Georgia Basic Business Taxes
Q1 2014
In 2005, Georgia became the first state in the Southeast to adopt a "Single Factor Gross Receipts" apportionment formula. This apportionment formula treats a company's gross receipts or sales in Georgia as the only relevant factor in determining the portion of that company's income subject to Georgia's 6 percent corporate income tax. Georgia is one of only 13 states currently using Single Factor Apportionment. Single Factor Apportionment significantly reduces the effective rate of Georgia income taxation of companies with substantial sales to customers outside Georgia.
Example: Assume for the 2012 tax year, In-State Manufacturing Co., Inc. has the following gross receipt sales in Georgia as compared to total gross receipt sales:
Total Gross Receipts: $10 million
Percent of Gross Receipts in Georgia: 13 percent
Accordingly, in 2012, only $1.3 million of In-State Manufacturing Co., Inc.'s income would be subject to Georgia's 6 percent corporate income tax, making their corporate income tax liability $78,000. [($10 million x 13%) x 6%]
Corporate Tax Credits
Georgia offers a range of corporate tax credits that enable companies to minimize or completely eliminate state corporate income taxes. For some of the credits, the amounts are dependent on the "tier status" of the community. Tier status refers to an annual four-tier ranking of the economic vitality of Georgia's counties. The highest credits are offered in the counties with the greatest need (Tier 1 and 2 counties), while the most prosperous counties (Tier 3 and 4 counties) offer lesser amounts.
Job Tax Credit
Companies may qualify for Georgia's Job Tax Credit Program if they or their headquarters are engaged in strategic industries such as manufacturing, warehousing and distribution, processing, telecommunications, broadcasting, tourism, and research and development. Depending on the community's tier, companies must create between two and 25 net new full-time jobs in the first year to qualify. Credits may also be accrued for additional jobs created in years 2-5.
Jobs created outside of year five may not be claimed unless a new threshold job creation (year one) is met. Qualified companies can claim a tax credit with a value of $750-$3,500 per job per year beginning with the first taxable year in which the new job is created and for the following four years the job is maintained. An additional $500 credit is offered in counties that participate in a multi-county Joint Development Authority (JDA).
Companies that create five or more jobs in a Less Developed Census Tract (LDCT) receive Tier 1 tax credits. Opportunity Zones, Military Zones, and Georgia's 40 least-developed counties offer job tax credits to businesses of any nature, including retail businesses that create at least two new jobs.
Credits may be taken against 100 percent of state corporate income tax liability in Tier 1 and 2 counties, or against 50 percent of state corporate income tax liability in Tier 3 and 4 counties. Credits that are claimed but not used in any taxable year may be carried forward for 10 years from the close of the taxable year in which qualified jobs were established. Additionally, in Tier 1 counties, excess credits may be credited to Georgia payroll withholding taxes (with a limitation of $3,500 per job, per year).
Port Tax Credit Bonus
The Port Tax Credit Bonus is available to taxpayers who increase imports or exports through a Georgia port by 10 percent over the previous or base year. Base year port traffic must be at least 75 net tons, five containers, or 10 TEUs (twenty foot equivalent units); if not, the percentage increase in port traffic will be calculated using 75 net tons, five containers, or 10 TEUs as the base. The port tax credit bonus can be used with either the Job or the Investment Tax Credit program, provided that the company meets the requirements for one of those programs. Port Tax Credits may be used to offset up to 50 percent of the company's corporate income tax liability. Unused credits may be carried forward for 10 years, provided that the increase in port traffic remains above the minimum level and that the company continues to meet the job or investment tax credit requirements. Note that the Port Tax Credit Bonus cannot be utilized with the Quality Jobs Tax Credit.
Port Tax Credit Bonus for JOB Tax Credits
This "port bonus" is an additional $1,250 per job credit for taxpayers with qualified increases in shipments through a Georgia port. The $1,250 is added to the job tax credit. Example: Taxpayer that creates 50 jobs in a Tier 1 county and increases their port traffic by at least 10 percent is eligible to receive the port bonus. Taxpayer is eligible for $1,312,500 in tax credits over five years to reduce or eliminate Georgia income tax: [50 jobs x ($4,000 job tax credit + $1,250 port tax credit bonus) x 5 years] = $1,312,500.
