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Level 1
May 30, 2023
Question

Solar Panels

  • May 30, 2023
  • 3 replies
  • 8 views

I had a client come to me and say that a solar salesperson gave her the information that she would get a 67% tax credit (rather than the 30%) if she was self-employed.  I can't quite come to terms with if it is a personal residence and she if she has business use of home how that would add additional tax savings?  Please advise.

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3 replies

abctax55
Level 15
May 30, 2023

I would advise:

1) have that salesperson 'splain

2) have that salesperson do the return.

There's NO solar credit that has a 67% tax credit... that I'm aware of.   I'd love to be wrong; I'd do solar in a heartbeat on my office building if so.

 

HumanKind... Be Both
Level 15
June 5, 2023

@abctax55 wrote:

 

There's NO solar credit that has a 67% tax credit... that I'm aware of.   I'd love to be wrong; I'd do solar in a heartbeat on my office building if so.


 

The commercial/business credit (§48) starting in 2023 has some very interesting provisions, especially is 'specialized' areas (low income and certain other areas). 

I haven't had a chance to decipher the details yet, but this webpage has a nice chart (look at the 2023-2033 column).

https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar/federal-solar-tax-credits-businesses

 

 

 

abctax55
Level 15
June 6, 2023

Bill - your link takes me to retirement contribution info....which, if I could get a 67% credit on solar might just let me retire 🤣

I'm intrigued tho to find out what I may have missed.

HumanKind... Be Both
IRonMaN
Level 15
May 30, 2023

The salesperson got fired from his used car sales job before he started his solar panel job.  I heard his family had record snake oil sales back in the “Old West” days.

Slava Ukraini!
abctax55
Level 15
May 30, 2023

If not used car, then annuities or reverse mortgage salesman?

HumanKind... Be Both