Area Development
Corporate income tax:
New York State's maximum corporate franchise (income) tax rate for most corporate taxpayers is 7.1 percent; for qualified New York manufacturers the corporate franchise tax is 6.5 percent.

Corporations pay the highest tax computed on the following four alternative bases:
1. A tax of 7.1 percent (6.5 percent for qualified NYS manufacturers) on allocated entire net income;
2. A tax of 0.15 percent on allocated business and investment capital (maximum for qualified NYS manufacturers: $350,000; maximum for non-manufacturers: $1 million;
3. A tax of 1.5 percent on allocated minimum taxable income; and
4. A separate minimum tax at fixed dollar amounts, ranging from $25 to $5,000, based on New York receipts.

An additional tax of 0.09 percent applies to a corporation's allocated subsidiary capital.

A surcharge rate of 17 percent also applies to a taxpayer's post-credit tax liability allocable to the 12-county Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District (MCTD). This includes the City of New York, Long Island, and the mid-to-lower Hudson River Valley.

Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Mobility Tax (MCTMT): Tax imposed on certain employers and self-employed individuals engaging in business within the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District (MCTD), which includes New York City (the counties of New York (Manhattan), Bronx, Kings (Brooklyn), Queens, and Richmond (Staten Island)), and the counties of Rockland, Nassau, Suffolk, Orange, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester. The MCTMT is imposed at a rate of 0.34 percent of an employer's payroll expense for all covered employees for each calendar quarter. No exemptions or credits apply.

Sales and use taxes:
A 4 percent sales tax (4.375 percent in New York City and the 12-county Metropolitan Commuter District) is levied on retail sales of tangible personal property and certain services, as well as on the use of such property and services upon which sales tax was not collected. The tax is based on receipts from retail sales. Furthermore, counties and cities may impose additional sales and use taxes up to an additional 4.75 percent.

Sales and use tax exemptions:
Exemptions from state and local sales and use taxes are provided for:
•Machinery and equipment used directly and predominantly in manufacturing, mining, and experimental research and development.
• Tools used directly in manufacturing, mining, and refining.
• Commercial aircraft, machinery and equipment installed in such aircraft, personal property used in aircraft repairs, and certain aircraft equipment.
• Repair, installation, and maintenance of manufacturing machinery and equipment, including parts, tools, and supplies.
• Manufacturing machinery and equipment, and fuels and utilities used or consumed in the manufacturing process.
• Building parts, packaging materials, manufacturing fuels and utilities, and fuel for aircraft.

Property tax:
All real property within the state is taxed at the local level. Property is assessed where located at a portion of the actual value by local assessors. Personal property is tax-exempt.

Industrial or commercial construction or reconstruction in designated areas of New York City may be exempt from real property taxes. Exemption rates and terms vary with the area and type of business facility.

Commercial and industrial facilities constructed or reconstructed outside New York City at a cost of more than $10,000 may be eligible for a partial exemption from local real property taxes. The maximum exemption amounts to 50 percent of any increase in value in the first year following completion and declines by five percentage points in each of the succeeding nine years.

Industrial or commercial facilities financed by industrial development agencies are exempt from property taxation. Negotiated payments in lieu of taxes can be made to municipalities.

Pollution-control facilities are exempt from local real property taxes and ad valorem levies on any increase in value resulting from the construction of such facilities.

Investment tax credit (ITC):
A credit equal to 5 percent of investment (up to $350 million; 4 percent rate on amount over $350 million and for personal income taxpayers) in buildings and tangible personal property, acquired by purchase, with a useful life of four years or more and used in production (manufacturing, processing, assembling, agriculture), financial services, qualified film production facilities, or research and development. The ITC is available at an optional rate of 9 percent (seven percent for personal income taxpayers) of qualified investment in research and development property. The ITC can reduce corporate tax to the higher of the alternative minimum tax or fixed dollar minimum tax. The ITC is taken in the year investment made or property placed in service. New businesses may take a refund of unused credit, and other unused credits may be carried forward 15 years (10 years for personal income taxpayers).

An additional credit for the same capital investment is available in each of the two years following the investment if employment in those years reaches specified levels. If employment is at least 101 percent of the base year level but less than 102 percent, the credit is 1.5 percent; at least 102 percent but less than 103 percent, two percent; and at least 103 percent, 2.5 percent. Unused credits may be carried forward for up to 15 years (10 years for personal income taxpayers).

Effective for property placed in service after October 1, 1998, but before October 1, 2011, the investment tax credit (ITC) is extended to tangible personal property principally used in the ordinary course of business: As a broker or dealer in connection with the purchase or sale (which shall include but not be limited to the issuance, entering into, assumption, offset, assignment, termination, or transfer) of stocks, bonds or other securities, or of commodities (as defined in the Internal Revenue Code
• Of providing investment advisory services for a regulated investment company (as defined in the IRC), or lending, loan arrangement, or loan origination services to customers in connection with the purchase or sale of securities
• As an exchange registered as a national securities exchange or a board of trade


Excelsior Jobs Program
The Excelsior Jobs Program, administered by Empire State Development (ESD), will provide job creation and investment incentives to firms in such targeted industries as biotechnology, pharmaceutical, high-tech, clean-technology, green technology, financial services, agriculture and manufacturing. Firms in these strategic industries that create and maintain new jobs or make significant financial investment may be eligible to apply for up to four new refundable tax credits. Businesses claim the credits over a five year period.
The Excelsior Jobs Tax Credit: A credit of up to $5,000 per new job to cover a portion of the associated payroll cost.
The Excelsior Investment Tax Credit: Valued at two percent of qualified investments.
The Excelsior Research and Development Tax Credit: A ten percent credit for new investments based on the Federal Research and Development credit.
The Excelsior Real Property Tax Credit: Available to firms locating in certain distressed areas and to firms in targeted industries that meet higher employment and investment thresholds (Regionally Significant Project).

Brownfield redevelopment credit:
Three refundable credits are available to taxpayers that have executed a "Brownfield Cleanup Agreement" with the Department of Environmental Conservation and have received a remediation certificate pursuant to such agreement.
• Brownfield Redevelopment Credit - consists of the sum of the site preparation costs, tangible property costs, and on-site groundwater remediation costs.

For qualified sites admitted to the Brownfield Cleanup Program on/after June 23, 2008:
• the tangible property credit component is capped at:
o $35 million, or three times the costs included in the calculation of the site preparation credit component and the on-site groundwater remediation credit component, whichever is less; or
o $45 million, or six times the costs included in the calculation of the site preparation credit component and the on-site groundwater remediation credit component, whichever is less, in the case of a qualified site to be used primarily for manufacturing activities.

• the applicable percentages, up to a maximum of 50 percent, for purposes of calculating the site preparation credit component and the on-site groundwater remediation credit component are based on the level of cleanup achieved, as follows:
o soil cleanup for unrestricted use, the protection of groundwater or the protection of ecological resources, the applicable percentage shall be 50 percent;
o soil cleanup for residential use, the applicable percentage shall be 40 percent, except for Track 4 which shall be 25 percent;
o soil cleanup for commercial use, the applicable percentage shall be 33 percent, except for Track 4 which shall be 25 percent;
o soil cleanup for industrial use, the applicable percentage shall be 27 percent, except for Track 4 which shall be 22 percent.

• Remediated Brownfield Credit for Property Taxes - The amount of the credit against the taxpayer's income tax increases based upon the number of persons employed at the qualified site and is generally equal to 25 percent of the product of the "employment number factor" and the eligible property taxes paid. If the property is located in an Environmental Zone, the credit is not subject to the 25 percent limitation.

• Environmental Remediation Insurance Credit - For premiums paid for environmental remediation insurance, up to the lesser of $30,000 or 50 percent of the cost of premiums.

Hiring credits:
A credit is available for employers who employ individuals with disabilities. The credit equals 35 percent of the first $6,000 of first-year wages paid to the disabled employee (maximum of $2,100 per employee). However, if the first-year wages qualify for the federal work opportunity tax credit, the New York credit will apply to the second-year wages.

Research/Emerging Technologies Credits:
Research and development credit: A credit of 9 percent against the corporation franchise tax (or 7 percent against the personal income tax) is available for investment in property used for research and development in the experimental or laboratory sense. Qualified Emerging Technology Employment Credit: A refundable credit of $1,000 per new full-time employee (employees in excess of 100 percent of base year employment level) is available for one three-year period (the year the credit is first claimed and in each of the next two years provided minimum employment levels are maintained).

Qualified Emerging Technology Company Capital Tax Credit:
An investors may be allowed a credit equal to a percentage of each qualified investment in a qualified emerging technology company certified by the Commissioner of Taxation and Finance as follows:
• Ten percent of qualified investments, provided the taxpayer certifies that it will not be sold, transferred, traded, or disposed of during the four years following the year in which the credit is first claimed; or
• Twenty percent of qualified investments, provided the taxpayer certifies that it will not be sold, transferred, traded or disposed of during the nine years following the year in which the credit is first claimed.

Investments made by or on behalf of an owner of the business, including but not limited to a stockholder, partner or sole proprietor, or any related person, are not eligible for this credit. The total amount of the credit allowable to a taxpayer for all years, taken in the aggregate, cannot exceed $150,000 (at the 10 percent rate) and $300,000 (at the 20 percent rate). The use of the credit is limited to 50 percent of the tax otherwise due; unused credits can be carried forward indefinitely (no refund provision). The program provides for the recapture of a pro rata share of the credit in the event the qualified investment is not held for the requisite period.

Qualified Emerging Technology Company Facilities, Operations and Training Credit:
A refundable credit for qualified emerging technology companies, equal to the sum of:
• Eighteen percent of the cost or other basis for federal income tax purposes of "research and development property" acquired by the taxpayer by purchase and placed in service during the taxable year;
• Nine percent for "qualified research expenses" paid or incurred by the taxpayer in the taxable year; and
• One hundred percent of "qualified high technology training expenditures" paid or incurred by the taxpayer, up to $4,000 per employee per taxable year.

To be eligible, the QETC must:
• Have no more than 100 full-time employees, of which at least 75 percent are employed in New York State;
• Have a ratio of research and development funds to net sales (as referred to in Public Authorities Law section 3102-e) which equals or exceeds six percent during its authorized taxable year; and
• Have gross revenues, along with the gross revenues of its affiliates and related members, not exceeding $20 million for the taxable year immediately preceding the year the taxpayer claims this credit.


A QETC may claim these credits for four consecutive taxable years, except, if a taxpayer is located in an academic incubator facility and relocates within New York State to a nonacademic incubator site, then the taxpayer (1) may make a revocable election to defer the credit to the first taxable year beginning after such relocation, and (2) shall be eligible for the credit for five consecutive taxable years. Cap on the credit is $250,000 per eligible taxpayer per year. Credit can reduce tax to the higher of the AMT or fixed dollar minimum (for corporate taxpayers). Unused credits are refundable. This credit sunsets on December 31, 2011 (e.g., credit is not applicable for taxable years beginning on/after January 1, 2012).

Biofuel Production Credit
A credit is available for biofuel produced at a biofuel plant in New York State on or after January 1, 2006. The credit is equal to 15-cents-per gallon after the production of the first 40,000 gallons per year presented to market. The credit is capped at $2.5 million per entity, per taxable year, for up to no more than four consecutive taxable years per biofuel plant.

FILM/TV
Empire State Film Production Credit - A refundable credit against corporate franchise (income) tax and personal income tax for qualified film production companies, or sole proprietors of qualified film production companies.
o The credit is the product of 30 percent and the qualified production costs paid or incurred in the production of a qualified film, provided that at least 75% of the production costs ("stagework") are spent in New York State.
o The credit is allowed for the taxable year in which the production of such qualified film is completed.
o "Qualified Film" excludes documentary films, news or current events programs, interview or talk programs, game shows, award ceremonies, sports programming, soap operas, commercials, music videos, or "reality" programs.
o $420 million ("Additional pool 2") has been allocated for this credit for each of years 2010-2014.

o Credits are paid as follows:
• Credits for less than $1 million will be paid in full in State fiscal year 2009-10;
• Credits between $1-$5 million will be paid out 50 percent in each of State fiscal years 2009-10 and 2010-11;
• Credits greater than $5 million will be paid out in 33 percent increments in each of State fiscal years 2009-10, 2010-11, and 2011-12.
Credit is available for tax years ending on/before December 31, 2014.
New York City is authorized to allow this credit against NYC tax; NYC credit is 5 percent of qualified production costs; NYC program capped at $12.5 million per year.

Empire State Film Post Production Credit - Up to $7 million of the Empire State Film Production Credit must be made available annually for this new credit, which will be allocated by the Governor's Office of Motion Picture and Television Development in the same manner as the Empire State Film Production Credit.
• Credit is equal to 10 percent of qualified post-production costs, available to a qualified film production company, (unless such company is eligible for the Empire State Film Production Credit).
• To be eligible, qualified post-production costs at a qualified post production facility must meet or exceed 75 percent of the total post production costs at any post production facility.
• Note: Any qualified post production costs used by a taxpayer as the basis for this credit cannot be used by the taxpayer to claim any other credit.
• Credit is 50 percent refundable in year 1, with the remainder carried forward to the immediately succeeding taxable year, where any remaining unused credit is refundable in that year.

Empire State Commercial Production Tax Credit - This credit is provided to a taxpayer that is a qualified commercial production company, or a partner of a partnership (including a member of a limited liability company that is treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes) that is a qualified commercial production company. (A New York S-corporation may not use this credit against its own tax; instead, the credit is provided to its shareholders who are subject to tax under Article 22 of the Tax Law.)

To be eligible for this credit, at least 75 percent of the production costs (excluding post production costs) paid or incurred directly and predominately in the actual filming or recording of a qualified commercial must be incurred in New York State.

New York will provide $7 million of credit annually to be disbursed to all eligible commercial production companies as follows:
• Growth Credit ($3 million) - a refundable credit equal to 20 percent of the qualified production costs attributable to the use of tangible property or the performance of services in New York in the production of a qualified commercial. Total qualified production costs must be greater in the current year than the average of the three previous years for which the credit was applied. However, until a qualified production company has established a three-year history for the credit, the benchmark for the credit will be the greater of the previous year's or the average of the two previous years' qualified production costs. If the qualified production company has never applied for the credit, the previous year's data will be used to create a benchmark. The credit is applied only to the excess of the current calendar year's costs over the previous calendar year's cost. The annual $3 million cap will be disbursed on a pro rata basis to all eligible commercial production companies. No qualified production company will be allocated more than $300,000 of credit annually. The credit is allowed for the tax year in which the production of the qualified commercial is completed.

• Downstate Credit ($3 million) -a refundable credit equal to 5 percent of the qualified production costs attributable to the use of tangible property or the performance of services in New York in the production of the qualified commercial within the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District (MCTD, which includes New York City and the counties of Dutchess, Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Suffolk, and Westchester). Total qualified production costs in the current calendar year must be greater than $500,000 and the credit applies only to such costs exceeding $500,000. The annual $3 million cap will be disbursed on a pro rata basis.