Port Tax Credit Bonus for Investment Tax Credit
This "port bonus" increases the investment tax credit to the equivalent of a Tier 1 location regardless of the tier level. The port bonus would therefore be equal to 5 percent of the qualified investment in expenses directly related to manufacturing or providing telecommunication services with the credit increasing to 8 percent for recycling, pollution control, and defense conversion. Example: Taxpayer qualifies for a port bonus in a Tier 4 county, invests $100 million in a manufacturing plant, plus $25 million in recycling equipment. Taxpayer is eligible for a $7 million investment tax credit to reduce or eliminate Georgia income tax: [$100 million x 5%] + [$25 million x 8%] = $7 million.
Foreign Trade Zone
This program allows qualified businesses to defer, decrease, or eliminate duties on materials imported from overseas that are used in products assembled in Georgia.
Quality Jobs Tax Credit
Companies that create at least 50 jobs in a 12-month period where each job pays wages at least 110 percent of the county average are eligible to receive a tax credit of $2,500-$5,000 per job, per year, for up to five years. New quality jobs created within seven years can qualify for the credit. Credits may be used to offset the company's payroll withholding once all other tax liability has been exhausted and may be carried forward for 10 years. New jobs that do not meet the requirements for the Quality Jobs Tax credit may count towards the Jobs Tax Credit Program if they meet the eligibility requirements for that program separately. For Current Average County Wages, visit https://explorer.dol.state.ga.us/mis/Current/ewcurrent.pdf.
Research and Development
Georgia offers an incentive to new and existing business entities performing qualified research and development (R&D) in Georgia. Companies may claim a 10 percent tax credit of increased R&D expenses subject to a base year calculation.
For existing companies, the base amount is calculated on the average of the past three years' R&D expenditures and the credit is applied to the tax liability. For new Georgia companies or for companies with no prior R&D expenditures in Georgia, the base calculation is 30 percent of the first year's qualified R&D expense. The credit is determined by subtracting the current year's qualified R&D expenses, less the base year's R&D expenses, multiplied by 10 percent. The R&D credit is applied to 50 percent of the company's net Georgia income tax liability after all other credits have been applied. Any excess R&D credit can then be applied to the company's state payroll withholding. Any unused credits can be carried forward for up to 10 years from the close of the taxable year in which the qualified research expenses were made.
Mega Project Tax Credit
Companies that employ at least 1,800 net new employees, and either invest a minimum of $450 million or have a minimum annual payroll of $150 million may claim a $5,250 per job, per year tax credit for the first five years of each net new job position. Credits are first applied to state corporate income tax, with excess credits eligible for use against payroll withholding. Credits may be carried forward for 10 years.
Child Care Tax Credits
Employers who purchase or build qualified childcare facilities are eligible to receive Georgia income tax credits equal to 100 percent of the cost of construction. The credit for the cost of construction is spread over 10 years [10 percent each year]. Unused childcare credits from the purchase or construction of a childcare facility can be carried forward three years. The childcare facility must be licensed by the state. Employers who provide or sponsor childcare for employees are eligible for a credit against Georgia income tax equal to 75 percent of the employer's direct costs. Credits that are related to the operating cost of the facility may be carried forward five years. All childcare credits can be used against 50 percent of the taxpayer's income tax liability in a given year.
Tax Exemptions
Sales and Use Tax Exemption
Qualified equipment purchases or leases are exempt from sales tax when the equipment purchased is used in the manufacturing process. Under certain conditions, primary material handling equipment (in warehouses and distribution centers); computer equipment and Class 100 (or less) clean room machinery, equipment and materials can also be exempted. Energy that is necessary and integral to the manufacture of tangible personal property is exempt from all sales and use tax, except for sales and use tax for educational purposes. The exemption is being implemented over four years, with 25 percent phased in each year beginning in January 1, 2013.
