Employer-provided Child Care Credit Helps Manufacturers Help Their Workers
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Employer-provided Child Care Credit Helps Manufacturers Help Their Workers

CPAs & Advisors


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It’s certainly not news to you: There is a severe labor shortage in the manufacturing sector. In fact, according to the National Association of Manufacturers, nearly 2.1 million manufacturing jobs could be open by 2030. One way to attract and retain top talent is to provide an impressive slate of employee benefits. One such benefit is child care. And manufacturers may be able to offset some of the costs with a valuable tax credit. Here’s how it works.

The basics

The Section 45F employer-provided child care credit is part of the general business credit, which is composed of more than 30 separate tax credits that are subject to combined limits based on your tax liability. To calculate and claim the credit, a business files Form 8882, Credit for Employer-Provided Child Care Facilities and Services.

The credit is equal to 25% of an employer’s qualified child care facility expenditures plus 10% of its qualified child care resource and referral expenditures paid or incurred during the tax year. It’s limited to a total of $150,000 per tax year.

Facility expenditures

Qualified child care facility expenditures are amounts paid:

  • To acquire, construct, rehabilitate or expand property that’s 1) to be used as part of a qualified child care facility of the taxpayer, 2) depreciable or amortizable, and 3) not part of the principal residence of the taxpayer or one of the taxpayer’s employees;
  • To operate a qualified child care facility of the taxpayer, including expenses for training, scholarship programs and increased compensation for employees with child care training; or
  • Under a contract with a qualified child care facility to provide child care services to the taxpayer’s employees.

To qualify, expenses must not exceed the fair market value of the child care provided. A qualified child care facility is one that meets all state and local regulatory requirements and:

  • Is used principally to provide child care (unless it’s also the personal residence of the person who operates it),
  • Is open to all of the taxpayer’s employees during the tax year, and
  • Doesn’t discriminate in favor of highly compensated employees.

In addition, if the facility is the taxpayer’s principal trade or business, at least 30% of enrollees must be dependents of the taxpayer’s employees.

Special rules and restrictions

Qualified expenditures are amounts paid under a contract to provide resource and referral services to help a taxpayer’s employees find child care. To avoid double benefits from the same expenditures, the taxpayer must reduce its basis in any qualified child care facility by the amount of the credit attributable to facility-related expenditures. The taxpayer must also reduce other deductions or credits that are based on the same expenses.

Taxpayers may have to recapture (pay back) some or all of the credit if a qualified child care facility ceases to operate as such, or undergoes a change in ownership, before the 10th tax year after the tax year in which it’s placed in service. The percentage of the credit that must be recaptured decreases gradually over the 10-year period.

Valuable recruiting tool

As employers compete for a shrinking labor pool, employer-provided child care can be an attractive perk for current and prospective employees. The Sec. 45F tax credit can help reduce the cost of this benefit. Contact us with any questions regarding this tax credit.

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