• Upstate Credit ($1 million) - a refundable credit equal to 5 percent of the qualified production costs attributable to the use of tangible property or the performance of services in New York in the production of the qualified commercial outside the MCTD. Total qualified production costs in the current calendar year must be greater than $200,000, and the credit applies only to such costs exceeding $200,000. The annual $1 million cap will be disbursed on a pro rata basis.

The credit may not reduce the tax due to less than the fixed dollar minimum tax.

The amount of credit not applied to the tax in the current tax year (the excess credit) may be refunded or credited as an overpayment to next year's tax. The refund is limited to 50 percent of the excess credit in the current year; the balance may be carried forward to the following year and may be deducted from the tax in that year. The amount of the excess credit not applied to the tax in the next succeeding tax year will be credited or refunded (without interest). Production costs used as the basis for allowance of this credit or used in the calculation of this credit cannot be used to claim any other credit.

This program expires December 31, 2011. (The Empire State commercial production tax credit is administered by the Governor's Office for Motion Picture and Television Development, nyfilm@empire.state.ny.us).


Investment Tax Credit for Qualified Film Production Facilities - The ITC is available for property principally used as a qualified film production facility (i.e., a film production facility in the State which contains at least one sound stage with a minimum of 7,000 square feet of contiguous production space) among that eligible for the investment tax credit (ITC), where the taxpayer (owner of the facility) is providing three or more services to any qualified film production company (an entity principally engaged in the production of a qualified film and which controls the qualified film during production) using the facility, including such services as: studio lighting grid; lighting and grip equipment; multi-line phone service; broadband information technology access; industrial scale electrical capacity; food services; security services; and heating, ventilation and air conditioning.

HISTORIC PRESERVATION
Credit for Rehabilitation of Historic Properties - A credit is allowed for the rehabilitation of depreciable historic properties located in New York State. Note: to be eligible for the credit, the rehabilitation project must be in a distressed area.
• The amount of the credit is equal to 100 percent (30 percent, effective 1/1/2015) of the federal credit under IRC section 47(c)(3).
• A certified historic structure is defined as a building and its structural components which are listed in the National Register of Historic Places or located in a registered historic district and certified to be of historic significance to the district.
• Credit is capped at $5 million ($100,000, effective 1/1/2015); any State credit must be recaptured if the federal credit upon which it is based is subject to recapture.
• Unused credits can be carried forward indefinitely.
• In the case of partnerships or S-corporations, the maximum credit is determined at the entity (rather than taxpayer) level. The credit may be used to reduce tax to the higher of the alternative minimum income tax or fixed dollar minimum tax; unused credits can be carried forward.

Long-term care insurance credit:
A credit is allowed for long-term care insurance premiums paid during the taxable year equal to 20 percent of the premium paid for long-term care insurance. The credit may not reduce the tax below the AMT or fixed dollar minimum. Unused credits can be carried forward indefinitely.

Automated external defibrillator credit:
A credit may be taken for the purchase of automated external defibrillators, such as those used for first-aid treatment of heart attacks. The credit is equal to the cost of each defibrillator purchased, but may not exceed $500 per unit. Credit cannot reduce tax below the AMT or fixed dollar minimum. Unused credits cannot be carried forward.

Security Training Tax Credit:
This is a refundable tax credit, administered by the State Office of Homeland Security in conjunction with the Tax Department, for qualified building owners. Taxpayers must apply to the State Office of Homeland Security for an allocation of credit and credit certification in order to claim this credit. The credit is equal to the sum of the number of qualified security officers providing protection to a building(s) owned by the taxpayer multiplied by $3,000.

New York State Contact:
Warner Johnston
Empire State Development
633 Third Avenue, 37th Floor
New York, NY 10017
(800) STATE-NY
(212) 803-3740


Incentive and tax information is provided to Area Development by each state's economic development or commerce agency for information purposes only and is subject to revision at any time by the state government. Please contact the state agency directly for full requirements and offerings.