Inventory Tax Exemption
Business inventory is exempt from state property taxes (0.25 mills). Many Georgia counties have also adopted a Level One Freeport Exemption of up to 100 percent of qualified raw material, work-in-process, and finished goods inventory. In most of these counties, distribution center and warehouse inventories are exempt if the inventory is destined to be shipped out of state. Local governments can expand the Freeport Exemption through a referendum that exempts any business inventory or real property not covered in the Level One Exemption, including retail inventory.
Retraining Tax Credit
A company's direct investment in training can be claimed as a tax credit. The credit is available to all Georgia businesses that file a Georgia income tax return. Fifty percent of the employer's direct cost, up to $500 per full-time employee, per approved training program, may be claimed as a credit. The total amount of credit cannot exceed $1,250 per employee per year. Training programs must be approved by the Technical College System of Georgia.
The retraining program must be for quality and productivity enhancements and certain software technologies. This tax credit can be used to offset up to 50 percent of a company's state corporate income tax liability. Unused credits can be carried forward for 10 years. These credits can be combined with other tax credits.
Angel Investor Tax Credit
Georgia now offers an income tax credit for qualified investors who invest in certain qualified businesses in Georgia in calendar years 2011, 2012, and 2013. The credit is claimed two years later, in 2013, 2014, and 2015 respectively. The credit is 35 percent of the investment with an individual investor cap of $50,000 per year. The aggregate annual cap for this program is $10 million. The qualified investor must get approval from the Georgia Department of Revenue before claiming the credit.
Small Business Tax Relief
Georgia allows for faster depreciation on equipment deduction, in which businesses can choose to claim the expense in year one as opposed to over several years.
Investment Tax Credit
Existing Georgia companies that have operated a manufacturing or telecommunications support facility in Georgia for at least three years, and that make a minimum $50,000 additional qualified capital investment directly related to manufacturing or providing telecommunications services, may claim 1-5 percent (depending on tier status) of the new investment as a tax credit.
Higher credits (3-8 percent, depending on tier status) are available for investments in recycling or pollution control equipment and for defense plant manufacturing conversion to a new product. Taxpayers must choose either the investment tax credit or the job tax credit. This credit may be applied against 50 percent of state corporate income tax liability and carried forward for ten years.
Example: Taxpayer in a Tier 1 county invests $100 million in a manufacturing plant plus $25 million in recycling equipment. Taxpayer is eligible for a $7 million tax credit to reduce or eliminate Georgia corporate income tax. [$100 million x 5%] + [$25 million x 8%] = $7 million.
Optional Investment Tax Credits
The optional investment tax credit can be taken in lieu of the investment tax credit. The credits range from 6-10 percent of qualified capital investment. This credit is available to taxpayers that qualify for investment tax credits, with the minimum investment ranging from $5-$20 million. A taxpayer can use the tax credits up to the calculated amount for a given year. The credit may be claimed up to 10 years after the year the property was first placed in service, provided the property remains in service. The optional investment tax credit is a calculated risk. Without large increases each year in income tax liability, the usable tax credit could be very small and possibly zero.
Georgia Film Tax Credit
The Georgia Entertainment Industry Investment Act offers an across the board flat tax credit of 20 percent based on a minimum investment of $500,000 on qualified productions in Georgia. An additional 10 percent uplift can be earned by including an imbedded animated Georgia logo on approved projects. Qualified expenditures include materials, services, and labor. Eligible productions include feature films; television movies, pilots or series; commercials; music videos; and certain interactive projects including types of animation, special effects, and video game development.
Interactive entertainment companies are eligible for this credit only if their gross income is less than $100 million and the maximum credit for any qualified interactive entertainment production company and its affiliates is $5 million.
The $500,000 minimum expenditure threshold can be met with one or the total of multiple projects aggregated. The income tax credit may be used against Georgia income tax liability or the company's Georgia withholding. If the production company chooses, they may make a one-time sale or transfer of the tax credit to one or more Georgia taxpayers.
State Contact:
Georgia Department of Economic Development
75 Fifth Street NW, Suite 1200
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
404-962-4000
business@georgia.org
www.georgia.org
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.