biodiesel production |
Provides a credit for small agri-biodiesel producers through 2026 (OBBBA extension). |
|
§45 – Renewable Electricity Production Credit |
Renewable generation |
Offers a credit based on the amount of electricity generated from eligible renewable energy resources. |
|
§45Q – Carbon Oxide Sequestration Credit |
Carbon management |
Incentivizes the capture and secure storage of carbon dioxide, including approved commercial uses, within the United States. |
|
§45U – Zero-Emission Nuclear Power Production Credit |
Nuclear power |
Provides a production credit for electricity generated by qualifying nuclear facilities, applicable to electricity sold after 2023. |
|
§45V – Clean Hydrogen Production Credit |
Hydrogen |
Rewards the production of hydrogen meeting clean standards at approved hydrogen production facilities. |
|
§45X – Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit |
Domestic clean tech manufacturing |
Offers credits for U.S. manufacturing of clean energy components, including solar and wind equipment, inverters, battery parts, and critical minerals. |
|
§45Y – Clean Electricity Production Credit |
Technology-neutral production |
Beginning in 2025, replaces the traditional production credit (§45). Available for any facility producing zero-emission electricity, regardless of technology type. |
|
§45Z – Clean Fuel Production Credit |
Transportation fuels |
Beginning in 2025, provides credits for U.S. production of low-carbon transportation fuels, including sustainable aviation fuel. |
|
§48 – Energy Investment Credit |
Renewable energy projects |
Grants a credit for capital invested in renewable energy projects and infrastructure. |
|
§48C – Advanced Energy Project Credit |
Clean manufacturing facilities |
Encourages investments in factories that produce clean energy technologies and equipment. |
|
§48E – Clean Electricity Investment Credit |
Technology-neutral investment |
Starting in 2025, replaces the traditional investment credit (§48). Provides credits for investments in facilities generating zero-emission electricity, regardless of technology. |
Most transferable tax credits fall within two categories: Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) and Production Tax Credits (PTCs).
One-time credits based on a percentage of a project’s upfront capital investment value when the project is placed in service (PIS).
Ongoing, metered credits that are generated based on the actual production and sale of qualifying products and clean energy, claimed annually over a 10-year period.
Base credit for an Investment Tax Credit (ITC) starts at 6% of the project’s qualified cost basis and can increase to 30% if all Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship requirements are met. Projects can also qualify for bonus adders, which increase the percentage of the credit generated as we discuss below.
The IRA provides for three bonus credits or “adders” on top of the base ITC percentage:
1. Energy community bonus (10%)
a. Location: The energy community bonus applies to projects located in either:2. Domestic Content bonus (10%)
Bonus for projects that meet requirements for components manufactured in the US. Applicable to §45, §45Y, §48, and §48E credits. There are two requirements for a project to qualify for the domestic content bonus:
3. Low-income community bonus (10-20%)
The new Clean Electricity Investment Tax Credit is an allocated tax credit that is granted to certain applicable facilities under the IRA Section 48E which replaced the previous §48 ITC starting in 2025. It grants an extra 10% or 20% bonus ITC on top of the baseline 30% credit.
To qualify for this bonus, projects must be less than 5 MW and fall into one of the following four categories:
These projects are an allocation that is not automatic. Projects must apply and be awarded allocation capacity by Treasury/DOE every year, and demand is high. Buyers should confirm allocation award letters, and compliance with low-income rules.
Production tax credits are calculated using a rate-based formula determined by the qualifying product or energy produced and sold annually over a period of 10 years. The IRS updates §45 PTC rates each year, typically in Q2, using an inflation adjustment factor (IAF) published in the Federal Register. For 2024, the IAF was 1.9499. Rates are generally stable, but they are subject to revision.
PTCs are also subject to PWA requirements:
Projects only qualify for the full rate if they comply with the Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) rules. Without compliance, they remain stuck at the base rate, which is only 20% of the full value.
1. Calculation of PTC Amounts
The applicable PTC rate depends on when the project was placed in service.
a. Before January 1, 2022
These projects are not subject to the new prevailing wage and apprenticeship rules (“PWA”). The PTC is calculated as [1.5 cents] × [IAF], rounded to the nearest 0.1 cent. In 2024, this produced $29.00/MWh for wind, closed-loop biomass, and geothermal, and $15.00/MWh for open-loop biomass, landfill gas, trash, qualified hydropower, and marine/hydrokinetic energy.
b. After December 31, 2021
For newer projects, the formula is [0.3 cents] × [IAF], rounded to the nearest 0.05 cent. If the project complies with PWA, the result is multiplied by five. In 2024, with PWA compliance, the rate was $30.00/MWh for wind, closed-loop biomass, geothermal, and solar; and $15.00/MWh for open-loop biomass, landfill gas, trash, qualified hydropower, and marine/hydrokinetic energy. For hydropower and marine/hydrokinetic projects placed in service after December 31, 2022, the same $15.00/MWh rate applied in 2024, assuming PWA compliance.
2. Energy Community Bonus
Projects located in an energy community receive a 2% increase in PTC value without PWA compliance and a 10% increase if PWA requirements are met.
3. Domestic Content Bonus
Projects meeting domestic content thresholds also receive a 2% increase if not PWA-compliant and a 10% increase if they are. For a project that satisfies PWA, the domestic content bonus can bring the effective PTC value to 40% of qualified basis.
On July 4th, 2025, Congress passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (“OBBBA”) which imposed significant changes to transferable renewable energy tax credits created by the IRA in 2022. OBBBA impacts tax credits projects beginning construction in 2025 and beyond. Placed in service restrictions affect projects not placed in operation (COD) and placed in service (PIS) by the end of 2028. Transferability is intact, but the pool of eligible projects and eligible buyers will change, diligence burdens rise, and wind/solar supply decays after 2027 unless grandfathered. Buyers can expect more credits from fuels (45Z), storage, geothermal, nuclear, and 45X manufacturing to dominate the TTC market mix.
The main changes imposed by OBBBA that affect TTCs are: