About: TaxCreditTransfer.com is an educational site that explains U.S. clean-energy and manufacturing tax credit transferability in plain English. The goal is simple: help readers understand what credits are transferable, what the process looks like, what documents are commonly involved, and where to find the official rules.
What this site does
- Explains tax credit transferability (IRC §6418) in plain, practical language.
- Organizes the 11 eligible credits into easy-to-navigate pages, each with official links.
- Summarizes the operational steps: registration, filing, and risk concepts (high level).
- Maintains a curated library of official sources and updates as guidance changes.
What this site does not do
- Not tax or legal advice. We don’t determine whether your project qualifies.
- No deal structuring. We don’t negotiate, draft documents, or provide transaction-specific opinions.
- No guarantees. Tax rules change; always verify using official sources.
Read: Disclaimer
Who this site is for
This site is built for people who need a clear, structured starting point:
Common readers
- Credit buyers who want to understand risk, documentation, and what they’re actually buying.
- Credit sellers (project owners) who need a roadmap for registration and filing basics.
- Analysts, CFOs, controllers who want a plain-English overview before engaging advisors.
- Anyone new to IRA-era credit transferability and trying to learn fast.
How the site is organized
Start with these hub pages
- Start Here — beginner overview and orientation.
- How It Works — the workflow, cash rule, timing, and constraints.
- Eligible Credits — the 11 eligible credits with links to each page.
- Registration Filing — pre-filing registration and registration numbers.
- Risk & Compliance — diligence, excessive transfer concept, recapture basics.
- Glossary — definitions used across the site.
Each credit page aims to answer the same practical questions: what it is, how it’s generally claimed, what documentation commonly matters, and links to official sources.
Sources and updates
Tax credit guidance evolves. We prioritize official sources (IRS, Treasury, Federal Register, eCFR) and use them as the backbone for page updates.
Where we track changes
Important reminder
Always verify current-year requirements and forms using official sources before relying on any summary. This site is designed to help you understand the landscape—not replace professional advice.
Contact
For questions, corrections, or partnership inquiries, email: Or visit: /p/contact.htmlContact